The daring operation that whisked Machado out of Venezuela : NPR

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Nobel peace laureate María Corina Machado greets supporters from a balcony of the Grand Lodge in Oslo, Norway, within the early hours of Dec 11, 2025.

ODD ANDERSEN/AFP through Getty Photos


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ODD ANDERSEN/AFP through Getty Photos

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — It is a rare achievement to win the Nobel Peace Prize. However for this 12 months’s laureate, even attending to the ceremony was a feat of its personal.

María Corina Machado has spent greater than a 12 months in hiding after her opposition motion defeated President Nicolás Maduro in final 12 months’s election — a vote extensively considered as fraudulent. Getting her out of Venezuela and safely to Oslo required an operation worthy of a thriller.

On the heart of that mission was U.S. Particular Forces Veteran Bryan Stern, the bearded, broad-shouldered founding father of Gray Bull Rescue Basis. Stern and his group of U.S. army veterans have pulled off a whole lot of extractions world wide. However this one, he says, was totally different.

“She’s the second hottest individual within the Western Hemisphere after Maduro,” he stated. “Due to that signature, that is what made this operation very onerous.”

Stern and his group had solely every week to plan Machado’s escape, a mission they referred to as Operation Golden Dynamite — a nod to Alfred Nobel, the Peace Prize founder who additionally invented dynamite.

A land route was dominated out — too many checkpoints the place she’d be acknowledged. So, they determined to maneuver by sea.

However they needed to be cautious. The U.S. army has constructed up a major presence off Venezuela’s coast, destroying practically two dozen alleged narco-trafficking boats in current months, killing not less than 87 folks. Stern would not focus on particulars, however says he coordinated with U.S. officers who had been conscious they’d be working within the space.

He was cautious to keep away from utilizing a ship that might flip right into a goal. “I did not desire a large big boat with large engines that might go quick and lower via waves,” he stated. “That is what the narcos use — and the U.S. army likes to blow them up.”

Then their plan hit one other snag: Machado’s boat by no means arrived on the predetermined rendezvous level within the Caribbean Sea.
“We had been supposed to satisfy within the center, however when that could not occur, we pivoted and went to them,” Stern stated.

In pitch darkness, with 10-foot waves smashing the perimeters of each boats and solely flashlights to information them, nerves frayed. Every crew apprehensive the opposite may very well be cartel members, authorities brokers, or worse.

“I may very well be Maduro’s guys, I may very well be cartel guys — something actually,” Stern stated. “Everyone seems to be skittish approaching one another at nighttime at sea. In 10-foot waves? That is scary stuff.”

Lastly, as soon as they had been shut sufficient to listen to each other, a voice lower throughout the water.

“It is me — María!”

Stern hauled her aboard. With the wind at their backs, the ultimate leg to a Caribbean island — which he declined to call, however is extensively reported to be Curaçao — was mercifully easy. A personal aircraft was ready to take her the remainder of the best way to Oslo.

Stern says Machado was harder than the crusty veterans serving to her escape.
“We’re all bitching and moaning — it is chilly, it is moist, we’re hungry, it is darkish,” he stated. “She did not complain as soon as.”

Stern admits he was a bit star struck by Machado. He’d adopted her struggle for democratic change for years. He’d all the time assumed Venezuela’s “Iron Woman” acquired her nickname from her political steeliness. However after that evening, he says it is one thing extra.

“She’s gnarly,” he stated, laughing. “Fairly superior.”

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