Close Menu
Tactical AmericansTactical Americans
  • Home
  • Guns
  • Knives
  • Gear
  • News
  • Videos
  • Community

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tactical, firearms and many more news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's Hot

University of Colorado suspends Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity over hazing reports

Dec 7, 2025 4:32 pm

Right-Wing Political Commentator Tim Pool Says a Car ‘Opened Fire’ on His Home Late at Night By Nicholas Rice 46

Dec 7, 2025 4:27 pm

Ninth Circuit Restores California’s Ammo Background Checks

Dec 7, 2025 3:31 pm
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Sunday, December 7, 2025 4:40 pm EST
Trending
  • University of Colorado suspends Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity over hazing reports
  • Right-Wing Political Commentator Tim Pool Says a Car ‘Opened Fire’ on His Home Late at Night By Nicholas Rice 46
  • Ninth Circuit Restores California’s Ammo Background Checks
  • Pearl Harbor remembrance ceremony marks 84th anniversary of attack in Hawaii
  • 18-Year-Old Student Stabbed to Death While Out Celebrating End of Semester: ‘Our World Will Never Be the Same’ By Raven Brunner
  • Remembering Our Pearl Harbor Fallen
  • New evidence photos show items Luigi Mangione carried when arrested
  • Minnesota fraud schemes steal hundreds of millions from taxpayers
  • Privacy
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest VKontakte
Tactical AmericansTactical Americans
  • Home
  • Guns
  • Knives
  • Gear
  • News
  • Videos
  • Community
Newsletter
Tactical AmericansTactical Americans
Home » Venezuela military looks strong on paper but experts say it’s hollowed out
News

Venezuela military looks strong on paper but experts say it’s hollowed out

Jack BogartBy Jack BogartDec 7, 2025 7:10 am3 ViewsNo Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp
Venezuela military looks strong on paper but experts say it’s hollowed out
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

As tensions rise between Washington and the Maduro regime, experts told Fox News Digital that Venezuela’s military may look formidable on paper but is hollowed out by years of corruption, decay and political control. While they say Venezuela cannot stop a determined U.S. strike, any broader operation would be far more complicated than the White House suggests.

Isaias Medina, an international lawyer and former Venezuelan diplomat who denounced his own government at the International Criminal Court, described Venezuela as a criminalized state dominated by narcotrafficking networks.

“Venezuela today resembles a fortress built on sand wrapped around a criminal regime,” he said, adding that any hypothetical U.S. action would be “evicting a terrorist cartel that settled next door and not invading a country.”

Medina warned that Venezuela’s dense civilian population — also victimized by the regime — demands extreme caution. “The only acceptable approach is overwhelming bias toward restraint and longer operational timelines, forgoing targets that cannot be struck cleanly.”

TRUMP PUSHES PEACE IN EUROPE, PRESSURE IN THE AMERICAS — INSIDE THE TWO-FRONT GAMBLE

He said the military’s capabilities look better on paper than reality, with equipment rusting from lack of maintenance and thousands of politically appointed generals disconnected from an estimated 100,000 lower-ranking troops who may abandon their posts under pressure.

Retired Rear Adm. Mark Montgomery, senior director at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies’ Center on Cyber and Technology Innovation, told Fox News Digital that Venezuela’s most relevant threat lies in its air-naval systems — and even those could be quickly eliminated.

“You have to break this up,” he said. “There’s an air-naval part, which is most likely what could impact our strike operations,” including fighter jets, limited naval vessels and Russian-made surface-to-air missiles.

MADURO BRANDISHES SWORD AT RALLY AS HE RAILS AGAINST ‘IMPERIALIST AGGRESSION’ AMID RISING TENSIONS WITH US

Venezuelan troops during parade.

But Montgomery said the U.S. could quickly neutralize them. “Reasonably speaking, in the first day or two of a campaign plan, we can eliminate the air and maritime threat to U.S. forces,” he said.

Any U.S. plan targeting cocaine production would begin with “simultaneous strikes on the airfields, the aircraft and the air defense weapon systems to ensure that they don’t respond to any U.S. attacks on other assets.”

Asked whether Venezuela could retaliate after such strikes, Montgomery replied: “Not against an air campaign. No.”

TRUMP’S STRIKE ON CARTEL VESSEL OFF VENEZUELA SENDS WARNING TO MADURO: ‘NO SANCTUARY’

Members of Venezuela's Bolivarian National Guard hold weapons

Montgomery stressed that while air defenses can be eliminated quickly, a ground operation would be a far different story. “They have a small professional military… 65 to 70,000 people, many of whom probably don’t want — they didn’t join the army to fight,” he said. The country also maintains a massive militia, whose motivation would depend on loyalty to Maduro.

But geography and scale make a land operation a nightmare scenario. “Venezuela is probably twice the geographic size of California, 35 to 40 million citizens,” Montgomery said. “This would be a terrifically challenging ground campaign, especially if it turned into a counterinsurgency.”

He added bluntly: “Today, I would not do this. I do not recommend it.”

TRUMP GAVE MADURO ULTIMATUM TO FLEE VENEZUELA AS LAND OPERATIONS LOOM: REPORT

Venezuelan air force

WASHINGTON’S SHADOW WAR: HOW STRIKES ON CARTELS THREATEN TO COLLAPSE MADURO’S REGIME

Montgomery does support an air campaign which he believes will be more efficient than the current naval tactics. He cited his experience commanding U.S. Navy counter-drug operations: “Every one of these 21 ships could have been pulled over by a mix of Navy and Coast Guard assets and helicopters.” But intelligence often proved unreliable.

Despite years of decay, Venezuela still possesses a large, uneven mix of military hardware. Analysts say it cannot stop a U.S. campaign but could complicate early phases.

Venezuela holds military drills

Its inventory reportedly includes 92 T-72B tanks, 123 BMP-3 infantry vehicles, Russian Msta-S artillery, Smerch and Grad rocket systems, and an estimated 6–10 flyable Su-30MK2 jets. Air defenses include the S-300VM, Buk-M2E and Pechora-2M.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Venezuela’s deepening ties with Iran, Russia and China continue to worry U.S. officials.

Jorge Jraissati, president of the Economic Inclusion Group, said “numbers show only 20% of Venezuelans approve of this regime,” warning that for more than a decade “there has been no respect for the will of the population” as Caracas aligns with “anti-Western regimes that destabilize the region.”

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

University of Colorado suspends Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity over hazing reports

Right-Wing Political Commentator Tim Pool Says a Car ‘Opened Fire’ on His Home Late at Night By Nicholas Rice 46

Ninth Circuit Restores California’s Ammo Background Checks

Pearl Harbor remembrance ceremony marks 84th anniversary of attack in Hawaii

18-Year-Old Student Stabbed to Death While Out Celebrating End of Semester: ‘Our World Will Never Be the Same’ By Raven Brunner

New evidence photos show items Luigi Mangione carried when arrested

Minnesota fraud schemes steal hundreds of millions from taxpayers

At Least 12 People, Including a 3-Year-Old Child and 2 Teens, Killed in Mass Shooting By Escher Walcott

Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel speaks out on Martha Moxley murder case

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Right-Wing Political Commentator Tim Pool Says a Car ‘Opened Fire’ on His Home Late at Night By Nicholas Rice 46

Dec 7, 2025 4:27 pm

Ninth Circuit Restores California’s Ammo Background Checks

Dec 7, 2025 3:31 pm

Pearl Harbor remembrance ceremony marks 84th anniversary of attack in Hawaii

Dec 7, 2025 3:27 pm

18-Year-Old Student Stabbed to Death While Out Celebrating End of Semester: ‘Our World Will Never Be the Same’ By Raven Brunner

Dec 7, 2025 3:24 pm

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tactical, firearms and many more news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

Remembering Our Pearl Harbor Fallen

By news

New evidence photos show items Luigi Mangione carried when arrested

By Jack Bogart

Minnesota fraud schemes steal hundreds of millions from taxpayers

By Jack Bogart
Tactical Americans
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Copyright © 2025 Tactical Americans. Created by Sawah Solutions.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.