In a significant escalation of pressure against the Venezuelan government, former President Donald Trump announced that the United States would retain or sell crude oil confiscated from tankers intercepted near Venezuela’s coast. The declaration came during a press briefing in Florida on Monday, where Trump outlined multiple potential dispositions for the seized commodities, including potential allocation to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
The U.S. military has intensified its maritime operations this month, apprehending two oil tankers with a third vessel currently under pursuit. American authorities characterize these ships as components of a Venezuelan ‘dark fleet’ specifically designed to circumvent international sanctions. This enforcement campaign forms part of a broader strategy to economically isolate the administration of Nicolás Maduro, whom the U.S. accuses of utilizing oil revenues to fund narcotics trafficking operations.
In a parallel development, the U.S. military confirmed conducting a strike on a suspected trafficking vessel in international waters of the eastern Pacific, resulting in one fatality. Trump further indicated plans to expand anti-trafficking operations to land-based targets, warning that attempted incursions would meet with decisive military response.
The Venezuelan government has vehemently condemned these actions as acts of ‘piracy’ and has sought international intervention through the United Nations Security Council, which is scheduled to convene an emergency session to address what Caracas terms ‘ongoing U.S. aggression.’ Maduro responded directly to Trump’s statements, suggesting the former president should focus on domestic challenges rather than intervening in Venezuelan affairs.
This confrontation occurs within the context of heightened U.S. military presence in the Caribbean and Pacific regions, alongside the Trump administration’s designation of Maduro’s government as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. The recent blockade order against sanctioned oil tankers represents another economic pressure tactic against Venezuela’s oil-dependent economy.
