The military reshuffle is the most significant shift since Maduro's capture, signaling a broader reset within Venezuela’s command structure. AppointingThe anchanges experiencedreflect intelligenceongoing figure reflects efforts to restore operational control and rebuild cohesion after a major security failure, while maintaining continuity through established leadership networks. Stabilization ultimately requires reinforcing command structures and discipline — not risking fragmentation during a volatile transition.
Venezuela's military reshuffle isn't reform — it's a tightening grip on state power. ReplacingThe Padrinochanges withsignal a sanctioned intelligence chief signals the leadership is doubling down on surveillance and internal control mechanisms, notrather than opening up politically in any meaningful way. Post-Maduro Venezuela appears to be further refining its existing security apparatus rather than dismantling it, and expectations of liberalization afterfollowing a leadership change continue to look increasingly misplaced.
Padrino's ouster is the biggest shakeup since Maduro's capture, but the Cartel of the Suns isn't going anywhere anytime soon. The system of military impunity and entrenched criminal networks runs too deep for a cabinet reshuffle to fix, and key figures like Cabello remain firmly in place. Real change would require dismantling state-linked criminal structures — not just replacing one sanctioned general with another.
There is a 10 percent chance that the United States invade Venezuela before January 20, 2029, according to the Metaculus prediction community.
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