-
Ecumenical Prayer Week Begins This Sunday - 23 mins ago
-
A perfect match of film and filmic study - 32 mins ago
-
Sam Darnold on getting FIRST playoff win 💪 Credits Defense in Seahawks' blowout victory over 49ers - 47 mins ago
-
Kenneth Walker III Powers Seahawks to NFC Championship Game and Earns LFG Award - 2 hours ago
-
Tom Brady’s LFG Player of the Game: Seahawks RB Kenneth Walker III 🏆 Divisional Round - 2 hours ago
-
5 Takeaways From the Seahawks’ Win Over the 49ers - 3 hours ago
-
49ers Hit With Harsh Warning After Blowout Loss to Seahawks - 3 hours ago
-
Broncos QB Bo Nix Out for AFC Championship Game, Rest of Season With Broken Ankle - 4 hours ago
-
John Mellencamp discourages his children from working traditional jobs - 4 hours ago
-
Brain-infecting ‘raccoon roundworm’ parasite found in dog in San Fernando Valley - 4 hours ago
Trump lays out Venezuela oil strategy, says he plans to meet with Machado next week in Washington
President Trump said on Truth Social Wednesday that Venezuela will use the money that it draws from a recent oil sale deal with the U.S. on “ONLY American Made Products.”
Those purchases could include agricultural products, medicines, medical devices and equipment needed to fix the country’s beleaguered electrical grid, Mr. Trump wrote.
“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,” the president continued.
Since Maduro’s capture, Mr. Trump has focused on Venezuela’s oil industry, pressing U.S. companies to enter the country — a move he has suggested could help rebuild the oil-rich nation’s crumbling infrastructure.
Meanwhile, Secretary of State Marco Rubio has argued that oil could serve as a point of leverage over the remnants of the Maduro regime who continue to run Venezuela.
Earlier Wednesday, Rubio announced the U.S. will export between 30 million and 50 million barrels of oil from Venezuela, which will be sold at “market rates,” with revenue used “in a way that benefits the Venezuelan people.”
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters that Venezuela’s interim government had agreed to release the oil. She added that the proceeds will be put in U.S.-controlled bank accounts and be “dispersed for the benefit of the American people and the Venezuelan people at the discretion of the United States government.”
It’s not clear how much revenue will be drawn from the oil sales. Venezuelan crude oil, which is tough to refine and has historically faced tight U.S. sanctions, has been sold at a discount in the past, though some refineries on the U.S.’s Gulf Coast are set up to process the kind of heavy crude oil that typically flows from Venezuela, according to Reuters.
Source link











