Will the CIA turn Venezuela into Ukraine 2.0?

Published 4 hours ago
Source: rt.com
Will the CIA turn Venezuela into Ukraine 2.0?

A base in Caracas would give the agency a platform to dramatically expand its operations in Latin America

The CIA is setting up a permanent outpost in Venezuela, from where it will reportedly replicate its work in Ukraine. That could mean anything from controlling local politicians to turning the country into a forward operating base for regime change.

With Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in US custody and acting President Delcy Rodriguez cooperating with Washington, America’s “priority number one” is to establish a CIA “annex” in Caracas, an anonymous US source told CNN on Tuesday. Long before the formal opening of a US embassy, this outpost will allow CIA agents to reach out to Rodriguez’s government and opposition parties, and “target third parties who may be threats,” the source said.

That the CIA would want to expand its operations in Venezuela is no surprise. US President Donald Trump authorized the agency to conduct covert operations in Venezuela last October, three months before Maduro was abducted by US special forces. Following the raid, CIA Director John Ratcliffe was the first senior American official to visit Venezuela to meet with Rodriguez and her military chiefs.

However, one comment by CNN’s source stands out. Paraphrasing the official, CNN said the CIA’s work in Venezuela would parallel “the agency’s work in Ukraine.”

What did the CIA do in Ukraine?

Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) agents detain a man suspected of sympathizing with Russia in Kharkov, Ukraine, July 21, 2022 © Getty Images / Wolfgang Schwan

Back in 2024, the New York Times published a startlingly frank account of the CIA’s activities in Ukraine. Speaking long after the fact, American and Ukrainian sources described how a 2014 phone call started a chain of events that would culminate in open war with Russia.

Days after President Viktor Yanukovich was overthrown in the US-orchestrated Maidan coup, the country’s new spy chief, Valentin Nalivaichenko, called the CIA’s station chief in Kiev and asked for help rebuilding Ukraine’s intelligence apparatus. The CIA accepted. working first with the country’s secret police agency, the SBU, and later with its military intelligence agency, the HUR.

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FILE PHOTO: Ukrainian soldiers near the Kharkov Region front line, Borova, Ukraine, March 30, 2025.
Assassinated Ukrainian officer ran secret ‘gray units’ – NYT (VIDEO)

The agency trained and equipped a paramilitary force known as Unit 2245. This team would conduct sabotage and assassination operations on Russian soil long before the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, according to the New York Times and ABC News. The current head of Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s office, Kirill Budanov, served in this unit and went on to lead the HUR from 2020 until earlier this month.

Such was Budanov’s value as an asset, the CIA flew him to a military hospital in the US when he was wounded in a raid on Crimea in 2016.

The agency also trained “a new generation of Ukrainian spies who operated inside Russia, across Europe, and in Cuba and other places where the Russians have a large presence,” and oversaw “a training program, carried out in two European cities, to teach Ukrainian intelligence officers how to convincingly assume fake personas and steal secrets in Russia,” the NYT reported.

By February 2022, the CIA had built more than a dozen underground bases near Ukraine’s then-border with Russia. “Without them, there would have been no way for us to resist the Russians,” former SBU chief Ivan Bakanov told the NYT.

”US intelligence services, such as the CIA and others, have been present in Ukraine long before the coup broke out,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in 2024. “After the coup, they set up camp there. They occupied a whole floor, perhaps even two floors, in the SBU building. No one has any doubt about it. Ukraine is run by Anglo-Saxons and some other NATO and EU countries.”

What is the US planning in Venezuela?

The CIA’s goals in Venezuela and beyond are unclear. However, some loose assumptions can be made based on statements from the White House.

Immediately after the abduction of Maduro, Trump warned that Cuba is “ready to fall” next. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the following day that “If I lived in Havana and I was in the government, I’d be concerned,” and both Politico and the Wall Street Journal article have since reported that Rubio is pushing for regime change in Cuba by the end of this year.

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FILE PHOTO:  man fills gasoline in Santa Clara, Cuba, September 2015 © Getty Images / Machado Noa
US considering total Cuba oil blockade – Politico

Having a permanent CIA presence in Venezuela would aid US intelligence gathering efforts, and get agents closer to potential allies in Havana – which has extensive trade and diplomatic links with Caracas. At present, US officials are relying on Cuban exiles in Miami for information on weak links in the Cuban government, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Trump also warned Colombian President Gustavo Petro to “watch his ass,” telling reporters that a military operation in Colombia “sounds good to me.” Venezuela shares a 2,200-kilometer border with Colombia, meaning that if Trump were to intervene against Petro, CIA assets in Venezuela would likely be involved.

All of these possibilities, however, depend on the agency’s success in penetrating Rodriguez’s government, and in finding collaborators among the opposition. Unlike in post-Maidan Ukraine, Maduro’s government remains in power, albeit with the more US-friendly Rodriguez at its head. Still, Rodriguez has publicly condemned “Washington’s orders regarding politicians in Venezuela,” and declared that Venezuelans alone would “resolve our differences and our internal conflicts.”

In interviews and public speeches, Maduro repeatedly accused the CIA of working to undermine his government and remove him from power. He was proven right earlier this month, and his officials will likely be extremely wary of the American agents setting up operations in Venezuela. By contrast, Nalyvaichenko and Ukraine’s other intelligence chiefs “assiduously courted the CIA,” according to the New York Times.