Russian Military Advisory Mission and Systems
Over 120 Russian troops operate in Venezuela under Lieutenant General Oleg Makarevich, leading what Ukrainian intelligence identifies as the “Equator Task Force.” This is not symbolic presence. Makarevich is the same general who commanded the operation to destroy the Kakhovka Dam in Ukraine, causing catastrophic flooding. His deployment to Venezuela leading a rotational advisory mission indicates Moscow’s assessment of strategic importance.
Russian advisers provide training across multiple domains including infantry, drone operations, special forces, military intelligence, signals intelligence, armor, aircraft, artillery, and domestic surveillance. They are positioned in Caracas, Maracaibo, La Guaira, and Aves Island. This is comprehensive military-to-military integration, not limited technical assistance.
Venezuela’s military operates Russian-supplied Sukhoi Su-30 fighters armed with Kh-31 anti-ship missiles, the same systems that forced US Navy planners in the 1990s to develop specific countermeasures due to their speed and sea-skimming flight profile. Venezuelan air defense includes S-125 Pechora, Buk-M2E, and thousands of Igla-S surface-to-air missile systems positioned near oil facilities, radar sites, and naval approaches. While aging, these systems remain capable of threatening helicopters and lower-flying aircraft.
Russian radar arrays and Chinese communication relays create what military planners term a “contested electromagnetic spectrum.” US forces cannot assume undetected operations or unjammed communications. This is anti-access area denial infrastructure in the Caribbean, 1,200 miles from American territory. Russian cargo flights continue delivering military equipment. Venezuelan officials have requested assistance refurbishing Su-30 fighters and acquiring 14 additional missile systems from Moscow.
The strategic calculation from a Pentagon perspective is straightforward. Russia is establishing military infrastructure, training networks, and operational familiarity in America’s strategic backyard exactly as the United States has done in Russia’s near abroad. The difference is proximity. Venezuelan territory sits far closer to the continental United States than Ukraine sits to Western Europe. If the Pentagon tolerates Russian military advisory missions in Venezuela, complete with signals intelligence training and air defense systems, it accepts adversary power projection capability in the Western Hemisphere.