(Corrects paragraph 1 to remove erroneous reference to tanker being Venezuelan) By Siyi Liu and Chen Aizhu SINGAPORE, Dec 15 ...
On Dec. 10, US forces intercepted and seized an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela that Attorney General Pam Bondi said is ...
In announcing the U.S. had seized an oil tanker off Venezuela on Wednesday, President Donald Trump said of its crude, “We’ll keep it, I guess.” ...
The U.S. seizure of an oil tanker off the Venezuelan coast looks designed to further squeeze the economy of President Nicolás ...
Venezuela’s collapsing oil industry has become a central arena for the Trump administration’s broader strategy to reassert ...
Regime change in Venezuela should open up its oil industry to foreign investment, but won't result in a transfer of oil ...
Seizures of more tankers could put a stranglehold on Venezuela’s economy, which is exceptionally dependent on oil to keep the ...
A U.S. intervention in Venezuela would trigger an immediate oil price spike, but analysts expect prices to fall later if ...
Experts say that Russian and Chinese support for Venezuela has largely dried up, with no prospect of real military or ...
Whatever the outcome of the current collision between Venezuela and the United States, the Venezuelan economy is heading into another severe economic crisis. Simply put, years of gross mismanagement, ...
The U.S. military has seized a sanctioned oil tanker off Venezuela’s coast, a move Bloomberg and other outlets say sharply escalates President Donald Trump’s bid to force Nicolás Maduro from power.
The United States appears ready for war with Venezuela, a prospect that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro this weekend attributed to America’s desire to control the country’s vast oil reserves.