Clock ticking quickly for Maduro



Down in Venezuela, the people are in the streets and Sr. Maduro got some very bad news.  He lost a key military man, as we see in this report:

An active Venezuelan general called on the armed forces to rebel against President Nicolas Maduro and to recognize the opposition leader Juan Guaido as interim chief as pressure at home and abroad grows on the head of state to step down.

In a video circulating on Twitter on Saturday, General Francisco Yanez of the air force's high command, said most of the armed forces already disavowed Maduro, who claims he is victim of a coup directed by the United States.

"People of Venezuela, 90 percent of the armed forces of Venezuela are not with the dictator, they are with the people of Venezuela," Yanez said in the video.
"Given the happenings of the last few hours, already the transition to democracy is imminent."
The high command's web page lists Yanez, along with a photo, as the air force's head of strategic planning.

I wonder what other general is next!
There are three possible scenarios for Maduro.
First, the Batista exitfilling up a plane with your belongings and leaving in the middle of the night.  I should add that my parents did not support Fulgencio Batista, but he did leave a prosperous nation behind.  You can't say that about Maduro.
Second, a flight to Mexico or Cuba, and trust that no Venezuelan targets him as they did with Somoza.  Back in 1980, exiled Nicaraguan president Anastasio Somoza-Debayle was killed in Paraguay. 
Third, and I'd love to see this, arrested like Manuel Noriega to spend time in a federal prison.  Of course, he won't have Noriega to chat baseball with.  Noriega died in 2017.

No matter how it ends, we can safely say the end is near.