Everyone is watching Donald Trump’s escalating rhetoric on Iran. But quietly, another move is unfolding, one that could reshape how power, money, and oil intersect in Venezuela. The U.S. has sold its first confirmed batch of Venezuelan oil, worth roughly $500 million. But here’s the twist: the money isn’t going to Caracas. It’s going to a bank account in Qatar. Why Qatar? Why now? And who really controls Venezuela’s oil when the oil leaves the country? This story isn’t just about energy markets. It’s about leverage. Venezuela owes nearly $170 billion to creditors circling like hawks. Courts, bondholders, and foreign companies have spent years trying to seize whatever Venezuelan assets they can find. So when the U.S. signs an executive order shielding oil revenue from seizure, and parks the money offshore, it raises uncomfortable questions. Is this about protecting Venezuelan wealth? Or about locking it out of Venezuela altogether? And if there’s backlash inside the country tomorrow, has Washington already future-proofed the money?
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