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Trump Demands Venezuela Stop Shipping Oil To China And Russia In Exchange For Eased Sanctions
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Venezuela's oil is its main source of hard currency. That money keeps the state functioning, pays for imports, and covers basic obligations. So when Washington ties sanctions relief to where Venezuelan barrels go, it is not just an energy story. It is a cash-control story.
U.S. reporting says the Trump administration has told Venezuela 's interim leadership that broader permission to increase production and expand exports will depend on meeting U.S. conditions.
At the center is a demand to sharply curb or end crude shipments to China and Russia, steer sales toward U.S.-approved channels, and accept tighter oversight of how the oil is marketed and how proceeds are handled.
The reported opening move is a first tranche of roughly 30 million to 50 million barrels now constrained by sanctions, sold at market prices under U.S. supervision, with the revenue routed through controls designed to limit diversion.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright has described the aim as maintaining significant influence over Venezuela's oil industry and supervising sales for an open-ended period.
US–China oil tussle reshapes Venezuela
The White House has also signaled talks with major U.S. oil companies on how any broader restart would work. China's response has been blunt. Beijing has condemned the pressure as intimidation and says its interests in Venezuela should be protected.
That pushback matters because China is not just a buyer. It is a key fallback market for heavy crude and a source of financing and leverage when Venezuela's options are limited.
Russia's interest is also strategic: keeping a partner afloat, preserving influence, and showing that U.S. pressure can be resisted.
If those flows are cut, China and Russia lose a sanctioned supply stream and a geopolitical foothold. Venezuela, meanwhile, becomes far more dependent on U.S. terms.
That is why the negotiation is so asymmetric. Caracas needs steady cash now, while Washington is trying to turn that urgency into compliance. One more uncertainty hangs over everything: the legal and political basis for enforcement.
Competing claims about authority in Caracas and the legitimacy of U.S. pressure will shape whether tankers actually change course-and whether this becomes a template for other sanctioned producers.
Washington is linking sanctions relief to Venezuela cutting crude shipments to China and Russia.
The reported first tranche is about 30 million to 50 million barrels sold under U.S. supervision, with proceeds controlled through U.S.-approved channels.
The fight is over leverage and cash control, not just oil flows, with China publicly pushing back.
Venezuela's oil is its main source of hard currency. That money keeps the state functioning, pays for imports, and covers basic obligations. So when Washington ties sanctions relief to where Venezuelan barrels go, it is not just an energy story. It is a cash-control story.
U.S. reporting says the Trump administration has told Venezuela 's interim leadership that broader permission to increase production and expand exports will depend on meeting U.S. conditions.
At the center is a demand to sharply curb or end crude shipments to China and Russia, steer sales toward U.S.-approved channels, and accept tighter oversight of how the oil is marketed and how proceeds are handled.
The reported opening move is a first tranche of roughly 30 million to 50 million barrels now constrained by sanctions, sold at market prices under U.S. supervision, with the revenue routed through controls designed to limit diversion.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright has described the aim as maintaining significant influence over Venezuela's oil industry and supervising sales for an open-ended period.
US–China oil tussle reshapes Venezuela
The White House has also signaled talks with major U.S. oil companies on how any broader restart would work. China's response has been blunt. Beijing has condemned the pressure as intimidation and says its interests in Venezuela should be protected.
That pushback matters because China is not just a buyer. It is a key fallback market for heavy crude and a source of financing and leverage when Venezuela's options are limited.
Russia's interest is also strategic: keeping a partner afloat, preserving influence, and showing that U.S. pressure can be resisted.
If those flows are cut, China and Russia lose a sanctioned supply stream and a geopolitical foothold. Venezuela, meanwhile, becomes far more dependent on U.S. terms.
That is why the negotiation is so asymmetric. Caracas needs steady cash now, while Washington is trying to turn that urgency into compliance. One more uncertainty hangs over everything: the legal and political basis for enforcement.
Competing claims about authority in Caracas and the legitimacy of U.S. pressure will shape whether tankers actually change course-and whether this becomes a template for other sanctioned producers.
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