US Seizure of Rogue Oil Tanker Off Venezuela Signals New Crackdown on Shadow Fleet

A Venezuelan navy patrol boat escorts Panamanian flagged crude oil tanker Yoselin near the El Palito refinery in Puerto Cabello, Venezuela on November 11, 2025. Venezuela on Tuesday announced what it called a major, nationwide military deployment to counter the US naval presence off its coast. (Photo by Juan Carlos HERNANDEZ / AFP) (Photo by JUAN CARLOS HERNANDEZ/AFP via Getty Images)

MIAMI (AP) — The recent seizure of an oil tanker known as Skipper by the U.S. off the coast of Venezuela marks a dramatic escalation of President Donald Trump’s campaign to choke off Venezuelan leader NicolౠMaduro’s access to oil revenues. The tanker is part of the illicit “shadow fleet” that global energy powers, including Venezuela, Iran and Russia, use to sidestep U.S. sanctions. Analysts say the operation could signal a broader U.S. campaign to clamp down on fuel smuggling. The move also threatens Maduro’s economic lifeline, although experts warn a broader blockade could roil global markets and raise U.S. gasoline prices.

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