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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.

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.

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