Venezuelan Parliament chief seeks to review Barbados accord after alleged Maduro conspiracies

alleged plots that included plans to assassinate him
Rodríguez announced the discovery of military conspiracies against Maduro, citing assassination attempts among the alleged schemes.

En el palacio legislativo de Caracas, Jorge Rodríguez, presidente de la Asamblea Nacional venezolana, anunció esta semana el descubrimiento de una serie de conspiraciones militares contra el presidente Nicolás Maduro, alegando vínculos directos con la CIA y exigiendo una revisión del acuerdo de Barbados. El momento elegido para estas revelaciones no es casual: Venezuela lleva años atrapada entre la presión internacional, la crisis económica y un conflicto político que resiste toda resolución duradera. La acusación de intervención extranjera, difícil de verificar de manera independiente, se inscribe en una narrativa más amplia sobre la soberanía y la legitimidad que define, desde hace tiempo, la batalla por el futuro del país.

  • El gobierno venezolano afirma haber desarticulado cinco conspiraciones militares distintas, incluyendo supuestos planes para asesinar al presidente Maduro, lo que eleva de inmediato la temperatura política en Caracas.
  • Más de treinta oficiales militares están implicados y se les atribuyen conexiones directas con la CIA, convirtiendo lo que podría haber sido un asunto interno en un conflicto de dimensiones geopolíticas.
  • El acuerdo de Barbados, concebido como un puente de diálogo entre el gobierno y la oposición, queda ahora en entredicho: Rodríguez exige su revisión completa, amenazando con desmantelar meses de negociaciones diplomáticas.
  • Las pruebas de las conspiraciones serán entregadas al negociador opositor Gerardo Blyde, en un movimiento que busca confrontar a la oposición con acusaciones de doble juego: negociar en público mientras se conspira en la sombra.
  • La polarización se profundiza: si las acusaciones prosperan, la disposición del gobierno a dialogar podría endurecerse de manera irreversible, alejando aún más cualquier salida negociada a la crisis venezolana.

Jorge Rodríguez, al frente de la Asamblea Nacional venezolana, compareció esta semana en el palacio legislativo de Caracas para anunciar el descubrimiento de varias conspiraciones militares contra el presidente Nicolás Maduro, entre ellas supuestos planes de asesinato. La gravedad de los hechos, dijo, justificaba una revisión completa del acuerdo de Barbados, el marco negociado entre el gobierno y una facción de la oposición.

Lo que otorgó particular peso a las acusaciones fue su alcance y la presunta participación extranjera. Los organismos de seguridad venezolanos identificaron a más de treinta oficiales militares involucrados en cinco conspiraciones separadas, todos ellos con supuestos vínculos directos con la CIA. La afirmación de una injerencia estadounidense transformó un asunto que podría haberse leído como disidencia interna en un conflicto con resonancias internacionales, aunque la verificación independiente de tales alegaciones sigue siendo, como en ocasiones anteriores, extraordinariamente difícil.

Rodríguez anunció que las pruebas serían entregadas a Gerardo Blyde, el negociador principal de la oposición, en un gesto que parecía diseñado para confrontarle con documentación de lo que el gobierno considera una flagrante mala fe: buscar el cambio de régimen por vías militares mientras se participa en conversaciones diplomáticas. La maniobra sugiere que el ejecutivo está reconsiderando los términos de su relación con la oposición.

El anuncio llega en un momento de extrema fragilidad política. Venezuela acumula años de conflicto, crisis económica y presión internacional, y la irrupción de estas acusaciones amenaza con polarizar aún más a un país profundamente dividido y con descarrilar los avances, por modestos que fueran, alcanzados en las negociaciones de Barbados.

Jorge Rodríguez, who leads Venezuela's National Assembly, stood at the legislative palace in Caracas this week and announced that his government had uncovered a series of military conspiracies against President Nicolás Maduro—plots that allegedly included plans to assassinate him. The discovery, Rodríguez said, was serious enough to warrant a complete review of the Barbados accord, a negotiated agreement between the government and a faction of the opposition.

The Barbados accord had been meant as a framework for dialogue between Maduro's administration and elements of the Venezuelan opposition. But Rodríguez's statement suggested that the discovery of these alleged plots had fundamentally changed the political calculus. He indicated that evidence of the conspiracies would be handed over to Gerardo Blyde, the lead negotiator for what Rodríguez characterized as the "extremist" opposition faction.

What made the allegations particularly significant, according to Rodríguez, was the scope and the alleged foreign involvement. Security bodies in Venezuela had identified more than thirty military officers who participated in five separate conspiracies. But it was not simply a matter of dissident soldiers acting alone. Rodríguez asserted that these officers maintained direct connections to the Central Intelligence Agency—the CIA. The claim of American intelligence involvement added a geopolitical dimension to what might otherwise have been characterized as an internal military matter.

The timing and the framing of these revelations reflected the broader tensions that have defined Venezuelan politics in recent years. The government has repeatedly alleged that opposition movements receive support and direction from foreign powers, particularly the United States. The claim of CIA links to military conspirators fit within that narrative, though independent verification of such allegations has historically been difficult to obtain.

Rodríguez's call to review the Barbados accord suggested that the government was reconsidering the terms of engagement with the opposition. If military officers tied to opposition figures were indeed plotting against Maduro, the government's willingness to negotiate with opposition representatives could be expected to harden. The presentation of evidence to Blyde appeared designed to confront the opposition negotiator with documentation of what the government viewed as bad faith—an attempt to pursue regime change through military means while simultaneously engaging in diplomatic talks.

The statement represented a significant escalation in the already fraught political environment. Venezuela has experienced years of political conflict, economic crisis, and international pressure. The discovery of alleged conspiracies, whether real or claimed, threatened to further polarize an already divided nation and potentially derail whatever diplomatic progress had been made through the Barbados negotiations.

Rodríguez characterized the opposition faction as 'extremist' and indicated that evidence of conspiracies would be delivered to their lead negotiator
— Jorge Rodríguez, Venezuelan National Assembly president
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why would Rodríguez announce these conspiracies now, rather than simply arresting the officers involved?

Model

Because the announcement itself is a political move. By going public and linking the conspiracies to the Barbados accord, he's signaling that the government sees the opposition as negotiating in bad faith—talking peace while plotting violence.

Inventor

And the CIA claim—how central is that to what he's actually saying?

Model

It's the hinge. Without the CIA angle, this is just a domestic military problem. With it, Rodríguez reframes the entire opposition as a foreign proxy. It justifies hardening the government's position.

Inventor

Do we know if these conspiracies are real?

Model

The source doesn't provide independent verification. We have the government's claim and the security bodies' findings. That's what we can report—not whether the conspiracies actually happened, but that the government is claiming they did and using that claim to reshape negotiations.

Inventor

What happens to the Barbados accord now?

Model

That's the open question. If the government genuinely believes the opposition is plotting assassination, they're unlikely to continue negotiating on the same terms. The accord could be suspended, renegotiated, or abandoned entirely.

Inventor

And the thirty officers—what's their status?

Model

The source doesn't say. They're identified as participants in these five conspiracies, but we don't know if they've been arrested, are still in the military, or what charges they might face.

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