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Teh One Who Knocks
05-05-2020, 10:36 AM
By Scott Smith, Joshua Goodman | Associated Press


https://i.imgur.com/SaVuoXwl.jpg

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro said authorities arrested two U.S. citizens among a group of “mercenaries” on Monday, a day after a beach raid purportedly aimed at capturing the socialist leader that authorities say they foiled.

Maduro held up a pair of blue U.S. passports, reading off the names and birth dates on them in a nationwide broadcast on state television. He showed images of the fishing boats the alleged attackers rode in on and equipment like walkie-talkies and night-vision glasses collected in what Maduro called an “intense” couple of days. He blamed the attacks on the Trump administration and neighboring Colombia, both of which have denied involvement.

“The United States government is fully and completely involved in this defeated raid," Maduro said, praising members of a fishing village for cornering one group in the sweep netting the “professional American mercenaries.”

Before dawn on Sunday, officials say the first attack started on a beach near Venezuela's port city of La Guaira, when security forces made the first two arrests and killed eight others attempting to make a landing by speedboats.

The two U.S. citizens arrested Monday were identified as as Luke Denman and Airan Berry, both former U.S. special forces soldiers.

Florida-based ex-Green Beret Jordan Goudreau said earlier Monday that he was working with the two men in a mission intending to detain Maduro and “liberate” Venezuela. Goudreau has claimed responsibility for the operation.

The two served in Iraq and Afghanistan with him in the U.S. military, Goudreau said, adding that they were part of this alleged mission in Venezuela called “Operation Gideon.” The aim was to capture Maduro.

Venezuela has been in a deepening political and economic crisis under Maduro’s rule. Crumbling public services such as running water, electricity and medical care have driven nearly 5 million to migrate. But Maduro still controls all levers of power despite a U.S.-led campaign to oust him. It recently indicted Maduro as a drug trafficker and offered a $15 million reward for his arrest.

Venezuela and the United States broke diplomatic ties last year amid heightened tensions, so there is no U.S. embassy in Caracas. Officials from the U.S. State Department did not respond Monday to a request by The Associated Press for comment.

“I’ve tried to engage everybody I know at every level,” Goudreau said of the attempt to help his detained colleagues. “Nobody’s returning my calls. It’s a nightmare.”

Kay Denman, the mother of one of the Americans, said the last time she heard from her son was a few weeks when he texted her from an undisclosed location to ask how she was coping with the coronavirus pandemic. She said she never heard her son discuss Venezuela and only learned of his possible capture there after his friends called when they saw the reports on social media.

“The first time I heard Jordan Goudreau’s name was today,” she said when reached at her home in Austin, Texas.

Goudreau has said he reached an agreement with the U.S.-backed Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó to overthrow Maduro, which Guaidó has denied. The opposition leader said he had nothing to do with Sunday's raid.

Goudreau says Guaidó never fulfilled the agreement, but the former Green Beret pushed ahead with an underfunded operation with just 60 fighters, including the two U.S. veterans.

He said he last communicated with Denman and Berry when they were adrift in a boat “hugging” the Caribbean coast of Venezuela. They were still in their boat following an initial confrontation with the Venezuelan Navy early Sunday, he said.

“They were running dangerously low on fuel,” Goudreau said. “If they had gone onto landfall, they would have gone to a safe house.”

Goudreau said the two were waiting for a boat on the Caribbean island of Aruba with emergency fuel to help extract them.

Venezuelan state TV showed showed images of several unidentified men handcuffed and lying prone in a street. One video clip showed authorities handling a shirtless man in handcuffs.

He was identified as a National Guardsman Capt. Antonio Sequea, who participated in a barracks revolt against Maduro a year ago. Goudreau said Sequea was a commander working with him in recent days on the ground in Venezuela.

Maduro ally and Attorney General Tarek William Saab said that in total they’ve arrested 114 people suspected in the attempted attack and they are on the hunt of 92 others.

Goudreau, a three-time Bronze Star U.S. combat veteran, claims to have helped organize the deadly seaborne raid from Colombia. He said the operation received no aid from Guaidó or the U.S. or Colombian governments.

Opposition politicians and U.S. authorities earlier issued statements suggesting Maduro’s allies had fabricated the assault to draw attention away from the country’s problems.

Goudreau said by telephone earlier Monday that 52 other fighters had infiltrated Venezuelan territory and were in the first stage of a mission to recruit members of the security forces to join their cause.

An AP investigation published Friday found that Goudreau had been working with a retired Venezuelan army general — who now faces U.S. narcotics charges — to train dozens of deserters from Venezuela’s security forces at secret camps inside neighboring Colombia. The goal was to mount a cross-border raid that would end in Maduro’s arrest.

Teh One Who Knocks
05-11-2020, 10:08 AM
By Isabel Vincent - The New York Post


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Jordan Goudreau, who organized the failed coup in Colombia

When he was planning his invasion of Venezuela, Jordan Goudreau compared his mercenary forces to those of Alexander the Great in his most decisive battle against the Persian kingdom.

Like the ancient warrior, Goudreau, a 43-year-old decorated former Special Forces soldier, planned to strike “deep into the heart of the enemy,” capture Venezuelan strongman Nicolas Maduro and collect a multimillion dollar bounty.

But when his ragtag group of guerrillas docked last weekend in Macuto, a coastal city 20 miles from the capital of Caracas, they seemed to have more in common with the fumbling characters in Woody Allen’s 1971 spoof “Bananas” — about a band of misfits who unwittingly get caught up in a Latin American revolution.

The mercenaries, including Venezuelan dissidents and two Americans, were overwhelmed by a group of local fishermen when they washed ashore, largely because Maduro’s forces knew they were coming and were lying in wait, a US law enforcement source told The Post.

Cuban spies, who run all of Venezuela’s counterintelligence, had tracked Goudreau, a former Green Beret and self-styled security consultant, for months as he helped train a small cadre of combatants in Colombia. Goudreau himself strangely bragged about the coup in a tweet to President Trump on May 4: “Strikeforce incursion into Venezuela. 60 Venezuelan, 2 American ex Green Beret @realDonaldTrump”

Despite the death of eight guerrilla fighters and the arrest of 13 others, including former Special Forces soldiers Airan Berry and Luke Denman, who have been paraded on Venezuelan national TV, Goudreau praised the operation and said there were numerous “cells” still active in the country, ready to attack Maduro and his cronies.

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Eight men are arrested in Venezuela after the failed coup

“I’ve got troops in the field,” Goudreau told Factores de Poder, a Miami-based YouTube channel that reports on Venezuela, shortly after the failed coup. “I’ve been a freedom fighter my whole life. These people have a right to fight for their country.”

But Goudreau’s main reason for organizing the coup may have had less to do with freedom fighting, and more with an urgent need for cash, the source told The Post. Goudreau, whose nascent security consultancy business is struggling, was bent on cashing in on the $15 million reward from the State Department for the capture of Maduro, who was indicted on drug trafficking charges in Manhattan federal court in March.

“Goudreau was clearly after the money and to promote his new security company,” said the source, who did not want to be identified. “But the whole thing was incredibly amateurish. We’re still trying to piece it together. This was no coup, not even close.”

And while Maduro is exploiting the failed coup for maximum propaganda purposes, attacking the US government and his political enemies in Venezuela, who at one point backed the bizarre plot, Goudreau has other problems on his hands.

The brawny commando with the square jaw and buzz cut has not only become the subject of ridicule but he is now under federal investigation for arms trafficking in Colombia, the source told The Post.

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Airan Berry (in blue) and Luke Denman (in gray), two former U.S. special forces soldiers who were arrested after the
botched plot

*****

Jordan Guy MacDonald Goudreau always wanted to be a hero, a modern-day GI-Joe. But he was also an opportunist who was desperate to monetize his combat experience after he left the service, friends told The Post.

The Canadian-born American soldier joined the Canadian Armed Forces while completing a computer science degree at the University of Calgary in the mid-1990s, according to his LinkedIn profile. A year later, in 1999, he moved to Bethesda, Maryland, where he worked as a systems analyst for Employee Health Programs, a drug testing firm.

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Jordan Goudreau

But he longed for the battlefield, and two years later moved to Fayetteville, North Carolina, where he trained at Fort Bragg to be a medical sergeant and “fire infantryman” assigned to the 10th Special Forces Group, an elite cadre of soldiers who specialize in unconventional warfare and counter terrorism.

He deployed to Iraq from November 2006 to April 2007 and served two tours in Afghanistan — in 2011 and 2014 — and was awarded with three Bronze Star medals. But his military career ended four years ago after he suffered a concussion in a parachuting accident and numerous back injuries.

“Jordan is the kind of dude who the military calls to do the top tier stuff that guys do that keep people safe,” friend Frank Riley told The Post. “He’s well trained and has a heart for people. He would give his life for his country.”

Another friend, who served with the former Green Beret in Iraq, remembered him as a fearless warrior. “He was incredible,” Drew White told Canada’s Globe and Mail last week. “He was who you wanted in the trenches with you.” White said that he and Goudreau also served with Berry and Denman in Iraq.

White, who now lives in Colorado and runs a home inspection company, teamed up with Goudreau after they retired from the military to start Silvercorp USA, a security firm launched in 2018, public records show. The Melbourne, Florida-based firm was incorporated on Feb. 26, 2018, days after the mass shooting at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, that left 17 dead, records show.

Goudreau thought he had hit pay dirt with a scheme he devised to protect students from random shooters. He wanted to charge parents $8.99 each to embed former Special Forces soldiers at schools posing as teachers to gather intelligence from students that could uncover potential threats.

“The beauty of it is it’s all for the price of a Netflix subscription, so it’s really hard to argue with me about, ‘Well it costs too much.’ You can’t tell me that,” Goudreau told the Washington Post in November 2018, when he was pushing his services at an Orlando expo on school safety. When a colleague suggested Goudreau could go to school boards and the government for the cash, he responded vehemently.

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Jordan Goudreau (center) is pictured serving in the military

“But we don’t want to,” he said. “We don’t want that. We want private money because it’s faster.”

Goudreau did need money fast. In 2018, he had debts that topped $100,000, said Riley, an Afghanistan War veteran who also helped Goudreau set up Silvercorp. That year, as he was launching his business, Goudreau moved in with Riley, who he had met through Warrior Games, a US Special Operations competition for wounded ex-combatants, Riley said. Goudreau used Riley’s address in Melbourne to incorporate Silvercorp, public records show.

“He was having a lot of problems with debts,” Riley said. “He had separated from his wife and he was still paying her expenses in New York.”

According to Riley, Goudreau’s wife, June, lived in New York while Goudreau was training in Germany. Public records show the last known address for Goudreau is a post office box in Park Slope, Brooklyn, in 2012.

Beginning in 2012, Goudreau was investigated for allegedly defrauding the Army of $62,000 in housing allowance payments. Goudreau, who did not return The Post’s calls for comment, said in other interviews that the investigation was closed with no charges.

Still, desperate to pay off his debts, Goudreau began to take on private security work, and boasted on Silvercorp’s website that he participated in “international security teams for the President of the United States as well as the Secretary of Defense.”

In February 2019, he was part of a team at a concert for Venezuelan aid organized by billionaire Richard Branson in Colombia, where the scheme to invade the country and liberate impoverished Venezuelans from Maduro’s iron grip began to take shape.

Later, Goudreau met with Venezuelan soldiers who had deserted the country, including Cliver Alcala, a retired major general in the Venezuelan army, who was trying to lead 300 low-ranking deserters in Colombia to invade the country.

Goudreau agreed to train the men and lead the operation, according to the Associated Press. Last month, Alcala surrendered to US authorities after his indictment on drug trafficking charges in March. He is now in custody in New York awaiting federal trial in the case that alleges that Maduro was the ringleader of a massive cocaine cartel.

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Jordan Goudreau (left), along with former Venezuelan Army Gen., Cliver Alcala announce the beginning of an
insurgency into Venezuela

Months after his first trip to Colombia in September 2019, Goudreau met with Juan Jose Rendon, a Miami-based political strategist and Maduro opponent who fled Venezuela in 2013. Rendon headed up a clandestine coalition searching for ways to help Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido remove Maduro from power. Guaido, who won elections in 2018, is seen as the country’s legitimate president by more than 60 countries, including the US.

At their meeting, Goudreau told Rendon that he had 800 mercenaries ready to swoop into Venezuela and asked for more than $200 million to complete the job, the Washington Post reported. Although Rendon and his partners initially agreed to the operation, they began to get cold feet when Goudreau could not produce any evidence of a small army and demanded an immediate payment of a $1.5 million retainer.

After the failed mission, it was the money that became a sticking point for Goudreau. In the interview with Factores de Poder, he said he never received “a single cent” for his work but continued to prepare his fighting force anyway, going further into debt, he said.

A few weeks before the failed coup, Goudreau contacted Rendon through a lawyer in order to collect on the retainer and “made it known that if they didn’t pay up he would release the agreement to the press,” Stars and Stripes reported. In the interview with Factores de Poder, Goudreau provided copies of pages from the contract and complained about never receiving the retainer. Nevertheless, he ordered the operation to help Venezuelans.

“I just want to say to the Venezuelan people that there’s people fighting on your behalf,” Goudreau said.

Riley said he wasn’t surprised that Goudreau launched the failed coup with almost no backing. “He’s not a red tape kind of guy,” he said. “He’s the right man for the job and he’s used to doing things on his own. He doesn’t wait for anyone to help him.”

https://i.imgur.com/20wYJu4.jpg
Handout photo showing ID cards, two-way radios and other military gear allegedly belonging to US citizens arrested
after the botched coup attempt

lost in melb.
05-11-2020, 11:31 AM
So was this orchestrated by the US government. Yes or no?

DemonGeminiX
05-11-2020, 12:03 PM
No. If it was, Maduro would be dead or in custody.