US indicts Nicolás Maduro and other top Venezuelan leaders for drug trafficking
The US has charged the Venezuelan president, Nicolás
Maduro, and 14 members of his inner circle with drug trafficking,
“narco-terrorism”, corruption and money laundering, and offered a $15m reward
for information leading to Maduro’s capture and prosecution.
Unveiling the indictment, the attorney general,
William Barr, said the Venezuelan leadership collaborated with a dissident
faction of the former Colombian guerrilla group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces
of Colombia, or Farc, operating on the Colombian-Venezuelan border, which Barr
described as an “extremely violent terrorist organization”.
“They’ve
obtained the support of the Maduro regime, who is allowing them to use
Venezuela as a safe haven from which they can continue to conduct their cocaine
trafficking and their armed insurgency,” Barr said.
Alongside Maduro, Venezuela’s vice-president for the
economy, Venezuela’s defence minister, and the supreme court’s chief justice
are among the list of 15 current and former officials who have been indicted.
The state department announced a reward of $15m for
“information related to” Maduro, and $10m each for information on Diosdado
Cabello, the head of the national constituent assembly, and three others: Hugo
Carvajal, former head of Venezuela’s military intelligence, Clíver Alcalá, a
retired army major general, and Tareck Zaidan El Aissami Maddah, the country’s
industry minister.
In separate indictments, prosecutors in Miami
charged the head of the Venezuelan supreme court, Maikel Moreno, with money
laundering. And charges dating back to May 2019 were unsealed in Washington
against the defence minister, Gen Vladimir Padrino, accused of permitting
planes carrying drugs to transit Venezuelan airspace.
Barr said that Venezuelan leaders and the Farc
faction organised an “air bridge” from a Venezuelan airbase transporting
cocaine to Central America and a sea route to the Caribbean.
“We estimate that somewhere between 200 and 250
metric tons of cocaine are shipped out of Venezuela by these routes,” Barr
said. “Those 250 metric tons equate to 30m lethal doses.
Geoffrey Berman, US attorney for the southern
district of New York said the accused called the operation the “cartel of the
suns”.
“The name they chose reflects the cartel’s identity
and operations,” Berman said. “It is a direct reference to the sun-shaped stars
that Venezuelan military officers wear on their uniforms.”
Barr said the US would “explore all options” to put
the accused Venezuelan leaders in custody. Almost all of them are still in
Venezuela. Carvajal, the former intelligence chief, had been living in Spain
but disappeared in November after a Spanish court approved a US request for
extradition.
Another of the accused, Clíver Alcalá, broke from
the Maduro camp in 2013 and and has admitted to plotting to overthrow Maduro
with a mercenary army based in Colombia.
Reached by the Guardian in the Colombian city of
Barranquilla where he still lives, Alcalá said he had been mistakenly accused.
“The Colombian authorities know where I am. They
know I’m at home, and have no plans to run away,” he said. “I support the
indictments against the Maduro regime but I’m a false positive. I shouldn’t be
included.”
The charges portray Venezuelan drug smuggling as a
major national security issue. The justice department statement on the
indictments said: “Maduro and the other defendants expressly intended to flood
the United States with cocaine in order to undermine the health and wellbeing
of our nation. Maduro very deliberately deployed cocaine as a weapon.”
But US data for 2018, which shows 210 tons of
cocaine passing through Venezuela, shows that six times as much passed through
Guatemala in the same period.
“The evidence they point to against Maduro is thin,
which suggests this is more about politics than about drugs,” said Geoff
Ramsey, director of the Venezuela programme at the Washington Office on Latin
America thinktank.
“Venezuela’s
nowhere close to a primary transit country for US-bound cocaine. If the US
government wanted to address the flow of cocaine they’d focus on corruption in
places like Honduras and Guatemala – both governments that the administration
has coddled in recent years.”
The charges torpedoed efforts to break a standoff
between Maduro, supported by Russia and China, and the US-backed opposition
leader, Juan Guaidó.
On Thursday afternoon, Tarek William Saab, the
prosecutor general and a close ally of Maduro, announced an investigation into
Guaidó, Alcalá – the ex-general also indicted by the US – and a host of alleged
co-conspirators.
“Guaidó and his North American advisers planned to
bathe Venezuela in blood,” Saab tweeted following the announcement.
Just a day earlier, Maduro had extended an olive
branch to his opponents because of the Covid-19 crisis.
“I’m ready to meet with all sectors that want to
talk about the coronavirus pandemic,” he said in a televised address on
Wednesday.
But that offer appeared to have been rescinded
following the US charges.
“From the US and Colombia they have conspired and
given the order to fill Venezuela with violence,” Maduro tweeted on Thursday
morning.
“No negotiation is possible now,” said one source
close to the US administration and the Venezuelan opposition. “There aren’t
going to be elections, how could there be?”
David Smilde, a Venezuela expert at Tulane
University, said it would be “tragic” if the indictments stopped the Maduro
government receiving international assistance during the coronavirus epidemic.
He also added that the charges would make it harder
for the US to force Maduro out.
“These
indictments seriously increase the exit costs for Maduro, Cabello and Moreno.
It is hard to imagine Maduro being willing to do anything other than hunker
down knowing he has a price on his head,” Smilde said. “These moves effectively
ensure a longterm deadlock between the US and Venezuela, just as we have seen
with Cuba.”
It is not the first time the US has indicted an
incumbent head of state in Latin America. The Panamanian dictator, Manuel
Noriega, was charged with drugs offences in 1988, and a year later, US forces
invaded Panama to arrest him.
In October last year, the Honduran president, Juan
Orlando Hernández, was named as a co-conspirator in a New York court in which
convicted his brother Juan Antonio “Tony” Hernández, in a large-scale drug
conspiracy case.
The president, who is a close ally of the US
administration, was not charged.