A U.S. military aircraft carrying Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro has landed at Stewart International Airport in New York, marking a historic and unprecedented moment in U.S. law enforcement and national security operations. The arrival follows Maduro’s capture earlier the same day in a coordinated operation involving U.S. intelligence and special operations forces.

Footage circulating online shows the military plane touching down under tight security, confirming Maduro’s transfer into U.S. custody on January 3, 2026. The operation reportedly involved a carefully planned raid on a secured residence, carried out with speed and precision to avoid civilian harm and ensure immediate control of the target.

Maduro has been under U.S. indictment since 2020, charged with narco-terrorism, conspiracy to traffic cocaine, and providing material support to designated terrorist organizations. Federal prosecutors allege that Maduro used Venezuela’s state apparatus to facilitate large-scale cocaine shipments into the United States, working in coordination with Colombian FARC guerrillas to destabilize the region and flood American communities with illegal narcotics.

The transfer of Maduro to U.S. soil represents a dramatic escalation in accountability for foreign leaders accused of exploiting power to fuel crime, corruption, and transnational terrorism. For years, U.S. officials have accused the Maduro regime of functioning as a criminal enterprise masquerading as a government, protected by authoritarian control and foreign adversaries.

This development signals a renewed posture by the United States toward enforcing the rule of law beyond its borders when American lives and national security are directly threatened. The operation underscores a clear message: political status does not grant immunity from justice when evidence points to systemic criminal conduct.

Maduro is expected to face federal proceedings in the coming days, where the charges against him will be formally addressed in a U.S. court of law. The case is likely to have significant implications for Venezuela, Latin America, and the broader international response to narco-states and authoritarian regimes aligned against U.S. interests.