Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

U.S. Sanctions Target Maduro's“Narco Friends” As Washington Squeezes The Regime's Cash Engine


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • The U.S. has widened its sanctions net to include people it says sit close to Venezuela's ruling family and oil-export machinery.
  • The move is designed to make doing business with Caracas riskier for traders, banks, shippers, and middlemen worldwide.
  • For outsiders, it is a reminder that Venezuela's crisis is not only political: it is also an enforcement and money-flow story.

Washington's latest step against Nicolás Maduro is not a sweeping new embargo. It is a sharper kind of pressure: naming specific people and assets, then daring the global financial system to keep its distance.

The U.S. Treasury announced sanctions on three relatives of First Lady Cilia Flores-Franqui Francisco Flores de Freitas, Efraín Antonio Campo Flores, and Carlos Erik Malpica Flores-alongside Panamanian businessman Ramón Carretero, six oil tankers, and companies linked to them.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Maduro and“criminal associates” are flooding the United States with drugs, framing the action as a counter-narcotics push.



Two of the newly listed figures, Flores de Freitas and Campo Flores, are known in Venezuela and the U.S. as the“narco-nephews.”
US Targets Venezuela's Oil Service Network
U.S. authorities arrested them in 2015 in a DEA sting, a federal jury convicted them in 2016, and a judge sentenced them to 18 years in prison.

They were released in 2022 as part of a prisoner swap-an outcome that kept the case alive as symbolism: Washington points to it as evidence of state-linked criminal networks; Caracas calls it politicized.

Behind the headline is a practical goal. Venezuela's oil sales remain the regime's main source of hard currency, and the easiest pressure point is the service layer that moves money and cargo: brokers, insurers, ship managers, trading desks, and banks clearing payments.

Once OFAC designations land, even firms with no U.S presence can face frozen transactions, stranded deals, and reputational blowback if counterparties decide the risk is not worth the margin.

The lesson is that Venezuela's isolation can tighten suddenly-and spill over into regional migration, security cooperation, and energy pricing-without a single new law.

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The Rio Times

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