President Donald Trump wants to control Venezuela’s oil production and trade indefinitely
The administration of US President Donald Trump is pursuing court warrants to seize dozens more tankers suspected of transporting Venezuelan oil without Washington’s authorization, several sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
The move aims to solidify Washington’s grip on the South American nation’s oil exports, following the capture of President Nicolas Maduro in a US special forces raid on January 3. The US military and Coast Guard have already seized five vessels in recent weeks in international waters, including the Russian-flagged Marinera northwest of Scotland.
According to a Reuters report on Tuesday, the US Justice Department has filed a number of non-public civil forfeiture actions, primarily in Washington DC district courts, seeking warrants to seize dozens more tankers accused of evading sanctions and moving oil from Venezuela, as well as Iran and Russia.
It remains unclear how many new seizure warrants Washington is seeking, but Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell declared last week that the US would “hunt down and interdict ALL dark fleet vessels transporting Venezuelan oil at the time and place of our choosing.”
Integrated combat power to defend the homeland: Joint Task Force Southern Spear’s support of the recent boardings of tankers in the Western Hemisphere is the latest demonstration of the readiness, precision and expertise of our service members.
The legal push aligns with Trump’s stated goal to control Venezuela’s oil resources. While the White House frames its actions as necessary to rebuild Venezuela’s industry for the benefit of the people, critics say the campaign represents an unprecedented extraterritorial application of US law and unilateral sanctions.
The Russian Foreign Ministry condemned the seizure of the Marinera as a violation of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, which guarantees freedom of navigation in international waters. The Russian Transport Ministry confirmed the tanker was operating under a temporary Russian flag “in accordance with Russian and international law” when interdicted.
The US raid against the Marinera was conducted with British support, and a separate BBC report suggests the UK government is exploring its own legal justifications to detain Russia-linked tankers.
Since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, Western governments have imposed sweeping sanctions on Russia, targeting its oil trade and what they call its ‘shadow fleet’. London alone has imposed sanctions on more than 500 vessels.