https://usa-onlinenews.com/2020/05/07/did-we-just-witness-one-of-the-nuttiest-foreign-policy-blunders-in-american-history/

"I cannot be the only American who somehow missed the news that on March 26 
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced the United States would offer bounties 
of a combined $55 million for the capture of President Nicolás Maduro of 
Venezuela and four of his top associates. By the end of March, most of the 
country was living under some sort of mandatory lockdown. People were fighting 
for toilet paper and stocking up on bags of rice and making plans for 
aspirational quarantine reading. Millions of us were preparing for Mad Max.
"It now appears that we were thinking of the wrong '80s action flick. Last 
weekend it was reported that a group of more than 100 American mercenaries, 
including two former Green Berets and one ex-agent from the Drug Enforcement 
Administration, had failed in some kind of apparent coup attempt and that some 
of them were being detained by the Maduro government. What was being called 
"Operation Gideon" perhaps unsurprisingly failed to bring about regime change, 
much less result in the apprehension of the country's socialist dictator. 
Reports suggest that 50 of the mercenaries stormed Venezuela by sea, joining up 
with around the same number of fellow soldiers of fortune already waiting 
behind enemy lines. The Venezuelan army (and Maduro's own paramilitary loyalist 
forces) outmatched them by around 350,000. A small ragtag band of American 
warriors attempts to force the commies out of South America against all odds? 
This is basically the plot of Predator if the Predator hadn't shown up.
"Pompeo maintains that the United States government was not involved in this 
offensive. For what it's worth, he is probably telling the truth. Instead it 
appears that the plot was launched long ago by a bunch of former Venezuelan 
military officials who have been training deserters from the Maduro regime in 
secret Colombian camps for a year. One of the principals, a retired general 
named Cliver Alcalá, was arrested in the United States back in March for drug 
smuggling and is imprisoned in New York."   [end of partial quote]

Jim Bell's comment follows:
I consider the headline of this article foolish.  It suggests that a single 
attempt to remove Maduro and his corrupt cronies, having failed, somehow means 
that the entire concept of offering a reward for their removal is somehow ill 
advised.  To the contrary, it might have succeeded, at which point the plan 
would have been labelled "brilliant".   The world doesn't get just one chance 
to do so.  

If there was one thing about this idea that was foolish, it was offer to give 
that money only if Maduro et al were "removed", not killed.  It would probably 
be much easier to kill Maduro than to engineer his physical removal from 
Venezuela.
I also wonder if the United States Government set up any sort of system to 
allow people to anonymously collect this $55 million.  So, how do these people 
imagine that they will  be able to successfully get away with this money?  IF 
the US government secretly says to them, "We're only giving you one tenth of 
what you were promised.  Be glad we gave you that much.  If you complain we'll 
broadcast your name, picture, and location to the entire world!"
A large promised reward is only useful if the potential collector is confident 
he will actually receive all of it, and won't be killed by enemies before he is 
good and old.  
            Jim Bell

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