How the ousting of Russia’s ally Maduro benefits Moscow

How the ousting of Russia’s ally Maduro benefits Moscow


Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro shakes hands with his Russia counterpart Vladimir Putin during a meeting at the Moscow Kremlin.

Mikhail Metzel | TASS |Getty Images

Russia’s reaction to the ousting of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has been cautious, with Moscow weighing up the potential geopolitical benefits and opportunities of the U.S.’ unilateral action against the loss of an important regional ally in Latin America.

Moscow initially condemned U.S. strikes on Venezuela on Saturday, and the subsequent capture of Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry decried the U.S.’ “aggressive actions,” saying they constituted “an unacceptable infringement on the sovereignty of an independent state.” But the Kremlin has not issued an official response on the ousting, nor has Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Maduro was an ally of Putin and Venezuela has long-standing ties with Russia; Caracas backed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and the two countries shared energy ties and military cooperation. The allies also had a shared interest in counteracting the U.S.’ geopolitical, military and economic influence in the region.

Still, Maduro’s removal is not all bad news for Russia, and Moscow is likely to be looking at ways it can leverage the crisis in Venezuela to its own benefit.

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U.S. President Donald Trump welcomes Russian President Vladimir Putin to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson on August 15, 2025 in Anchorage, Alaska.

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Danger for Zelenskyy?

Analysts have also expressed concern that Trump’s capture of Maduro, and the criminal charges levelled against him, could give Russia carte blanche to do the same to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who Moscow frequently describes as a “criminal” without presenting evidence to back up its accusations.

“He [Trump] is giving Putin permission to go as far as he wants with Zelenskyy,” Sarah Lenti, political consultant and former director on the National Security Council at the White House, told CNBC on Monday.

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Ideological boost?

On an ideological level, Trump’s intervention in Venezuela and the foreign policy stance underpinning it — a desire to reassert the U.S.’ power and dominance in the Western Hemisphere — chimes with Russia.

Putin is also widely seen as wanting to reestablish Russia’s sphere of influence in Europe and Central Asia, which was lost following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, an event that Putin described as the “greatest geopolitical catastrophe” of the 20th century.

There has been speculation that Trump’s newfound focus on reestablishing American hegemony in the West could allow Russia to do the same in its own backyard. But several analysts commented to CNBC that the U.S.’ intervention in Venezuela showed countries like Russia and Iran that Trump was ready to act if it was deemed to be in the U.S.’ interests.

“What he is doing in Venezuela is definitely going to be seen and heard very clearly in Iran, and in Russia,” Amrita Sen, founder of Energy Aspects, told CNBC on Monday,

“Whether that’s in terms of needing to take Trump seriously, or in terms of, ‘Don’t dismiss it when he says, “I am going to be doing X,”‘ and I think that’s something that world leaders will be very careful about,” she told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe.”

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Marko Papic, strategist at BCA Research, contended that Russia had no bargaining power with the U.S. when it came to allies like Venezuela.

“If the U.S. gets a free rein in the sphere of influence, do other great powers get a free rein in theirs? The answer is ‘no.’ There is nothing that Russia could have given America in Venezuela. … There was no need for any kind of a bargain between Russia and the U.S. [as] the U.S. has free rein in its Western hemisphere,” he noted.

Loss of an ally

Analysts are keen to stress that Maduro’s ousting won’t be actively welcomed in Moscow, as it removes an important ally and a bulwark against U.S. influence and aspirations in Latin America.

“With Maduro’s fall, another Russian client state bites the dust, reducing the value of a Kremlin security guarantee to slightly better than zero,” Tina Fordham, founder of Fordham Global Foresight, stated in analysis on Monday.

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and his Venezuelan counterpart Nicolas Maduro shake hands during a ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow, on July 2, 2013.

Maxim Shemetov | AFP | Getty Images

“To make matters worse from the Kremlin’s perspective, the U.S. operation effortlessly cut through the much-vaunted S-300 Russian air defence systems that had been installed in Venezuela, after having also failed to deliver air protection in Syria and Iran,” she noted.

Correction: Tina Fordham is founder of Fordham Global Foresight. An earlier version misstated the firm’s name.