How the ‘heavy metal’ fall of a 1980s dictator shapes Donald Trump’s Venezuela policy now

Toppling Panama’s leader more than 30 years ago looks easier than ousting Nicolás Maduro today

Soldiers on duty in Panama after US invaded in late 1989 to overthrow Gen Manuel Noriega. Photograph: Jean-Louis Atlan/Getty
Soldiers on duty in Panama after US invaded in late 1989 to overthrow Gen Manuel Noriega. Photograph: Jean-Louis Atlan/Getty

It is a story Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro surely knows well. A Latin American strongman was in hiding, surrounded by US troops, heavy metal blaring through the night.

In December 1989, Gen Manuel Noriega’s run as dictator of Panama was reaching a humiliating end. US troops had invaded the country, with orders to capture Noriega and bring him to trial.

They would end up surrounding his final hideout, tormenting him for 10 days with loudspeakers blasting songs from the likes of Black Sabbath and Guns N’ Roses until he surrendered into handcuffs.

Today, as US president Donald Trump considers military action in Venezuela, the parallels between Noriega and Maduro grow more significant, and some Trump officials hope the Venezuelan president will meet a similar fate.

Like Noriega more than 30 years ago, Maduro has been federally indicted on drug-trafficking charges. And US officials maintain that the Venezuelan is not a foreign leader but a criminal who must be “brought to justice”, as secretary of state Marco Rubio recently said.

In a national address announcing the invasion of Panama, US president George HW Bush laid out his grounds for moving against Noriega, a defiant nationalist who brandished a machete in public and hosted cocaine-fuelled parties at his lavish mansions.

These included Noriega’s dictatorial rule, concerns about the security of the Panama Canal and the brash general’s increasing hostility toward the United States. (In a final straw, Noriega’s forces had killed a US Marine at a roadblock.)

But Bush also stressed Noriega’s status as a wanted criminal. The justice department had indicted him on charges of taking huge bribes in return for letting drug traffickers ship cocaine through his country.

US troops patrol the streets of Panama in an armoured personnel carrier after invading the Central American country. Photograph: Steve Starr/Getty
US troops patrol the streets of Panama in an armoured personnel carrier after invading the Central American country. Photograph: Steve Starr/Getty

“I directed our armed forces to protect the lives of American citizens in Panama and to bring Gen Noriega to justice in the United States,” Bush said.

For Noriega, escape was never an option. As Operation Just Cause began, a team of Navy Seals crept on to an airfield and blasted Noriega’s personal Learjet with an anti-tank gun. Seal divers sank a potential getaway boat with explosives. In all, 27,000 US troops were deployed.

As the assault began, a panicked Noriega, accompanied by a mistress, wove through Panama City in an unmarked Hyundai and went into hiding. At one point, he ducked incognito into a Dairy Queen fast food restaurant before taking refuge in the embassy of the Holy See in Panama City. Delta Force commandos and US Army tanks quickly surrounded the building, which they could not storm, and demanded his surrender.

A US soldier stands guard at a roadblock near to where Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega was holding out. Photograph: Bill Gentile/Getty
A US soldier stands guard at a roadblock near to where Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega was holding out. Photograph: Bill Gentile/Getty

When he refused, the music kicked in. The playlist was designed for maximum stress – and ridicule: Bon Jovi’s Wanted Dead or Alive, Van Halen’s Panama and Rick Astley’s pop hit Never Gonna Give You Up.

Brent Scowcroft, who was serving as national security adviser to Bush, later called the tactic “a low moment in US Army history.”

But Noriega eventually surrendered and was hauled to Florida for trial. (The general’s years of service as a secret CIA asset providing intelligence about Latin America were not enough to save him.) He was convicted and spent the rest of his life in prison until just before his death in 2017 in a Panamanian hospital after brain surgery.

Pentagon’s biggest warship enters Latin American waters amid rising US-Venezuela tensions ]

Noriega may be gone, but his story has not been forgotten – not by Maduro or Trump administration officials, many of whom have spent years trying to topple the Venezuelan leader.

Noriega’s capture sometimes came up during debates in Trump’s first term about how to deal with Maduro, according to two former officials from the time. Lt Gen Keith Kellogg, then the national security adviser to vice-president Mike Pence and now a presidential envoy to Ukraine, had first-hand experience in Panama as an infantry assault commander during the operation.

US soldiers waiting outside the Vatican embassy in Panama City where General Manuel Noriega was seeking asylum on Christmas Day 1989. Photograph: Manoocher Deghati/Getty
US soldiers waiting outside the Vatican embassy in Panama City where General Manuel Noriega was seeking asylum on Christmas Day 1989. Photograph: Manoocher Deghati/Getty

Among the options Trump officials considered at the time were a large-scale US invasion of the country and “a smaller, special operation targeted directly at Maduro”, Trump’s former defence secretary Mark Esper wrote in a 2022 memoir.

But the similarities between Panama 1989 and Venezuela 2025 are dangerously misleading, some analysts warn. Any US effort to apprehend or kill Maduro, they say, would be far more treacherous than the operation to corral Noriega.

“When people talk very loosely and say, ‘Well, we’ll just take him out’ it’s useful to recall 1989,” said Michael Shifter, an adjunct professor at Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service with extensive experience in Latin America.

“When one confronts the realities of what it would require, you conclude how crazy it would be to commit American troops for regime change in Venezuela.”

Venezuela braces for possible US strike amid military decay and internal dissent ]

Since the end of the Cold War, US efforts to depose hostile Latin American rulers have largely been failures. These include Trump’s own unsuccessful first-term push to oust Maduro, which sought to capitalise on the street protests across Venezuela in 2019.

Still, experts say the similarities between 1989 and today must be unsettling to Maduro.

Nicolás Maduro is considered an illegitimate ruler by the US. Photograph: Adriana Loureiro Fernandez/The New York Times
Nicolás Maduro is considered an illegitimate ruler by the US. Photograph: Adriana Loureiro Fernandez/The New York Times

“There are parallels,” said Elliott Abrams, who served as US special envoy for Venezuela during Trump’s first term. “One is that the guy running the government is someone we do not view as a legitimate head of government. And both are drug traffickers.”

In September, US attorney general Pam Bondi said Maduro was “one of the largest narco-traffickers in the world”. The Venezuelan leader, she said, “will not escape justice”.

And like Noriega, who ran Panama though puppet politicians, Maduro is considered an illegitimate ruler by the US because of the fraudulent elections that have kept him in power since 2013. Trump officials say he is more accurately described as a criminal cartel leader.

Trump may be deterred from major military action in Venezuela by the scale of the challenge. Panama was an easy target – a small country with a weak military, and in 1989, US troops were already stationed there guarding the Panama Canal. Venezuela is about 12 times larger than Panama, with a population more than 10 times greater than Panama’s in 1989.

And even the puny Panama Defense Forces put up enough resistance to kill 23 US troops, including four of the elite Navy Seals who carried out the assault on Noriega’s jet. The US has estimated that 314 Panamanian soldiers and 202 civilians died during the operation. – This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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