Following the US-led capture of Nicolás Maduro on January 4, 2026—including CIA preparations, airstrikes causing 80 deaths, and US-Colombia tensions—new revelations highlight a vast criminal support network spanning Venezuela's borders. In Colombia, former regime enablers face scrutiny as Latin America's geopolitical dynamics shift.
The US operation that captured Nicolás Maduro at Forte Tiuna in Caracas, involving months of CIA infiltration and targeted bombings (including one killing Colombian merchant Yohana Rodríguez Sierra), has triggered confessions exposing a criminal web of corrupt Venezuelan military, international mafias, drug cartels, frontmen, and political allies. Columnist Wilson Ruiz Orejuela notes, 'when a dictator falls, he does not fall alone. He falls with the network that sustained him, financed him, justified him, and defended him inside and outside Venezuela.'
In Colombia, the fallout intensifies scrutiny over years of downplayed threats, ignored warnings, and ideological alliances prioritizing convenience over security. Ruiz Orejuela highlights emerging evidence of hidden agreements, illegal routes, and financial supports, with accomplices now scrambling to erase digital traces.
Historically, authoritarian collapses turn loyalists into witnesses, sending a regional message that 'power without law always ends up facing justice.' As Venezuela transitions under interim President Delcy Rodríguez amid opposition sidelining and a 7 million-strong diaspora, reconstruction beckons. Colombia must actively address implications, focusing on truth and responsibility rather than revenge, to dismantle lingering complicity networks across Latin America.