Venezuela detains 2 Americans

Arrests come after government foiled ‘invasion’ from sea

May 05, 2020 11:07 pm | Updated 11:07 pm IST - Caracas

Two Americans were detained in Venezuela on Monday on suspicion of plotting to topple President Nicolas Maduro’s government, which has accused U.S.-backed Opposition leader Juan Guaido of bankrolling the scheme. The arrests came a day after the government said it foiled an “invasion” from the sea, killing eight assailants and capturing two others.

Mr. Maduro appeared on state television to show the passports of Luke Denman, 34, and Airan Berry, 41, and told the Venezuelan military high command that the pair were members of the U.S. security forces.

Attorney General Tarek William Saab earlier told reporters that “hired mercenaries” had signed a $212 million dollar contract with Mr. Guaido using funds “stolen” from state company PDVSA.

The U.S. — one of more than 50 countries backing Mr. Guaido as Venezuela’s acting President as he challenges Mr. Maduro for power — has slapped sanctions on PDVSA and allowed Mr. Guaido to use funds from frozen accounts belonging to the firm'’ Houston-based subsidiary Citgo.

‘Guaido to blame’

Mr. Saab said Mr. Guaido had signed a contract with former U.S. special forces soldier Jordan Goudreau, linked in several press reports last week to an allegedly bungled attempt to topple Maduro. Mr. Goudreau, an Iraq and Afghanistan veteran, is accused of training a mercenary force to invade Venezuela that disbanded after Colombian authorities seized a weapons shipment meant for the group.

Mr. Saab also shared on social media a video of Mr. Goudreau, who now runs a private security firm called Silvercorp USA, in which the former soldier claims an operation against Mr. Maduro’s regime is ongoing.

Mr. Guaido’s press team released a statement on Monday denying the accusations and insisting it had no agreements with private security firms. On Sunday, Venezuela claimed a group traveling on speedboats and embarking from Colombia tried to land before dawn in the northern coastal State of La Guaira but were intercepted by the military and special police units.

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