US-Venezuela oil deal angers China, pushes prices down

My Marina Wide

HOUSTON/BEIJING, Jan 7 (Reuters) – Global oil prices fell on Wednesday as China denounced the U.S. as an aggressor after President Donald Trump’s administration said it had persuaded Venezuela to divert supplies from Beijing and import up to $2 billion worth of crude.

The deal was in line with Trump’s stated goal of controlling the South American OPEC member’s vast oil reserves after ousting its leader Nicolas Maduro, whom he has long portrayed as a drug-trafficking dictator with ties to Washington’s enemies.

Maduro’s Socialist Party allies remain in power in Venezuela, where interim President Delcy Rodriguez walks a fine line between denouncing his “kidnapping” and launching cooperation with the US under Trump’s explicit threats.

TRUMP: OIL MONEY “WILL BE CONTROLLED BY ME”

He said the US would refine and sell up to 50 million barrels of crude stuck in Venezuela under a US blockade as the first step in his plan to revive a sector in decline despite sitting on the world’s largest reserves.

“This oil will be sold at its market price and this money will be controlled by me as President of the United States of America to ensure that it is used for the benefit of the people of Venezuela and the United States!” Trump posted on Tuesday.

Venezuela has not confirmed the agreement.

Crude oil prices fell about 1.0% on global markets due to an anticipated increase in supplies.

The deal could initially require cargo to be diverted to China, Venezuela’s main buyer, as Caracas tries to offload millions of barrels stuck in tankers and storage.

“The United States’ wanton use of force against Venezuela and its demand for ‘America First’ when Venezuela is eliminating its own oil resources are typical acts of aggression,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Mao Ning told a news conference.

“These actions gravely violate international law, gravely violate Venezuela’s sovereignty, and gravely harm the rights of the Venezuelan people.”

China, Russia and Venezuela’s leftist allies all denounced the US raid to capture Maduro over the weekend, which was Washington’s largest such intervention in Latin America since the 1989 invasion of Panama to oust Manuel Noriega.

Washington’s allies are also deeply unsettled by the extraordinary precedent of seizing a foreign head of state, with Trump making a series of threats of multiple actions – from Mexico to Greenland – to advance US interests.

DOZENS DIE DURING MADURO’S CAPTURE

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