Chevron, Gunboat Diplomacy Oil, Drugs,
and Immigration Shaped Trump’s Venezuela Campaign
New details of deliberations
show how aides with overlapping agendas drove the United States toward a militarized
confrontation with Venezuela.
Context
·
In 2025, President Trump’s administration escalated toward a militarized
confrontation with Venezuela.
·
Policy drivers:
o Oil (Chevron’s operations and U.S. access
vs. China’s dominance)
o Drugs (targeting cartels via maritime strikes)
o Immigration (mass deportations using wartime legal
tools).
Key Players
·
Marco Rubio (Secretary of State & National Security Adviser): long-time hawk on
Venezuela/Cuba, pushed to frame Maduro as a drug kingpin.
·
Stephen Miller (Homeland Security Adviser): linked anti-immigration agenda to cartel strikes
and deportations.
·
Both worked in tandem, merging overlapping goals into a unified campaign
against Maduro.
Military Actions
·
Secret directive signed July 25, 2025: ordered Pentagon to conduct maritime
strikes against Latin American drug cartels, focusing on Venezuela.
·
Phase One: SEAL Team Six-led boat strikes; at least 29 lethal attacks killed
over 100 people.
·
Phase Two (discussed): possible land operations by Delta Force.
·
Strikes often lacked clear legal frameworks, raising concerns of war crimes.
·
U.S. also began seizing Venezuelan oil tankers, effectively imposing
a blockade.
Legal & Humanitarian
Issues
·
Administration invoked the Alien Enemies Act (1798) to justify deportations
of Venezuelans stripped of protected status.
·
Hundreds deported to El Salvador’s CECOT prison, with reports of torture
and abuse.
·
Courts later ruled immigration did not qualify as “invasion” under the Act.
·
Pentagon struggled with handling survivors of boat strikes, revising
orders belatedly to comply with international law.
Oil Politics
·
Chevron’s license became a bargaining chip:
o Cuban American lawmakers pressured Trump
to end it.
o Trump initially refused renewal (May 2025)
to secure votes for his domestic bill.
o Later reversed course (July 2025), renewing
with revised terms after Chevron lobbied and Maduro freed U.S. prisoners.
·
Oil access remained central, with Trump framing Maduro as stealing U.S. assets.
Takeaways
·
The campaign against Venezuela was shaped by intersecting agendas:
o Rubio’s anti-Maduro/Cuba stance.
o Miller’s immigration crackdown and cartel
focus.
o Trump’s oil strategy and domestic political
needs.
·
Result: a militarized, secretive, and legally contested campaign involving
strikes, deportations, and economic pressure.
·
Critics describe it as gunboat diplomacy, while the administration
frames it as protecting Americans from drugs and crime.
In short: The article
reveals how oil politics, drug war tactics, and immigration policy converged
to push the Trump administration into an aggressive, militarized confrontation with
Venezuela in 2025.
[ABS
News Service/29.12.2025]
On a spring night in the Oval Office, President Trump asked Secretary
of State Marco Rubio how to get tougher on Venezuela.
It was just before Memorial Day, and anti-leftist Cuban American
lawmakers whose votes Mr. Trump needed for his signature domestic policy bill were
urging him to tighten a vise on Venezuela by stopping
Chevron’s oil operations there. But Mr. Trump did not want to lose the only U.S.
foothold in Venezuela’s oil industry, where China is the biggest foreign player.
The president was considering allowing Chevron to continue. But he
told Mr. Rubio, a longtime hawk on Venezuela and Cuba, that they had to show the lawmakers and other
doubters they could bring the hammer down on Nicolás Maduro, the leftist autocratic
leader of Venezuela, whom Mr. Trump had tried to oust in his first term.
Another aide in the room, Stephen Miller, said he had ideas. As Mr.
Trump’s homeland security adviser, he had been talking with other officials about
Mr. Trump’s campaign vow to bomb fentanyl labs. For various
reasons, that notion had faded, and in recent weeks Mr. Miller had turned to exploring
attacks on boats suspected of carrying drugs off the shores of Central America.
Mr. Miller’s deliberations had not focused on Venezuela, which does
not produce fentanyl. But three separate policy goals
began merging that night — crippling Mr. Maduro, using military force against drug
cartels and securing access to Venezuela’s vast oil reserves for U.S. companies.
Two months later, Mr. Trump signed a secret directive ordering the
Pentagon to carry out military operations against Latin American drug cartels and
specifically calling for maritime strikes. Though the justification was drugs in
general, the operation would concentrate enormous naval firepower off the coast
of Venezuela.
The result has been an increasingly militarized pressure campaign
intended to remove Mr. Maduro from power.
It has been marked by U.S. strikes that have
killed at least 105 people on boats in the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific,
a quasi-blockade of oil tankers entering and leaving Venezuelan ports and threats
by Mr. Trump to carry out land strikes in Venezuela.
It reflects overlapping drives by Mr. Rubio and Mr. Miller, who have
worked in tandem on policies against Mr. Maduro. Each has come to it with a focus
on long-held goals: for Mr. Rubio, the son of Cuban immigrants who also serves as
Mr. Trump’s national security adviser, a chance to topple or cripple the governments
of Venezuela and its ally, Cuba; and for Mr. Miller, an architect of Mr. Trump’s
anti-immigration policies, the opportunity to further his goal of mass deportations
and to hit criminal groups in Latin America.
This account of how Venezuela moved to the center
of the administration’s foreign policy agenda this year — to the point of a possible
war — is based on interviews with current and former U.S. officials, almost all
of whom agreed to speak only on the condition of anonymity because of sensitivities
about national security. Among the findings:
·
Mr. Miller told White House officials
in the spring to explore ways to attack drug cartels around their home countries
in Latin America. Mr. Miller wanted attacks that could draw widespread attention
to create a deterrent.
·
The focus on Venezuela intensified
after late May, when Mr. Trump was upset about tough negotiations involving Chevron.
Venezuela’s oil has been more central to Mr. Trump’s deliberations than previously
reported.
·
In meetings in the early summer, Mr.
Rubio and Mr. Miller talked with Mr. Trump about striking Venezuela. The president
appeared swayed by Mr. Rubio’s argument that Mr. Maduro should be seen as a drug
kingpin.
·
Mr. Miller told officials that if
the United States and Venezuela were at war, the Trump administration could again
invoke the Alien Enemies Act, an 18th-century law, to expedite deportations of hundreds
of thousands of Venezuelans the administration stripped of temporary protected
status. He and Mr. Rubio had used it earlier in the year to summarily deport
hundreds of Venezuelans to a notorious prison in El Salvador, only to be stopped
by court rulings.
·
The secret order for military action
against the cartels that Mr. Trump signed on July 25, calling for maritime strikes,
is the first known written directive from the president on such strikes. Administration
officials referred to the boat attacks as “Phase One,” with SEAL Team Six taking
the lead. They have discussed a vague “Phase Two,” with Army Delta Force units possibly
carrying out land operations.
·
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth kept many career uniformed military officials
and lawyers from the drafting of the “execute order” that guides the boat strikes.
As a result, the order had problematic holes in it, including a lack of language
on how to deal with survivors.
Mr. Rubio, Mr. Miller and other principals oversaw an often haphazard
process shrouded in secrecy. Their ability to contain planning to a closed circle
has been aided by the gutting throughout the year of portions of the federal bureaucracy,
including the National Security Council, which coordinates
interagency discussions.
In September, the administration pushed into what is so far the bloodiest
stage of its anti-Maduro campaign. That now amounts to 29 lethal boat attacks over
the past four months, operations that many legal experts say are murders or war crimes. The administration says it has intelligence linking the boats to
drug trafficking but has not publicly presented evidence for that assertion.
Anna Kelly, a White House spokeswoman, said in a statement that the
administration was working “to deliver on the president’s agenda to keep this poison
out of our communities.”
Mr. Rubio told reporters on Dec. 19 that the goal of the boat strikes was to ensure that
“no one wants to get on drug boats anymore” by pounding into them a “fear of the
reaper.”
And he reiterated that the Justice Department had obtained a grand
jury indictment against Mr. Maduro in 2020 on charges
of working with Colombian cocaine producers, who sometimes send their product through
Venezuela. Mr. Maduro’s government, he said, is “an illegitimate regime that openly
cooperates with terrorist elements.”
The seeds of militarizing the approach to Mr. Maduro and Venezuelans
were planted in February, when Mr. Rubio struck a deal with Nayib Bukele, the authoritarian leader of El Salvador, at his
lakeside villa: The United States would pay nearly $5 million to send about 300
Venezuelans accused of being gang members to El Salvador’s Terrorism Confinement
Center, or CECOT.
Soon after his visit with Mr. Bukele, Mr. Rubio designated eight
Latin American criminal groups as foreign terrorist organizations. Tren de Aragua,
a Venezuelan gang, topped the list.
Mr. Miller had already landed on a legal tool to bypass
due process: the Alien Enemies Act, an 18th-century law that
permits immediate detention and deportations of citizens of a country that has invaded
the United States or is at war with it.
Mr. Trump signed an executive order in March invoking the act, with a title warning of “the invasion of the United States
by Tren de Aragua.” In retrospect, the order was an important opening salvo against
Mr. Maduro: It was the administration’s first formal framing of Mr. Maduro and the
United States as being in a type of war. Contrary to a secret
U.S. intelligence assessment, it said Tren de Aragua was
an instrument of Mr. Maduro.
Many of the more than 250 Venezuelan men sent to El Salvador had
no ties to Tren de Aragua or notable criminal records, and some have described widespread
torture and abuse at the CECOT prison.
Courts soon ruled that illegal immigration does not count as the
kind of invasion that justifies using the wartime deportation law. But Mr. Miller
later talked about reviving the use of the Alien Enemies Act if the United States
were in an actual war with Venezuela, a former U.S. official said.
At the same time, Mr. Miller was exploring policies unrelated to
Venezuela that, like the deportations, had their roots in the so-called U.S. war
on terror. He looked at the idea of bombing fentanyl labs in Mexico.
But it became clear that Mexican leaders would not consent, and the administration
feared losing their cooperation on drug and migrant issues. The Washington Post
reported earlier on Mr. Miller’s discussions about striking cartels in Mexico.
By early May, Mr. Miller’s team began asking for further options
for using force against drug cartels.
White House officials and others bandied around relatively more constrained
ideas, including using the C.I.A. to carry out covert strikes on docked boats that
did not have people in them. But Mr. Miller’s team wanted to publicize the strikes.
Officials also discussed blowing up fake drug boats to instill
fear in traffickers. But Mr. Miller’s aides wanted the real thing, officials said.
By June, a request to explore a possible maritime operation was circulating
in the Pentagon. It was not yet focused on Venezuela, but that would soon change
— triggered by Mr. Trump’s yearslong interest in the country’s
most valuable resource.
For years, Chevron has clung to a unique prize in the American corporate
world: permission from the governments of the United States and Venezuela to produce
and export oil in joint ventures.
Because of that, the company became a bargaining chip this year in
secret sets of negotiations among Mr. Trump, Mr. Maduro and U.S. lawmakers — and
entwined with a pivotal move by Mr. Trump toward military action.
It began when Cuban American lawmakers pressed Mr. Trump early this
year to end Chevron’s Biden-era confidential license. After Mr. Trump and Mr. Rubio
announced in late February that they would do so, Mr. Maduro stopped accepting deportation flights of Venezuelans.
Mr. Maduro had agreed to them on Jan. 31 with Richard Grenell, a special envoy for
Mr. Trump.
Chevron’s chief executive, Mike Wirth, lobbied the administration
for a license extension, speaking to Mr. Trump several times over the coming months.
The Cuban American lawmakers got wind that the license could
be extended, and they threatened to withhold their votes
for Mr. Trump’s signature legislation, “the One Big Beautiful Bill.”
At the Oval Office meeting in late May, Mr. Trump told Mr. Rubio
and Mr. Miller that he needed to get the bill passed. But he said he had heard about
the downsides of ending the license, including that Chinese companies would take
over Chevron’s stakes, said an official.
The president demanded options. That was when Mr. Miller offered
to help. He had been nurturing his ideas for mass deportations and boat strikes.
Mr. Trump did not renew Chevron’s license when it expired on May
27. His domestic policy bill passed Congress five weeks later.
The president held a series of White House meetings on whether to
strike at Venezuela. At one in the early summer that included Mr. Rubio, Mr. Miller
and Mr. Grenell, Mr. Rubio argued that Mr. Maduro was a drug kingpin, a characterization
that appeared to stick with Mr. Trump, an official said.
In late July, Mr. Trump reversed course on Chevron’s license. He ordered the Treasury Department to issue
one with revised terms. That happened around the time
Mr. Maduro freed 10 American prisoners in exchange for the more
than 250 Venezuelans that the Trump administration had sent to CECOT, the Salvadoran
prison. And Mr. Trump had been swayed by Mr. Wirth’s argument that Chevron was a
bulwark against China.
But behind the scenes, Mr. Trump set a course for confrontation.
On July 25, he signed a secret order telling the Pentagon to take action against
drug-trafficking groups, putting in motion the targeting of Venezuelans.
That secret directive from Mr. Trump was closely held before The
New York Times reported on its existence
in early August.
The two-page order contained a previously unreported written proposal
for boat strikes. It directed Mr. Hegseth to target vessels in international waters
carrying drugs for any of 24 Latin American “narco-terrorist” groups. The attached
list included ones from Venezuela.
In past administrations, many uniformed lawyers and operational experts
in the Pentagon would have been invited to meetings to discuss the directive. The
National Security Council would have convened discussions among agencies. None of
that happened.
While the military order initially remained secret, the administration’s
public actions pointed to Mr. Maduro being the ultimate target of the campaign.
The secret list of 24 groups included major cartels and groups that
the Trump administration had formally designated as terrorists,
along with numerous relatively obscure Mexican gangs. The same day Mr. Trump signed
the directive, the Treasury Department announced sanctions against “Cartel de los
Soles,” a
slang term for drug corruption in Venezuela’s military,
declaring it a terrorist organization led by Mr. Maduro. The name was at the
bottom of Mr. Trump’s secret list.
On July 27, Mr. Rubio declared that Mr.
Maduro had stolen an election a year earlier and was the head of a cartel rather
than a legitimate president. Slightly over a week later, he and Attorney General
Pam Bondi announced the doubling of a reward for information
leading to Mr. Maduro’s arrest or conviction, to $50 million.
Around the same time, a Trump appointee with little national security
law experience was drafting a Justice Department memo saying boat strikes would
be lawful based on Mr. Trump’s wartime powers. The legal blessing was already developed
by late July, when the Senate confirmed the top two lawyers responsible for reviewing
such an operation — T. Elliot Gaiser, head of the department’s Office of Legal Counsel,
and Earl G. Matthews, Pentagon general counsel. They were essentially presented
with a done deal.
Office of Legal Counsel officials orally advised the administration
that the operation would be legal, then finalized their written memo on Sept. 5. When lawyers from other agencies raised concerns, they were told
there was nothing to debate because the Justice Department had already signed off.
At the Pentagon, a small circle of officials dove into the secret
operational planning for boat strikes.
Mr. Hegseth signed an execute order that created the operational
framework for the attacks. Dated Aug. 5 and written without input from many career
Pentagon officials, it lifted language from previous orders developed for drone
strikes against Al Qaeda targets in places like rural Yemen.
It lacked elements crucial to maritime operations — including any
mention of what to do with shipwrecked survivors of an attack, officials said.
During the planning, an aide to Mr. Miller, Anthony Salisbury, pushed
the Pentagon for ways to expand the scope of the operations, including loosening
standards — like the level of confidence military officials would need that a target
meets the criteria. Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, advised
that the military establish targeting criteria using lessons learned from the post-Sept.
11 wars. Ms. Kelly, the White House spokeswoman, said the account of Mr. Salisbury’s
role was “made up.”
Mr. Hegseth largely froze out of the process
Adm. Alvin Holsey, the head of the Southern Command, which oversees the region’s
forces. Admiral Holsey had begun to raise questions about the plans. For several
months, Mr. Hegseth had contended that the admiral was not pursuing the drug-trafficking
mission aggressively enough. Admiral Holsey abruptly announced in October that he
would leave his position early, at the end of the year. His
reasons remain unclear.
The Pentagon also bypassed a process called the Maritime Operational
Threat Response, used to get input from various agencies when proposing a maritime
action with international implications, said William D. Baumgartner, a retired Coast
Guard rear admiral and lawyer who oversaw Caribbean operations.
On Sept. 2, when U.S. forces detected a speedboat with 11 people
aboard, Mr. Hegseth gave the order to attack. Mr. Trump posted an edited video showing
a single strike blowing the boat apart.
In fact, after the first missile hit, two men climbed from the water
atop the overturned hull and waved, said people who
had seen a full video of the attack.
Frank M. Bradley, the three-star commander of the Joint Special Operations
Command, the force carrying out the attack, had rehearsed in August for scenarios where there might be survivors. He ordered
the
additional strikes, sinking the wreckage and killing
the initial survivors.
Other attacks soon followed. While Mr. Rubio became the public
defender of the strikes, Mr. Miller became the White House overseer — he
convened regular group meetings that included the Pentagon and other agencies. The
Guardian reported earlier on his role.
Then on Oct. 16, after an attack in the Caribbean Sea, military officials
spotted two survivors.
This time, a helicopter picked up the men and brought them aboard
the USS Iwo Jima. The U.S. government soon sent them back to their home countries of Colombia and Ecuador. They have not
been charged at home.
The episode set off a secret — and belated — scramble in the Pentagon
on the question of survivors. In separate calls with the State Department, Pentagon
officials even proposed sending them
to CECOT, the Salvadoran prison, or having them repatriated or shipped to a third
country.
Military lawyers revised the bare-bones “execute order” several times
to include language on survivors, officials said. Some other officials said the
changes reflected earlier planning. The revisions said the military had to treat
detainees according to international law.
But senior officials made it clear in internal conversations that
the best option, if survivors were spotted in the water, was to ask a nearby government
to pick them up rather than have U.S. forces do it, an official said.
The Pentagon declined to comment, following its standard practice
on execute orders.
As the strikes continue, Mr. Trump, Mr. Rubio and Mr. Miller have
moved on to the next stage of the campaign against Mr. Maduro: seizing
oil tankers to deprive Venezuela of revenue. They say Mr. Maduro must return oil and other assets “stolen” from
the United States before they lift what Mr. Trump has referred to as a blockade.
In its first weeks, the tactic has shaken Venezuela’s economy by
paralyzing
its oil industry. Critics call it gunboat diplomacy
or, as Mr. Maduro puts it, “a warmongering and colonialist pretense.”