« First « Previous Comments 340 - 370 of 370 Search these comments
I have just been informed that Venezuela is going to be purchasing ONLY American Made Products, with the money they receive from our new Oil Deal. These purchases will include, among other things, American Agricultural Products, and American Made Medicines, Medical Devices, and Equipment to improve Venezuela’s Electric Grid and Energy Facilities. In other words, Venezuela is committing to doing business with the United States of America as their principal partner – A wise choice, and a very good thing for the people of Venezuela, and the United States. Thank you for your attention to this matter!
The revived Monroe Doctrine is crushing it. Already, other narco-states in the American hemisphere are paying exceedingly close attention to what just happened in Venezuela. They don’t want it to spread. Namely, President Trump reported yesterday that Colombia’s president isn’t just waiting around for the midnight caller; he phoned the White House with a whole new and more helpful tone...
President Trump also made several dramatic announcements about Venezuela itself. First, and suddenly, our former hemispheric adversary will now, for some reason, be spending their vast oil revenues right here at home, in the United States, instead of paying the Russians and Chinese for military hardware...
Not just that. Also yesterday, President Trump dramatically announced that Venezuela would be “donating” to the U.S. millions of barrels of high-quality crude oil (worth billions), immediately. Thank you for your attention to this matter.
It’s still not over. In any other news cycle, this would be all anyone was talking about. The Wall Street Journal poured out a story yesterday headlined, “Trump Team Works Up Sweeping Plan to Control Venezuelan Oil for Years to Come.” The subheadline, get this, almost casually added, “President believes the effort could lower oil prices to his target of $50 a barrel.”
Fifty dollars a barrel.
“If successful,” the Journal modestly explained, “the plan could effectively give the U.S. stewardship of most of the oil reserves in the Western Hemisphere, when factoring in deposits in the U.S. and other countries where U.S. companies control production.” That’s not all. “It could also fulfill two of the administration’s primary goals,” the article continued, “namely, to box Russia and China out of Venezuela and to push energy prices lower for U.S. consumers.”
In other words, the Journal just described the Monroe Doctrine to a “T”: (1) stewardship of most of the oil reserves in our Western Hemisphere, (2) kicking China and Russia back to their own hemispheres of influence, and (3) making life more affordable for Americans. This also, not coincidentally, describes “America First.”
Along those lines, the military executed two more dramatic missions yesterday, all buried in the avalanche of news. The Washington Post sailed out the story under the headline, “U.S. seizes two tankers as Venezuelan oil blockade intensifies.” The sub-headline noted that, “In separate operations, a Russian-flagged vessel was boarded in the North Atlantic and another ship was apprehended near the Caribbean.”
The Russian-flagged oil tanker (now owned by the U.S.) initially sailed out of Venezuela with a shady fake registration. After being trailed by suspicious Coast Guard vessels to the Arctic, the tanker’s crew hastily painted a Russian flag on its bow. Later, Moscow advised that the Bella I was being escorted by a Russian nuclear submarine. The Coast Guard intercepted it anyway, without incident.
The Coast Guard was legally justified in at least two ways. First, it enforced Venezuelan sanctions, which were imposed or continued by Democrats during the Biden Administration. Second, maritime law allows seizure of improperly registered vessels. The post-hoc effort by the Russians to fix the fake registration using a couple buckets of paint proves the Bella (renamed in mid-cruise to the Marenara, a type of bland Italian pasta sauce).
Specifically, and allowing that I’m not a maritime lawyer (trust me, they are certifiably insane), UNCLOS Article 92 says that a ship that changes nationality during a voyage (if for other purposes than a true sale) is a stateless ship that can be boarded by any state. So.



Trump Cancels Second Wave of Attacks Against Venezuela After Prisoner Release
Trump also said that at least $100 billion would be invested by major oil companies in Venezuela’s energy sector.





How Paul Singer Stole Venezuela’s Crown Jewel
About a month ago, on November 25, 2025, a US judge approved the sale of Citgo Petroleum Corporation (CITGO), a subsidiary of Venezuela’s a state-owned oil company, to Amber Energy, a subsidiary of Paul Singer’s Elliott Management.
Venezuela rejected the legitimacy of the sale, with the Maduro administration calling it “fraudulent process,” a “barbaric theft, ”and “the theft of the century.”
The sale price for CITGO was $5.9 billion, with the proceeds flowing to creditors of the Venezuelan state. The acquisition is expected to be finalized sometime next year, pending regulatory approval... Maduro was the obstacle blocking that approval, but now he’s gone.
On a fundamentals basis, CITGO is worth far more than what Singer paid for it. Valuations during the auction ranged from $10 billion to $20 billion, depending on methodology and assumptions. Evercore, the investment bank advising the court-supervised sale, placed CITGO’s value at roughly $13 billion, while the Venezuelan government has argued the company is worth north of $20 billion.
The reason CITGO sold for a fraction of its real value is simple: U.S. sanctions and non-recognition of the Maduro government made Venezuela radioactive to investors. Most serious buyers would not touch the asset. Financing dried up. The auction never became competitive. What should have been a sale turned into a clearance event, with one vulture left standing.
What great luck for Paul Singer, then, that only one month after his purchase was approved, Trump invaded Venezuela and turned it into a puppet state, declaring that all the oil now belonged to American investors!
Singer himself has acted as a financial attack dog for Trump during his first year back in office. In June, he contributed $1 million to fund a super PAC aiming to oust Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), who'd become Trump's leading Republican critic over his Department of Justice's refusal to release its files pertaining to the billionaire sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.


This account from a Venezuelan security guard loyal to Nicolás Maduro is absolutely chilling—and it explains a lot about why the tone across Latin America suddenly changed.
Security Guard: On the day of the operation, we didn't hear anything coming. We were on guard, but suddenly all our radar systems shut down without any explanation. The next thing we saw were drones, a lot of drones, flying over our positions. We didn't know how to react.
Interviewer: So what happened next? How was the main attack?
Security Guard: After those drones appeared, some helicopters arrived, but there were very few. I think barely eight helicopters. From those helicopters, soldiers came down, but a very small number. Maybe twenty men. But those men were technologically very advanced. They didn't look like anything we've fought against before.
Interviewer: And then the battle began?
Security Guard: Yes, but it was a massacre. We were hundreds, but we had no chance. They were shooting with such precision and speed... it seemed like each soldier was firing 300 rounds per minute. We couldn't do anything.
Interviewer: And your own weapons? Didn't they help?
Security Guard: No help at all. Because it wasn't just the weapons. At one point, they launched something—I don't know how to describe it... it was like a very intense sound wave. Suddenly I felt like my head was exploding from the inside. We all started bleeding from the nose. Some were vomiting blood. We fell to the ground, unable to move.
Interviewer: And your comrades? Did they manage to resist?
Security Guard: No, not at all. Those twenty men, without a single casualty, killed hundreds of us. We had no way to compete with their technology, with their weapons. I swear, I've never seen anything like it. We couldn't even stand up after that sonic weapon or whatever it was.
Interviewer: So do you think the rest of the region should think twice before confronting the Americans?
Security Guard: Without a doubt. I'm sending a warning to anyone who thinks they can fight the United States. They have no idea what they're capable of. After what I saw, I never want to be on the other side of that again. They're not to be messed with.
Interviewer: And now that Trump has said Mexico is on the list, do you think the situation will change in Latin America?
Security Guard: Definitely. Everyone is already talking about this. No one wants to go through what we went through. Now everyone thinks twice. What happened here is going to change a lot of things, not just in Venezuela but throughout the region.
all our radar systems shut down without any explanation
« First « Previous Comments 340 - 370 of 370 Search these comments
Venezuela has greater oil stores than any other country. But after years of corruption, mismanagement and more recently U.S. sanctions, its oil output has dropped to a tenth of what it was two decades ago.
From Lake Maracaibo in the west to the Orinoco oil belt in the east, abandoned wells rust in the sun as looters scavenge the metal. The last drilling rig still working in Venezuela shut down in August. The country is on course, by the end of this year, to be pumping little more oil than the state of Wyoming.
“Twenty percent of the world’s oil is in Venezuela, but what good is it if we can’t monetize it?” said Carlos Mendoza, an ambassador under the late socialist president Hugo Chávez, who enjoyed an oil bonanza when prices were high but starved the industry of investment and maintenance funds.
“We’re entering a post-oil era,” Mr. Mendoza said.
While petroleum is under stress world-wide from climate-change concerns and the rise of wind and solar power, what is happening to oil in Venezuela goes far beyond the global industry’s troubles. It is an existential crisis for a country long dependent on oil for nearly all of its hard-currency earnings.
This year, Venezuela’s oil income will probably fall below the limited funds coming in from other sources such as gold mining and overseas workers’ remittances, said Luis Vicente León, an economist and pollster. Venezuela’s economy is likely to shrink more than 30% this year from the oil collapse plus the pandemic, says Ecoanalitica, a Caracas business consulting firm.