U.S. Issues New Sanctions Targeting Maduro’s Family and the Oil Sector

The United States on Thursday issued new sanctions on Venezuela’s oil sector and on members of President Nicolás Maduro’s family, while taking steps to keep tens of millions of dollars’ worth of oil from a large tanker that U.S. forces seized off the country’s coast.

Venezuela’s economy depends on oil and has been hurt by U.S. sanctions, leading Mr. Maduro’s government to smuggle and sell crude through a web of tankers and middlemen. The new sanctions target three nephews of the wife of Mr. Maduro and six shipping companies.

Separately, the Trump administration is seeking the legal authority to seize the oil from the Skipper, a tanker that U.S. forces boarded and took possession of on Wednesday in international waters near Venezuela, according to Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary. The oil had come from a state-owned Venezuelan company. American authorities have so far obtained a seizure warrant for the tanker — saying that it had been used in the past to smuggle Iranian oil — but not for the cargo currently on board.

“There is a legal process for the seizure of that oil, and that legal process will be followed,” Ms. Leavitt told reporters at the White House on Thursday.

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Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, at the White House on Thursday. The Trump administration is seeking legal authority to seize the tanker’s oil; officials have obtained a seizure warrant for the tanker but not the cargo.Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

Together, the sanctions and the seizure of the Skipper represent a new front in President Trump’s campaign to destabilize Mr. Maduro’s regime. Mr. Trump has accused Mr. Maduro of operating a “narcoterrorist” cartel and has authorized a series of deadly military strikes against boats that he has said, without publicly providing evidence, are smuggling drugs. Many current and former officials in Washington say the military buildup in the region is ultimately aimed at regime change.

Later in the day, Mr. Trump suggested that immigration was one of the factors that prompted the tanker seizure, saying that Venezuela had “allowed millions of people to come into our country.”

And he reiterated past warnings about a greater escalation.

“It’s going to be starting on land pretty soon,” he said of strikes in Venezuela.

The U.S. government’s actions this week most likely will reduce the number of tankers that are willing to load oil in Venezuela, further isolating a country that depends heavily on the revenue it receives from exporting the fossil fuel. But there was little immediate effect on oil prices, which remained around $58 a barrel in the United States. The market is unfazed because Venezuela produces little oil, less than 1 percent of what the world uses.

New details emerged on Thursday about the seized oil tanker, including about its crew, which is mainly from Russia, according to a U.S. official, who was not authorized to speak publicly. American authorities have asked the crew to sail the Skipper to the United States, but they have another crew on standby if needed, the official said.

The tanker has a capacity of 2 million barrels. It was loaded nearly full at a Venezuelan port about a month ago, according to data collected by Kpler, a company that monitors global oil shipping. The value of the oil carried by the Skipper amounted to roughly $78 million, said Francisco Rodríguez, an economist at the University of Denver.

The ship may have recently tried to hide its location and disguise its activities, according to a New York Times analysis of satellite imagery and photographs, reflecting the shadowy world of smuggling in which it is said to operate.

On Dec. 6, the Skipper conducted a ship-to-ship transfer in the open seas near Curaçao, offloading about 50,000 barrels of oil onto another tanker called the Neptune 6, according to Kpler, as well as TankerTrackers.com, a company that provides similar services.

About Author: holly

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