White House Slaps Financial Sanctions On Venezuela Amid Economic Crisis

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaks at a news conference with International press in Caracas, Venezuela, Tuesday, Aug. 22, 2017. Maduro spoke about the next regional elections in the country and the bad relations with the Government of the United State. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaks at a news conference in Caracas, Venezuela, Tuesday, Aug. 22, 2017. Immigration authorities in Colombia announced that Venezuela's ousted chief prosecutor Luisa Ortega Diaz... Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaks at a news conference in Caracas, Venezuela, Tuesday, Aug. 22, 2017. Immigration authorities in Colombia announced that Venezuela's ousted chief prosecutor Luisa Ortega Diaz is on her way to Brazil. Ortega said that Maduro removed her in order to stop a probe linking him and his inner circle to nearly $100 million in bribes from Brazilian construction company Odebrecht. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos) MORE LESS
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CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — The Trump administration on Friday slapped sweeping financial sanctions on Venezuela, barring banks from any new financial deals with the government or state-run oil giant PDVSA.

The sanctions Trump signed by executive order are bound to dramatically escalate tensions between Venezuela and the U.S. and exacerbate the country’s economic crisis.

“These measures are carefully calibrated to deny the Maduro dictatorship a critical source of financing to maintain its illegitimate rule, protect the United States financial system from complicity in Venezuela’s corruption and in the impoverishment of the Venezuelan people, and allow for humanitarian assistance,” the White House said in a statement.

The actions prohibit dealings in new debt and equity issued by the government of Venezuela and its state oil company. They also also prohibit dealings in certain existing bonds owned by the Venezuelan public sector, as well as dividend payments to the government of Venezuela.

But they stop short of cutting off U.S. imports of Venezuelan oil that are crucial both to Venezuela’s economy and U.S. oil refiners.

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence had signaled the upcoming move earlier, tweeting that the U.S. “will not stand by as Venezuela crumbles.”

“The birthright of the Venezuelan people has always been and will always be libertad,” he wrote, using the Spanish word for “freedom.”

Last month the Trump administration promised to take strong economic actions if President Nicolas Maduro’s increasingly authoritarian government went ahead with plans to create a constitutional assembly comprised of government loyalists.

Since the assembly has been seated, the 545 delegates have voted by acclamation to oust the nation’s outspoken chief prosecutor, take power from the opposition-controlled congress and create a “truth commission” that many fear will be used to target opponents. Several prominent opposition mayors have also been removed or ordered arrested by the pro-government supreme court.

The new economic sanctions are likely to worsen a crisis that has already seen the oil-dependent economy shrink by around 35 percent since 2014 — more than the U.S. economy did during the Great Depression.

Maduro, who is among some 30 seniors officials already barred from the U.S., seemed almost resigned to that possibility. He warned this week that the Trump administration was readying a “commercial, oil and financial blockade” in the mold of the one that punished Cuba for decades. He said it would be meant to pave the way for a U.S. military intervention.

“The economic measures the U.S. government is preparing will worsen Venezuela’s economic situation,” he told foreign journalists Tuesday, vowing to protect the population from the worst effects of any sanctions.

During a Latin America tour this month, Pence downplayed President Trump’s recent talk of a “military option” for Venezuela while repeatedly raising the specter of sanctions. He did so again on Wednesday in a meeting in Miami with several leading opposition exiles.

David Smilde, a Tulane University sociologist who has spent decades researching Venezuela, said blanket sanctions that immediately cut off the government’s cash flow and hurt the population are likely to strengthen Maduro in the short-term.

“It will bolster his discourse that Venezuela is the target of an economic war,” said Smilde.

But with Venezuela’s streets calmer than they have been for months, and the opposition still reeling from its failure to prevent the constitutional assembly from going forward, action from increasingly concerned international community represents the best chance of reining in Maduro, he added.

Maduro is already struggling to combat widespread shortages and triple-digit inflation as oil production — the economy’s lifeblood — has tumbled to its lowest level in more than two decades. Any economic sanctions, however mild, increase the risk Venezuela will default on its ballooning debt.

The government and PDVSA have around $4 billion in debt payments coming due before the end of the year but only $9.7 billion in international reserves on hand, the vast majority consisting of gold ingots that are hard to trade immediately for cash.

Venezuela has taken desperate steps to remain current on its debt throughout the economic crisis and the president has blamed his enemies for spreading rumors about any impending default.

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