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Venezuela's acting president replaces longtime defense minister with intelligence head – NBC News

March 19, 2026 by quixnet

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Venezuela’s acting President Delcy Rodriguez said on ​Wednesday that General Gustavo Gonzalez ‌Lopez will replace General Vladimir Padrino as defense minister, a position Padrino ​has held for more than ​11 years.
The change is the most important yet in Rodriguez’s cabinet and marks the demotion of a longtime powerbroker who controlled Venezuela’s sprawling military.
In a post on ⁠Telegram, Rodriguez thanked Padrino for ​his service and loyalty to the ​homeland and said he would be given new responsibilities.
Rodriguez in January appointed Gonzalez Lopez as the new head of the ⁠presidential guard and the General Directorate of Military Counterintelligence.
Gonzalez Lopez, who has been ​sanctioned by the U.S. and E.U. along with at least half a dozen other high-ranking ​officials for rights violations and corruption, served as Venezuela’s domestic intelligence director until mid-2024. Later that year, he began working with Rodriguez as head of strategic affairs at state oil company PDVSA, which ​she previously oversaw as energy minister.
Padrino, who has also been sanctioned by the U.S. ​over alleged drug trafficking and his support for ousted President Nicolas Maduro, once directed the ceremonial section ‌of ⁠the presidential guard under deceased President Hugo Chavez. But his star fully rose under Maduro, who made him defense minister in late 2014.
Sources have ​told Reuters ​Padrino ⁠was likely to be replaced and had been ​kept in his position after ​the ⁠U.S. capture of Maduro to ensure stability in the military, ⁠where ​some 2,000 generals control ​disparate groups of poorly-paid troops, as well ​as huge business interests.
Padrino, who appeared on state television ​soon after Maduro’s capture to say Venezuela would resist foreign troops ​and whose ⁠military was preparing ‘guerrilla-style’ attacks to confront an invasion, has instead worked with Rodriguez to comply with U.S. demands on oil, mining and the release of some people classed as political prisoners.
Despite ⁠the ​U.S. intervention, Venezuela’s repressive apparatus remains intact, the United Nations ​said last week. Venezuela’s government has always denied human rights violations against civil society and its political opposition, ​as well as accusations of corruption within the military.
Reuters
© 2026 NBCUniversal Media, LLC

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