Venezuela's government and opposition eye joint protection of US-held Citgo assets

Published
Score
6

Why it matters

Venezuela's government and opposition are negotiating cooperation to safeguard US-based assets like Citgo, controlled by the opposition since 2019 US sanctions on PDVSA.[1] This follows a US military operation on January 3, 2026, aimed at arresting President Nicolás Maduro and securing access to Venezuela's oil reserves, which Maduro ally Diosdado Cabello's daughter, Rodriguez, rejected while preparing to assume control of PDVSA's US subsidiaries.[1][3]

Key players include Venezuela's Maduro government, the opposition (managing Citgo via a protective board), PDVSA, and US entities like the Treasury Department imposing sanctions since 2015.[1][2] US oil firms such as Chevron have operated under Biden-era licenses, but Trump administration actions emphasize resource extraction, with liabilities estimated at $20-30 billion amid Venezuela's $200 billion debt.[2][3] Rodriguez is central as she positions to reclaim assets.[1]

Context stems from escalating US sanctions during the Venezuelan crisis, targeting corruption, narcotrafficking, and oil evasion, with opposition gaining Citgo control post-2019 to block Maduro access.[1][2] The 2026 US operation intensified tensions, prompting cross-faction talks amid fears of asset seizures or losses.[3]

Newsworthy due to rare government-opposition collaboration amid post-US raid instability, potential shifts in $20-30 billion oil assets, and Trump-era aggressive resource focus, signaling possible sanction relief or investment if governance improves.[1][3]

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