Washington Tightens the Screw on Caracas
To understand this dramatic exodus, we must go back to December 16, 2025. On that day, President Donald Trump imposed a “complete blockade” on sanctioned oil tankers carrying Venezuelan oil. This was not merely a sanction on paper—it was a full-scale naval blockade, with U.S. warships stationed in the Caribbean and the Atlantic. Secretary of State Marco Rubio described the operation as one of the largest “quarantines” in modern history, asserting that it “paralyzes” the regime’s ability to generate revenue.
The notable exception: oil shipped by Chevron to the U.S. Gulf Coast continues to flow freely. But for all others—the ships of the “ghost fleet,” those carrying Venezuelan crude to China, India, or elsewhere—it’s over. Since mid-December, U.S. forces have already intercepted several vessels. The Skipper, seized on December 10 while en route to China. The Centuries, boarded on December 20 but later released. And the Bella 1, which became the Marinera after flying the Russian flag, pursued for two weeks across the North Atlantic before finally being seized on January 7, 2026.
Venezuelan Ports at Capacity
The blockade is having exactly the intended effect. Venezuelan storage facilities are nearing maximum capacity. Oil is piling up, unable to be exported. And halting production risks damaging underground reservoirs and infrastructure—a nightmare for a country whose economy depends almost entirely on oil. The sixteen oil tankers stranded in ports for weeks represent millions of barrels stuck there and hundreds of millions of dollars frozen.
According to internal communications from PDVSA, Venezuela’s state-owned oil company, and two sources in the oil industry who spoke on condition of anonymity, the pressure is mounting. The ships must leave. But how can they evade U.S. surveillance? How can they circumvent a naval blockade? The answer: all at once, in an organized chaos that relies on overwhelming the system.
Imagine the scene. Captains receiving orders to cast off. Crews who know they’re going to be hunted down. Illegal oil cargoes on board. And that question that must haunt them: Will we make it through? Will we be the ones who get away, or the ones who get caught? Because now, it’s a lottery. A deadly lottery for their careers, for the ships, for everything.
The Coordinated Escape: Sixteen Ships Disappear
The Great Departure on January 4
On January 4, 2026, satellite images revealed the unthinkable: Venezuela’s ports were empty. The sixteen oil tankers that had been moored there for weeks had vanished. All of them. At the same time. An analysis by The New York Times based on Copernicus satellite images confirmed what experts had feared: a massive, coordinated, deliberate exodus.
Four ships are quickly spotted by satellite, sailing 30 miles off the coast, heading east. But they’re not playing by the rules. They’re using the names of decommissioned ships, falsifying their GPS positions—a technique called “spoofing”—and flying false flags. The other twelve have simply turned off their AIS (Automatic Identification System) transponders, making them invisible to conventional maritime tracking systems. Vanished.
The Techniques of the Ghost Fleet
These ships are part of what is known as the “ghost fleet” or “dark fleet”—a loose network of oil tankers that violate international sanctions by transporting Iranian, Russian, and now Venezuelan oil. Their methods are well-honed, sophisticated, and incredibly effective. The Aquila II transmits signals posing as the Cape Balder and claims to be in the Baltic Sea. The Bertha uses the alias Ekta and reports being off the coast of Nigeria. The Veronica III becomes the DS Vector, also fictitiously positioned near the Nigerian coast.
But the most daring of all is the Veronica, which was sailing empty. It changes its name to Galileo and, in a spectacular move, flies the Russian flag freshly painted on its hull. Three other oil tankers—each carrying Venezuelan crude and already subject to U.S. sanctions for transporting Russian or Iranian oil—did the same, re-registering in Russia and listing ports such as Sochi or Taganrog as their new home ports.
It’s criminal genius, frankly. Changing their names, their flags, falsifying their GPS positions to pretend they’re thousands of kilometers away. Painting a Russian flag on the hull in the hope that it will intimidate the Americans. It’s audacious. It’s desperate. And it shows just how cornered these ships are. Because deep down, they know that satellites see everything. That American destroyers aren’t fooled by a fresh coat of paint. But they try anyway. Because the alternative is guaranteed seizure.
Hunting Across the Atlantic
A U.S. Destroyer on Their Trail
The U.S. Navy isn’t caught off guard. According to military officials cited by The New York Times, a U.S. Navy destroyer is currently tracking the four oil tankers spotted by satellite. These ships are racing eastward, heading for Africa and Europe, hoping to reach waters where they can unload their illegal cargo or blend into international maritime traffic.
On January 8, 2026, the Vesna—operating under the false name Priya—was spotted by TankerTrackers.com and verified by the Times. It was already hundreds of miles from Venezuela, sailing northeast in the Atlantic, about 25 miles west of Grenada. Unlike the three other ships being tracked, it was not carrying crude oil, which allowed it to sail faster. A race against time.
The U.S. Surveillance Arsenal
Flight tracking data reveals the scale of the U.S. surveillance operation. At least three Pilatus U-28A Draco aircraft—used by the U.S. Air Force Special Operations Command for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions—are observed in flight north of Scotland. A KC-135 Stratotanker aerial refueling aircraft and a Navy P-8 Poseidon—specializing in anti-submarine warfare and maritime patrols—took off from a base in southeastern England and were spotted off the northwest coast of Scotland.
The British government confirms its support for the U.S. seizure operation, notably by providing aerial surveillance. However, NATO clarifies that it is not involved in active operations. “NATO is closely monitoring the activities of the ghost fleet vessels to improve maritime situational awareness,” says an alliance official. “However, there is currently no involvement of NATO’s standing naval forces in these operations.”
Do you see the irony? These oil tankers think they can evade the U.S. Navy by scattering across the Atlantic. But the United States is deploying spy planes, refueling aircraft, maritime patrol vessels, and destroyers. It’s a high-tech hunt, with satellites that see everything, planes circling constantly, and warships that never give up. These captains of the ghost fleet are playing hide-and-seek with the world’s most powerful military machine. Spoiler alert: they’re going to lose.
The Spectacular Seizures of January 7
The Marinera: Two Weeks of Pursuit
January 7, 2026, will go down in history as a day of victory for Washington. On that Wednesday, U.S. forces pulled off a spectacular double victory. First, they seized the Marinera—formerly the Bella 1—after a two-week chase across the North Atlantic. The vessel, which had evaded the blockade near Venezuela in late December, had fled north, changing its name and flying the Russian flag in a desperate attempt to avoid capture.
U.S. European Command announced in a statement that the tanker was seized “pursuant to a warrant issued by a U.S. federal court” after being tracked down by the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Munro. The seizure supports the Trump administration’s efforts to target “sanctioned vessels that threaten the security and stability of the Western Hemisphere,” the military statement said.
The M/T Sophia: Intercepted in the Caribbean
A few hours later, U.S. Southern Command announced the seizure of a second vessel: the M/T Sophia, described as “a stateless, sanctioned motor tanker from the ghost fleet.” The vessel was operating in international waters and conducting “illicit activities” in the Caribbean Sea. U.S. forces are now escorting it to the United States.
These two seizures mark the latest in a series of interceptions under the blockade policy. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth stated: “The United States continues to enforce the blockade against all vessels in the ghost fleet that are illegally transporting Venezuelan oil to finance illicit activities, stealing from the Venezuelan people. Only legitimate and legal energy trade—as determined by the United States—will be permitted.”
Two weeks. Two weeks of pursuit for the Marinera. Imagine the crew. Two weeks knowing that a U.S. destroyer is on your trail. Two weeks hoping to escape, to change the ship’s name, to fly a Russian flag, to pray that it would be enough. And then, on January 7, it was over. U.S. forces boarded the ship. Game over. And on the same day, a second ship was captured. The message is clear: you can run, you can lie, you can hide. But we’ll find you. Always.
Russia's Response: Threats and Powerlessness
Moscow Sends Ships—Too Late
Several U.S. media outlets report that Russia had dispatched naval forces to escort the Marinera as it approached the waters between the United Kingdom and Iceland. But the Americans arrived first. The two nations did not engage in a direct confrontation—an escalation that neither Washington nor Moscow wants. The Russian Ministry of Transport confirms that the United States boarded the oil tanker in international waters and that they have lost all communication with the vessel.
“No state has the right to use force against vessels legally registered under the jurisdiction of another state,” the ministry states in a press release carried by the state news agency Tass. A formal protest, but one without consequence. Russia grumbles but takes no action. The Russian state broadcaster RT published photographs showing a helicopter near the Marinera, with military forces—presumed to be American—attempting to board the tanker. Business Insider was unable to independently verify the details of the images.
Nuclear threats and empty rhetoric
A Russian official even went so far as to threaten military retaliation, including a nuclear response, following the U.S. seizures of oil tankers. These threats ring hollow—just the Kremlin’s usual rhetoric in the face of its powerlessness. Because, deep down, what can Moscow actually do? Attack the U.S. Navy to defend oil tankers carrying illegal Venezuelan oil? Start a war over ships in a “ghost fleet”? No one believes that—not even the Russians.
Later, Russia announced that the United States had decided to release two Russian crew members from the Marinera. A gesture showing that, despite the tensions, the two powers are seeking to avoid an uncontrollable escalation. The sailors are returning home. The ship remains seized. And the hunt continues.
The Russian threats almost make me laugh. Almost. Because we all know they’re just hot air. Moscow sends ships, but they arrive too late. Moscow threatens nuclear retaliation, but does nothing. Because deep down, these oil tankers aren’t worth a war. And Putin knows it. So he protests, he grumbles, he threatens. But the ships remain seized. And the Americans continue to track down the others. It’s humiliating for the Kremlin. But that’s the reality.
The Desperate Gamble: Overwhelming U.S. Forces
A "zombie race" strategy
David Tannenbaum, former head of sanctions enforcement at the U.S. Treasury, sums up the strategy perfectly: “All these ships fleeing at the same time—it’s a gamble that U.S. forces don’t have the legal authority or the capacity to stop them all at once. It’s essentially a zombie race—you just have to be faster than the ship next to you.”
The calculation is simple but brutal. If sixteen ships set sail simultaneously in different directions, the U.S. Navy cannot intercept them all. It must choose. Prioritize. Let some pass in order to catch others. It’s a game of probabilities where every captain hopes not to be the one who gets caught. A macabre lottery where the prize is freedom or seizure.
Contractors Under Sanctions
According to internal PDVSA data and two sources in the oil industry, the ships that departed without authorization were under contract with oil traders Alex Saab and Ramón Carretero. Both men are subject to U.S. sanctions for being business partners of the Maduro family. Saab was imprisoned in the United States in 2021 but was exchanged in 2023 by the Biden administration for Americans detained in Venezuela.
Fifteen of the sixteen ships on the move on January 4 were subject to U.S. sanctions for transporting Iranian and Russian oil. These are repeat offenders from the “ghost fleet”—ships that have made a career out of violating international sanctions. For them, this isn’t the first time. But this time, the noose is really tightening.
A zombie race. The expression is perfect. Brutal, but perfect. Because that’s exactly what it is. Sixteen ships fleeing at the same time, each hoping it will be the other one that gets devoured. Each praying to be fast enough, lucky enough. And meanwhile, the U.S. destroyers are picking their targets. Methodically. Coldly. One by one, they fall. The Marinera. The Sophia. And the others will follow. Because the U.S. Navy has time. It has resources. And it never gives up.
The Twelve Ghosts: Where Are They?
Off the Radar
The big unknown in this story remains the fate of the twelve oil tankers that turned off their AIS transponders and disappeared from tracking systems. Where are they? Where are they headed? Are they carrying oil, or are they sailing empty? No one knows for sure. Satellite imagery can locate ships, but the Atlantic is vast, and without an AIS signal, tracking down an oil tanker becomes a monumental task.
Several theories are circulating among experts. Some may be attempting to reach complicit ports in Africa or Asia, where they could discreetly unload their cargo. Others may remain at sea, waiting for the pressure to subside before turning their transponders back on. A few might even try to return to Venezuela if the situation becomes too risky.
A Game of Cat and Mouse
But turning off a transponder is not a magic solution. Surveillance satellites continue to scan the ocean. U.S. maritime patrol aircraft scan the waters. And warships can intercept any suspicious oil tanker. Samir Madani, co-founder of TankerTrackers.com, explains: “The only real way for oil tankers loaded with oil to break through a naval blockade is to submerge them with outgoing ships.”
That is exactly what they are trying to do. But the problem is that even when submerged, U.S. forces do not give up. They track, they wait, they intercept. One by one, these targets are falling. And for the twelve ghosts still on the loose, every passing day increases the likelihood of being spotted, intercepted, and seized.
Twelve ships somewhere in the Atlantic. Twelve crews sailing in the dark—literally and figuratively. Without transponders, they’re invisible to other ships. They risk collisions. They can’t call for help in an emergency. But they prefer that risk to the certainty of being seized. That’s what despair is. Preferring dangerous uncertainty to guaranteed defeat. And somewhere, an American analyst is looking at satellite images, searching for anomalies, for traces. And when he finds them—because he will find them—a destroyer will be dispatched. And it will be over.
The Geopolitical Implications
A message to all violators
This large-scale operation sends a clear message to anyone who thinks they can circumvent U.S. sanctions. The “ghost fleet”—that network of tankers transporting Iranian, Russian, and Venezuelan oil in violation of sanctions—is in Washington’s crosshairs. And this time, it’s not just bureaucratic red tape. These are warships, actual seizures, and prosecutions across the ocean.
The fifteen ships under sanctions for transporting Iranian and Russian oil are discovering that their old tactics no longer work. Change their names? Satellites see right through it. Falsify their GPS position? Surveillance systems cross-reference the data. Fly a Russian flag? Moscow can’t do anything about it. The ghost fleet is being tracked like never before.
The Pressure on Venezuela
For Venezuela, the consequences are catastrophic. With storage facilities nearing maximum capacity and production at risk of being halted, the country faces an even deeper economic crisis. Oil accounts for virtually the entire Venezuelan economy. Without exports, collapse is inevitable.
The Trump administration makes no secret of its objectives. Following the capture of Nicolás Maduro during a secret U.S. raid in early January, Washington is intensifying pressure on all fronts. The naval blockade is just one element of a broader campaign aimed at controlling Venezuelan oil exports and supporting the interim government of Delcy Rodríguez.
This is brutal geopolitics. Washington isn’t messing around. They’ve captured Maduro. They’re blocking the oil. They’re seizing the ships. And they’re sending a message to the whole world: if you violate our sanctions, we’ll come after you. No matter where you are. No matter what flag you’re sailing under. We’ll find you. We’ll arrest you. And your cargo will be seized. This is raw power, unapologetic and unapologetic. And it works. Because those sixteen oil tankers that fled? They’re fleeing out of desperation. Because they know that staying means certain doom. So they attempt the impossible. And they fail anyway.
Conclusion
The Hunt Continues
As you read these lines, the hunt continues. Somewhere in the Atlantic, four oil tankers are racing eastward, pursued by a U.S. destroyer. Twelve others are sailing in the shadows, their transponders turned off, hoping to evade surveillance. Reconnaissance planes circle above the ocean. Satellites scan every square kilometer of water. And in command centers in Washington, analysts track every movement and plan every interception.
The seizures of the Marinera and the Sophia on January 7 are just the beginning. More will follow. Because the U.S. Navy never gives up. Because its resources are unlimited. Because the message must be clear: the ghost fleet has nowhere to hide. The desperate gamble by these sixteen ships—to overwhelm U.S. forces by setting out all at once—was bold. But it was doomed to failure.
And here I am, mesmerized by this naval hunt unfolding in real time. Sixteen ships against the U.S. Navy. Captains gambling their careers on a roll of the dice. Crews sailing into total uncertainty. And on the other side, relentless destroyers, satellites that see everything, a military machine that never sleeps. It’s David versus Goliath, except this time, David has no sling. He has only hope. And hope isn’t enough against a destroyer. One by one, they’ll fall. The Marinera has fallen. The Sophia has fallen. The others will follow. Because in this zombie chase, the hunter is faster, stronger, and more determined. And he won’t stop until the last ship is seized. It’s brutal. It’s relentless. It’s the reality of American power in 2026. And these sixteen oil tankers have just learned that the hard way.
Sources
Primary sources
United24 Media – “Four Sanctioned Oil Tankers Flee Venezuela as US Navy Hunts Them Across the Atlantic” – January 9, 2026
Business Insider – “After a two-week chase across the Atlantic, U.S. forces finally caught a Russian-flagged dark fleet tanker that ran its blockade” – January 7, 2026
The New York Times (via Bennington Banner) – “Sanctioned oil tankers flee Venezuela in defiance of U.S. blockade” – January 5, 2026
Secondary Sources
Reuters – “U.S. Seizes Russian-Flagged Oil Tanker Linked to Venezuela” – January 7, 2026
CNN – “Venezuela Live Updates: U.S. Forces Seize Two Tankers” – January 7, 2026
NBC News – “U.S. seizes Russian-flagged oil tanker linked to Venezuela after weeks-long pursuit” – January 7, 2026
Al Jazeera – “U.S. Seizes Fifth Oil Tanker as Venezuela Pressure Campaign Continues” – January 9, 2026
BBC News – “U.S. Seizes Two ‘Ghost Fleet’ Tankers Linked to Venezuelan Oil” – January 7, 2026
Politico – “U.S. Seizes Russian-Flagged Tanker That Broke Its Blockade” – January 7, 2026
NPR – “U.S. seizes Russian-flagged oil tanker with ties to Venezuela” – January 7, 2026
TankerTrackers.com – Analysis and satellite imagery – January 2026
U.S. European Command – Official statements – January 7, 2026
U.S. Southern Command – Official statements – January 7, 2026
This content was created with the help of AI.