Trump signs order to firewall Venezuela oil revenue held in US
Published in News & Features
President Donald Trump took another step toward controlling future sales of Venezuelan oil and its proceeds by declaring a national emergency and issuing a directive meant to block claims on the revenue.
The executive order Trump signed Saturday is meant to safeguard Venezuelan oil revenue held in U.S. Treasury accounts, blocking it from the Latin American country’s creditors and preventing its seizure to satisfy debts or other legal claims, according to a White House fact sheet. The goal is “ensuring these funds are preserved to advance U.S. foreign policy objectives,” the fact sheet said.
The order “affirms the funds are sovereign property of Venezuela” even when held in U.S. custody for government and diplomatic purposes, and therefore not subject to private claims, the White House said.
The Trump administration has said it will use the proceeds from the sale of Venezuelan oil — beginning with what Trump has claimed as 30 million to 50 million barrels — to benefit the Venezuelan and American people. The sales are meant to help drain a growing accumulation of crude in storage and keep revenue flowing following the capture of Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro.
Claims by other countries or creditors on the funds would jeopardize U.S. objectives and “empower malign actors like Iran and Hezbollah,” the White House said.
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