Venezuelan soldiers ‘bled and collapsed’ after US deployed powerful sonic weapon during dramatic Maduro capture, according to eyewitness account

In an account shared by Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, it was reported that the US used a powerful sonic weapon against Venezuelan soldiers while capturing Nicolas Maduro, causing the soldiers to have nosebleeds and vomit blood.
On Saturday morning, Leavitt went to X to interview an unnamed security guard who claimed to have worked the night the US struck Venezuela and detained Maduro on drug trafficking charges.
‘Stop what you’re doing and read this…’ he wrote alongside five American flag emojis.
The interview saw the security official reveal the terrifying capabilities of the mysterious new US military weapon, which he described as a ‘very intense sound wave’ that disabled Venezuelan forces.
Mike Netter, vice president of Rebuild California, first shared this prediction in an
The security guard was reported to have said, “I suddenly felt like my head was exploding from the inside.” ‘All of our noses started bleeding. Some were vomiting blood. We fell to the ground and couldn’t move.
‘We couldn’t even stand up after that sonic gun or whatever it was.’
The Daily Mail has reached out to the White House for comment.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro (center) was captured by the USA on January 3
US launches attack on South American country before picking up alleged criminal
The security guard claimed that moments before the raid that kidnapped Maduro, ‘all our radar systems went off without explanation’. Then eight helicopters arrived and nearly 20 soldiers landed.
“They were unlike anything we’ve ever fought before,” the guard claimed.
According to an unconfirmed rumor, 20 US soldiers ‘killed hundreds of us.’
President Donald Trump said that 150 aircraft took off from 20 bases in the western hemisphere in the operation launched since August.
White House officials decided last month that they were ready to capture Maduro and his wife, but they had to wait for suitable weather conditions before launching the attack, which took place on January 3.
CIA spies on the ground in Venezuela were tracking the movements of Maduro and Flores; The security-conscious duo slept in a different place every night to avoid getting caught.
Members of Delta Force, the U.S. Army’s most elite unit, flew low across the Atlantic by helicopter with the support of a fleet of military aircraft and entered Venezuelan airspace.
US planes and drones managed to destroy Venezuela’s anti-aircraft defenses and cut power lines after entering the country’s borders.
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On Saturday, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt retweeted an account about the attack, claiming a sonic weapon was used to disable Venezuelan forces.
“Stop what you’re doing and read this…” Leavitt wrote alongside five American flag emojis.
Mike Netter, vice president of Rebuild California, first shared this insight in an X post on Friday that received over 15 million views per day.
Delta Force soldiers entered Maduro’s compound at 1:01 a.m. ET on Saturday. Trump said Maduro went to escape to a metal safe room but was caught before he could keep himself safe inside.
He and Flores were then taken by helicopter to the battleship USS Iwo Jima, where they disembarked at 03:29 ET.
Venezuelan officials said 80 members of the armed forces and civilians were killed during the capture operation.
One US soldier was injured in the return fire, but no Americans were killed.
President Maduro was brought to New York on federal charges and is being held in a Brooklyn jail there.
Trump claimed that Maduro was the leader of the Cartel de los Soles, or Cartel of the Suns, drug trafficking operation.
The president accused Maduro and his cartel cronies of funneling illegal drugs into the United States and charged him with drug trafficking and weapons crimes.
Maduro maintained his innocence this week in New York, saying he considered himself a “prisoner of war.”
President Donald Trump said that 150 aircraft took off from 20 bases in the western hemisphere as part of the operation, which has been in the works since August.
Maduro denied the accusations and claimed he was a ‘prisoner of war’
His wife, Cilia Flores, who was captured, also did not admit her guilt.
Maduro complained that he did not see the indictment containing the accusations against him before the hearing and added that he was not informed about his rights.
It was decided to keep the couple in custody until the next hearing on March 17.
Trump first accused the Venezuelan leader in 2020 and arrested him from his compound last week after Maduro ignored repeated orders to leave the presidency and go into exile in exchange for amnesty in exchange for criminal charges.




