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Trump to Deploy US Oil Giants to Rebuild Venezuela

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  • Popular Post
10 hours ago, JAG said:

Ah well that makes it all right then!

If you really believe that 1) it is temporary, 2} the oil will be used for Venezuelan interests, then I know someone who has a bridge for sale...

It is quite simply an attempt to take over a foreign country, so that major US corporations can seize control of it's oil resources, in the expectation that they will make shedloads of money, some of which will inevitably be promised to Trump - political or personal, but then the dividing line is vague anyway.. Venezuela will resist (particularly with Cuba in the mix), the major US corporations will attempt to use their mercenaries to enforce their takeover, they will come unstuck, troops will have to be deployed and off we go - again!

Oh, please—the "bridge for sale" snark is cute, but your whole conspiracy yarn is straight out of a THS fever dream, blending wild speculation with zero evidence.

This isn't some corporate oil heist with Trump pocketing kickbacks—it's America First enforcement against a narco-dictator who's wrecked his country and poisoned ours.

First, yes—it's temporary. Trump's explicit: US oversight during a "transition" to stabilize Venezuela post-Maduro, not permanent annexation.

No full invasion, no occupation troops—just a swift Delta Force snatch to haul an indicted fugitive to New York for trial on narco-terrorism charges (with a $50M bounty since 2020).

The goal? Break the "Cartel de los Soles" that's flooded the US with coke, fueled migration chaos, and empowered Russia/China.

That's protecting American lives and borders, not empire-building.

Second, the oil will benefit Venezuela. Their fields are a disaster—rusting rigs, output cratered from 3M barrels/day to under 1M under Maduro's incompetence.

Trump's plan is to bring in US firms (Exxon, Chevron) to rebuild and pump, selling the oil on global markets with proceeds going to Venezuela's reconstruction and debt repayment (including billions owed to US companies from Chávez-era seizures).

It's restitution and partnership, not "seizure"—Venezuela keeps ownership, we get fair trade access. If that's an "oil grab," then every international energy deal is theft.

As for your "Trump gets promised money" smear? Baseless libel. No evidence, no whispers—pure projection from folks who can't fathom a leader acting for national interest without graft.

Trump's a billionaire who donates his salary; this is about draining the swamp abroad, not lining pockets.

The "dividing line" between political/personal? Vague only in your imagination.And your doomsday prediction—Venezuela resisting with Cuba, mercenaries clashing, troops deploying into "another war"? Laughable fearmongering.

Venezuela's military is a joke: underpaid, divided, no match for US power.

Acting leader Delcy Rodríguez calls for "resistance," but it's rhetoric—sporadic protests, no organized uprising. Cuba?

They're broke and isolated; their "mix" adds nothing but bluster. No mercenaries needed—US firms would operate under transition agreements, not gunslinging. And troops? Trump's doctrine: No endless wars. This was a one-and-done op, like Panama '89—Noriega captured, tried in Miami, no quagmire.

Maduro rots in a US cell, Venezuela stabilizes under interim guidance, oil flows fairly, and America reaps security wins.

Your "off we go—again!" hysteria? Just hot air from someone who'd rather see chaos than results.

Keep buying bridges; reality's building pipelines.

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  • JimHuaHin
    JimHuaHin

    So the USA can do what ever it wants to whom ever it wants, without consequences? I await the global boycotts of the USA and USA produce and products, and the cyber attacks against same. Putin and X

  • JBChiangRai
    JBChiangRai

    I wonder if Trump will be referred to the ICC and an arrest warrant be forthcoming. International Law is very clear. Venezuela's oil belongs to Venezuela and Trump has been quite clear it's one of t

  • dinsdale
    dinsdale

    Interesting when you get a thumbs down for posting a fact. To the thumb down troller how about posting why my comment isn't accurate. 2001 Chavez brought in state ownership of oil and gas reserves. Th

Posted Images

4 minutes ago, mikeymike100 said:

Oh, please—the "bridge for sale" snark is cute, but your whole conspiracy yarn is straight out of a THS fever dream, blending wild speculation with zero evidence.

This isn't some corporate oil heist with Trump pocketing kickbacks—it's America First enforcement against a narco-dictator who's wrecked his country and poisoned ours.

First, yes—it's temporary. Trump's explicit: US oversight during a "transition" to stabilize Venezuela post-Maduro, not permanent annexation.

No full invasion, no occupation troops—just a swift Delta Force snatch to haul an indicted fugitive to New York for trial on narco-terrorism charges (with a $50M bounty since 2020).

The goal? Break the "Cartel de los Soles" that's flooded the US with coke, fueled migration chaos, and empowered Russia/China.

That's protecting American lives and borders, not empire-building.

Second, the oil will benefit Venezuela. Their fields are a disaster—rusting rigs, output cratered from 3M barrels/day to under 1M under Maduro's incompetence.

Trump's plan is to bring in US firms (Exxon, Chevron) to rebuild and pump, selling the oil on global markets with proceeds going to Venezuela's reconstruction and debt repayment (including billions owed to US companies from Chávez-era seizures).

It's restitution and partnership, not "seizure"—Venezuela keeps ownership, we get fair trade access. If that's an "oil grab," then every international energy deal is theft.

As for your "Trump gets promised money" smear? Baseless libel. No evidence, no whispers—pure projection from folks who can't fathom a leader acting for national interest without graft.

Trump's a billionaire who donates his salary; this is about draining the swamp abroad, not lining pockets.

The "dividing line" between political/personal? Vague only in your imagination.And your doomsday prediction—Venezuela resisting with Cuba, mercenaries clashing, troops deploying into "another war"? Laughable fearmongering.

Venezuela's military is a joke: underpaid, divided, no match for US power.

Acting leader Delcy Rodríguez calls for "resistance," but it's rhetoric—sporadic protests, no organized uprising. Cuba?

They're broke and isolated; their "mix" adds nothing but bluster. No mercenaries needed—US firms would operate under transition agreements, not gunslinging. And troops? Trump's doctrine: No endless wars. This was a one-and-done op, like Panama '89—Noriega captured, tried in Miami, no quagmire.

Maduro rots in a US cell, Venezuela stabilizes under interim guidance, oil flows fairly, and America reaps security wins.

Your "off we go—again!" hysteria? Just hot air from someone who'd rather see chaos than results.

Keep buying bridges; reality's building pipelines.

You're 100% wrong.

Hegseth, not the brightest of Trump's team, let the cat out of the bag...

1 hour ago, webfact said:

returning Venezuelan oil to the US.

1 hour ago, webfact said:

especially regarding American interests in Venezuelan oil.

1 hour ago, webfact said:

prior Venezuelan actions against American oil interests were unacceptable, and Trump is determined to recapture these assets

12 minutes ago, mikeymike100 said:

Trump's plan is to bring in US firms (Exxon, Chevron) to rebuild and pump, selling the oil on global markets with proceeds going to Venezuela's reconstruction and debt repayment (including billions owed to US companies from Chávez-era seizures).

CONDITIONS FOR A RETURN

Whether or not the companies return would depend on how executives, boards and shareholders evaluate the risk of renewed investment in Venezuela, the sources said.

"ConocoPhillips is monitoring developments in Venezuela and their potential implications for global energy supply and stability. It would be premature to speculate on any future business activities or investments," a company spokesperson said in emailed comments to Reuters on Saturday. The company reiterated the statement on Sunday when asked about discussions with administration officials for this story.

Besides uncertainty surrounding the contract framework for any operations there, companies considering a return would also need to deal with security concerns, poor infrastructure, questions about the legality of the U.S. operation to capture Maduro and the possibility of long-term political instability, analysts have told Reuters.

https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/us-pushes-oil-majors-invest-big-venezuela-if-they-want-recover-debts-2026-01-04/

_________________________

As per Chevron:

No quick wins in tapping Venezuela's oil reserves

The oil firm has been in Venezuela for over 100 years and said on Saturday that it is focused on the safety and well-being of its employees, in addition to the integrity of its assets. "We continue to operate in full compliance with all relevant laws and regulations," a Chevron spokesperson said in an emailed response to questions.

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/no-quick-wins-in-tapping-venezuela-s-oil-reserves-ce7e59d9d18ff527

On 1/4/2026 at 7:33 AM, JimHuaHin said:

So the USA can do what ever it wants to whom ever it wants, without consequences?

I await the global boycotts of the USA and USA produce and products, and the cyber attacks against same.

Putin and Xi must be celebrating Trump's stupidity; Trump just opened the door to anything goes.

Nobody is gonna say squat other than the left ringing their hands in horror and we all know what they can do with their opinion

Screenshot 2026-01-05 at 9.24.40 am.png

4 hours ago, wombat said:

Nobody is gonna say squat other than the left ringing their hands in horror and we all know what they can do with their opinion

With regards to Mr. Kobeissi, oil has be got out of the ground before you can physically sell it.

2 minutes ago, JerryM said:

With regards to Mr. Kobeissi, oil has be got out the ground before you can physically sell it.

Maybe Trump can just ask for a deposit, and never deliver, same as he does with his phones - watches - sneakers etc

1 minute ago, CallumWK said:

Maybe Trump can just ask for a deposit, and never deliver, same as he does with his phones - watches - sneakers etc

Well 'deploy' as from the Guardian OP seems an overly strong word for right now based in part upon the letter and corrected letter from Chevron. page 2

In typical trump style when in the spotlight, playing his fantasy of being a strong leader, he goes off script and makes claims that appear to be unknown to anybody else apart from himself. As usual the truth will eventually come out because the smart people never believe a word the clown says because he’s a pathological liar.

Doing exactly what Bush did after the Iraq war and how did that turn out? Another American clusterphuk. Expect more of the same, only even worse, as this demented clown and his fellow nut job circus performers demonstrate their total incompetence to understand how to run a country that isn’t like the US.

15 minutes ago, JBChiangRai said:

You're 100% wrong.

Hegseth, not the brightest of Trump's team, let the cat out of the bag...

You're the one who is 100% wrong—again.

Those cherry-picked forum snippets (likely paraphrased or twisted) aren't "Hegseth letting the cat out of the bag"; they're the same old distortion you've been peddling.

No one in the administration—not Hegseth, not Trump, not Rubio—has said the US is "returning Venezuelan oil to the US" as in outright seizing it for American tanks. What they've repeatedly stated is:

  • Reopening Venezuela's oil sector to international markets (including US companies) after years of Maduro's mismanagement and sanctions.

  • Allowing firms like Chevron and Exxon to resume/expand operations under licenses, with production sold globally and revenues funding Venezuela's reconstruction and compensating prior expropriations of American assets (billions lost when Chávez/Maduro nationalized fields without payment).

That's restitution for theft, not a new theft. Venezuela keeps sovereign ownership; US firms get paid for past losses and future investment. Calling that "recapturing assets" means getting back what was illegally taken—not a land grab.

If Hegseth (or anyone) used phrasing like "American interests in Venezuelan oil," it's standard: protecting U.S. companies abroad and securing energy supply chains against Russia/China/Iran influence. Every president does it; only Trump gets painted as a cartoon villain for it.

Your narrative requires believing:

  • Trump, a billionaire, is orchestrating a war for personal oil kickbacks (zero evidence).

  • The US is planning permanent takeover (despite explicit "transition" language and no troop buildup).

Reality: A one-night raid removed an indicted narco-leader. No invasion force on the ground.

Oil fields remain Venezuelan.

Markets will decide who invests.Keep clutching those anonymous forum quotes as "proof"

  • Popular Post
On 1/4/2026 at 8:40 AM, JerryM said:

Even if international access were fully restored tomorrow, it could take years and incredible expense to bring Venezuelan oil production fully back online. Venezuelan state-owned oil and natural gas company PDVSA says its pipelines haven’t been updated in 50 years, and the cost to update the infrastructure to return to peak production levels would cost $58 billion.

I posted something about this on another thread and if a pipeline and its associated equipment hasn't been updated in 50 years then there is no quick fix and it is a major, major problem. So if Trump and his morons think they can fix it easily, they are in for a very rude shock.

25 minutes ago, mikeymike100 said:

You're the one who is 100% wrong—again.

Those cherry-picked forum snippets (likely paraphrased or twisted) aren't "Hegseth letting the cat out of the bag"; they're the same old distortion you've been peddling.

No one in the administration—not Hegseth, not Trump, not Rubio—has said the US is "returning Venezuelan oil to the US" as in outright seizing it for American tanks. What they've repeatedly stated is:

  • Reopening Venezuela's oil sector to international markets (including US companies) after years of Maduro's mismanagement and sanctions.

  • Allowing firms like Chevron and Exxon to resume/expand operations under licenses, with production sold globally and revenues funding Venezuela's reconstruction and compensating prior expropriations of American assets (billions lost when Chávez/Maduro nationalized fields without payment).

That's restitution for theft, not a new theft. Venezuela keeps sovereign ownership; US firms get paid for past losses and future investment. Calling that "recapturing assets" means getting back what was illegally taken—not a land grab.

If Hegseth (or anyone) used phrasing like "American interests in Venezuelan oil," it's standard: protecting U.S. companies abroad and securing energy supply chains against Russia/China/Iran influence. Every president does it; only Trump gets painted as a cartoon villain for it.

Your narrative requires believing:

  • Trump, a billionaire, is orchestrating a war for personal oil kickbacks (zero evidence).

  • The US is planning permanent takeover (despite explicit "transition" language and no troop buildup).

Reality: A one-night raid removed an indicted narco-leader. No invasion force on the ground.

Oil fields remain Venezuelan.

Markets will decide who invests.Keep clutching those anonymous forum quotes as "proof"

Once again you are talking nonsense.

Those quotes I posted, Hegseth letting the cat out of the bag, all came from an article published by the news team here.

Here is the exact quote from Hegseth made when CBS interviewed him today "But, it means the drugs stop flowing, it means the oil that was taken from us is returned, ultimately, and that criminals are not sent to the United States."

"What was done by Venezuela against American oil interests and oil companies is well understood and it never should have happened and President Trump is willing to recapture that," Hegseth said.

Contrary to what you said, nothing has been said about letting international oil markets, only US companies. This is a planned theft and illegal.

Further evidence

  1. 2019 (White House remarks): Trump said “We have tremendous oil reserves in Venezuela. We’re looking at all options.” — widely interpreted as tying U.S. interest in regime change to oil.

  2. 2020 (campaign rally): He told supporters that Venezuela’s oil “should be flowing to the United States, not to Russia or China.”

  3. 2021 (interviews): Trump criticized U.S. sanctions policy, saying America should “take the oil” rather than leave it “to Maduro and his friends.”

This is a resource grab.

What happens if Delcy Rodríguez or hos replacement says, we'll open up the oil for investment, all countries can apply and be represented?

Or we will only work with Royal Dutch Shell, one of our original partners?

59 minutes ago, mikeymike100 said:

You're the one who is 100% wrong—again.

Those cherry-picked forum snippets (likely paraphrased or twisted) aren't "Hegseth letting the cat out of the bag"; they're the same old distortion you've been peddling.

No one in the administration—not Hegseth, not Trump, not Rubio—has said the US is "returning Venezuelan oil to the US" as in outright seizing it for American tanks. What they've repeatedly stated is:

  • Reopening Venezuela's oil sector to international markets (including US companies) after years of Maduro's mismanagement and sanctions.

  • Allowing firms like Chevron and Exxon to resume/expand operations under licenses, with production sold globally and revenues funding Venezuela's reconstruction and compensating prior expropriations of American assets (billions lost when Chávez/Maduro nationalized fields without payment).

Here's what Trump said:

“We’re going to have our very large United States oil companies – the biggest anywhere in the world – go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure – the oil infrastructure – and start making money for the country,” he said. “They will be reimbursed.”

https://www.straitstimes.com/world/united-states/trump-sees-us-oil-producers-spending-billions-in-venezuela?ref=latest

In essence, it's what Trump repeatedly has said. Where has he ever said that he wants to reopen Venezuela to international oil companies?

I decided to ask Gemini-AI if Trump had ever voiced such sentiments. Here's the question with the answer:

Did Trump every say he wanted non-American oil companies to have access to Venezuelan oil?

In his public statements following the January 2026 military operation, Donald Trump has not expressed a desire for non-American oil companies to have access to or control over Venezuelan oil fields.

Instead, he has framed the mission as a "reclaiming" of assets specifically for United States companies. His rhetoric consistently distinguishes between American interests and those of foreign nations like China and Russia.

Key Distinctions in His Statements

  • "Our Companies" vs. Competitors: Trump has repeatedly argued that the U.S. "built" Venezuela’s oil industry and that the nationalization under the socialist regime was a "theft" of American property. He specifically named U.S. giants like ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips as the entities that should return to "take back" their rights.

  • The Status of China and Russia: He has characterized the involvement of Chinese and Russian state companies in Venezuela over the last two decades as part of the "theft" and "mismanagement" of the country's resources. His administration's "total blockade" was specifically designed to stop these countries from receiving "stolen" Venezuelan oil.

  • Foreign Nations as Customers, Not Partners: While he has not invited foreign companies to operate the fields, he has stated that the U.S. will sell the oil to other nations. On January 3, 2026, when asked about China's energy needs, he told Fox & Friends: "I have a very good relationship with [President] Xi, and there’s not going to be a problem. They’re going to get oil." This implies a customer relationship where the U.S. controls the supply.

Summary of the Stance

Trump’s "America First" energy policy in Venezuela is focused on:

  1. Extraction and Operation: Reserved for U.S. oil majors.

  2. Reimbursement: Using the profits to pay back U.S. companies for past expropriations.

  3. Global Sales: Selling the resulting product on the international market, including to rivals like China, but only under U.S.-dictated terms.

As of January 2026, getting Venezuelan oil to the market after the ouster of Nicolás Maduro is estimated to require an immediate and long-term investment ranging from $10 billion to over $100 billion

Investment Requirements

  • Short-term Modernization: Experts estimate it will cost approximately $10 billion annually to repair "badly broken" infrastructure and begin turning production around. Revitalizing the industry over the next five years could cost between $40 billion and $60 billion.

  • Long-term Production Goals: Rebuilding the industry to reach historical peak levels of 3 to 4 million barrels per day (bpd) is projected to cost $100 billion to $110 billion and take at least a decade.

  • Specific Infrastructure: Updating PDVSA pipelines, many of which have not been serviced in 50 years, alone is estimated to cost between $8 billion and $58 billion

how much will it cost the us to get venezuelan oil to the market? - Google Search

Then you have :

Operational and Logistic Costs

  • Extraction Difficulty: Venezuela’s extra-heavy crude in the Orinoco Belt is expensive to extract and requires diluents (light hydrocarbons) to be blended for transport, adding to operational costs.

  • Market Price Pressure: Current global oil prices hovering around $50–$60 per barrel are considered the "breakeven" point for many Venezuelan fields, meaning new projects may not be profitable without higher market prices or significant cost reductions. 

Strategic Outlook (2026)

  • Production Forecast: Analysts expect Venezuelan production to remain relatively flat at roughly 900,000 bpd through 2026 due to the time required for repairs.

  • US Refiner Benefit: US Gulf Coast refineries are specially designed to process Venezuelan heavy crude; exports to these facilities would become increasingly economical as "above-ground" political risks are removed. 

how much will it cost the us to get venezuelan oil to the market? - Google Search

Mukesh Sahdev, the Chief Oil Analyst at XAnalysts, stated that Venezuela’s vast oil reserves are "too heavy to be desired" due to their complex chemical composition and the significant infrastructure challenges required to process them. 

The crude is extra-heavy and sulfur-rich, making it highly viscous, more expensive to extract, and difficult to refine. The country’s oil sector suffers from decayed gathering systems, power shortages, and a lack of capital. Analysts suggest that many "proven" reserves only became market-viable during periods of high oil prices; at lower prices, these reserves may be economically unrecoverable.

Sahdev noted that global demand is shifting toward cleaner fuels, requiring less of the gasoline and diesel typically produced from heavy crude. This makes long-term, multi-billion-dollar investments in Venezuelan infrastructure less attractive to private companies.

Venezuela oil too heavy to be desired, analyst says | Watch

Despite these challenges, some analysts note that U.S. refiners remain interested in Venezuelan heavy crude because it is necessary for producing diesel, jet fuel, and asphalt, and it is currently in short supply due to ongoing sanctions. 

16 hours ago, bannork said:

necessary for producing diesel, jet fuel, and asphalt

There is your MAGA market right there... Everything America needs to rebuild

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