Berti family maintenance employee Pedro Farias, 58, helps pick up debris and clean Elena Berti’s home after a missile struck near her backyard in Caracas. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
Berti family maintenance employee Pedro Farias, 58, helps pick up debris and clean Elena Berti’s home after a missile struck near her backyard in Caracas. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
In the wooded neighbourhood of La Boyera, at the foot of a mountain known as “the volcano”, Elena Berti was sleeping deeply on Saturday when everything began shaking so violently that the head of her bed frame toppled down on her.
Berti, 78, recalled rising from her bed, rosarybeads in hand, and looking outside at a scene that seemed incomprehensible: The woods beyond her back patio were on fire.
In its assault on the Venezuelan capital of Caracas, the United States military said it strategically bombed several radar installations and radio transmission towers to blind government forces as it closed in on President Nicolas Maduro.
It also appeared to strike this residential neighbourhood, seen as an oasis in this chaotic city, leaving residents bewildered and afraid.
“I never imagined something like this could happen inside my home,” Berti said. “I don’t have anything to do with politics or the military.
“This is anguish,” she continued, sighing: “It’s always something living here”.
The Pentagon and the White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the strike in La Boyera.
In recent years, as Venezuela went bankrupt, millions fled the country, inflation soared and Maduro strengthened his authoritarian grip on power – claiming victory after the 2024 presidential election despite tallies showing he lost – life in the capital has been marked by hardship.
Employees from a waste disposal company pick up debris at Elena Berti’s home. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
Now, after the US strikes and the capture of Maduro, Venezuelans are struggling to understand what just happened, and what might come next.
The earthquake has apparently come and gone: Maduro is in jail in New York, awaiting trial on narco-terrorism charges, and his vice-president Delcy Rodriguez has taken over, vowing continuity. But everyone seems to be bracing for aftershocks.
“There’s so much confusion,” said commercial salesman Ronald Figuera, 44, who lives less than 1.5km from where Maduro was apprehended on a Venezuelan military base in southern Caracas.
“It was so fast. We don’t know anything about anything.”
The impact shattered Berti’s bathroom door. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
His dread and uncertainty is shared by many across the Western Hemisphere, where government officials and political analysts alike were taken aback by the sight of Maduro – until Friday, Venezuela’s most powerful man – as a blindfolded detainee in American custody.
For years, Washington has made it clear that it viewed the Latin American strongman as illegitimate and wanted him gone. But the stated rationale for his removal has changed over time.
In 2019, when the first Trump administration backed then-National Assembly President Juan Guaido’s bid to replace Maduro as head of state, it was ostensibly about the preservation of democracy.
Maduro had been declared the victor of the May 2018 presidential election, but the flawed vote was rejected by the Venezuelan opposition and much of the international community.
Ultimately, Guaido fled the country and the US began building a legal case.
Glass bits on dolls and a bed in Elena Berti’s daughter’s bedroom. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
In March 2020, US federal prosecutors in the Southern District of Florida filed charges against Maduro, accusing him and other government figures of heading a large drug-trafficking network, the Cartel de los Soles, “to flood the US with cocaine”.
Maduro’s alleged role in the drug trade was invoked by the Trump Administration last year as it began launching deadly strikes against suspected drug-trafficking speedboats off the Venezuelan coast and was cited by US officials this weekend as the primary justification for his abduction by American Special Forces.
But in Trump’s remarks to the nation yesterday, he repeatedly brought up another factor: Venezuela’s oil.
American energy companies, Trump said, are poised to go in, invest billions of dollars and assume control of the nation’s vast reserves.
Holiday debris in Berti’s terrace. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
“They stole our oil,” Trump charged, apparently referring to the nationalisation of Venezuela’s oil industry in the 1970s and later efforts to tighten state control. “We built that whole industry there. And they just took it over like we were nothing … So we did something about it.”
Describing the successful military operation, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth introduced another overarching reason.
Trump, he said, was “deadly serious about re-establishing American deterrent and dominance in the Western hemisphere”.
In November, the White House published what it called a “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine – a historic document asserting America’s hemispheric dominance – that promised to “restore American pre-eminence in the Western Hemisphere”.
A piece of shrapnel in Berti’s home. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
Carolina Jimenez Sandoval, the Venezuelan president of the Washington Office on Latin America, said she could only make sense of Saturday’s stunning events in the context of this new document.
“The idea that you can take the most powerful man in the country and then see him surrendered to US troops sends a very powerful message across Latin America that the US is willing to go through with its threats,” she said.
“They’re not saying they’re going to work through alliances; they’re saying they’re going to impose their will through any means, including military power.”
Trump, she noted, didn’t mention Venezuelan democracy once in his speech on Sunday and the White House hasn’t signalled that it wishes to replace Maduro with either Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, the apparent winner of the 2024 election, or Maria Corina Machado, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize and leader of the country’s opposition movement.
Berti’s backyard after missile debris hit her terrace in Caracas. Her neighbours had recently remodelled the affected wall. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
“The lack of a clear objective is what has so many of concerned,” she said.
Renata Segura, director of the Latin America and the Caribbean programme at the International Crisis Group, said she was particularly worried about what could befall Venezuela if various factions begin vying for power.
Dozens of men carrying rifles were seen rumbling through Caracas on motorcycles today, members of a pro-government gang known as a colectivo.
“It’s very clear they have not really thought through what could happen next after removing Maduro,” Segura said. “And that’s very disturbing.”
Elena Berti, 78, sits on an armchair in her living room among the debris and furniture after a missile struck near her backyard in Caracas. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
Today, people in the capital were beginning to head out to the shops again. They lined up to buy food, water. More businesses were open than yesterday, though owners were careful not to allow too many people inside. Others went to church to pray – for peace, stability and, perhaps, for answers.
“It’s still the same people in power,” Figuera said. “Everyone here is waiting to see what happens next.”
A police officer, who spoke to the Washington Post on the condition of anonymity because he was a member of the state security forces, said that as soon as he heard the first bombs he knew Maduro’s time in power had come to a close.
Pieces of shrapnel shattered parts of Berti’s living room. Photo / Andrea Hernandez Briceno, for The Washington Post
But he’d felt few moments of certainty since. How long would Rodriguez hold on as president? He had no idea.
“She has no real power,” he said. It was the Americans, the “gringos”, he said, who were now in control.
“If anyone does anything against the gringos, they will face the same fate as Maduro.”
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