
Bloomberg Daybreak: US Edition Commodities in Flux After US Captures Venezuela’s Maduro
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Jan 5, 2026 Terry Haynes, a foreign policy expert and founder of Pangea Policy, and John Tucker, a Bloomberg journalist specializing in energy, delve into the ramifications of the US capturing Nicolás Maduro. Haynes discusses the strategy behind the intervention, the implications for US-China relations, and the Monroe Doctrine's relevance. Meanwhile, Tucker sheds light on the daunting costs of rebuilding Venezuela's oil industry and how this upheaval may impact China’s oil imports. The conversation navigates geopolitical tensions, market reactions, and potential shifts in alliances.
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U.S. Claims Control Over Venezuela's Future
- The U.S. says it will 'run everything' in Venezuela and seeks total access to rebuild governance and infrastructure.
- This signals a direct U.S. role in shaping Venezuela's political and economic future, not just diplomatic pressure.
U.S. Will Use Sanctions And Seizures As Leverage
- Marco Rubio and other U.S. officials highlight legal and financial levers like seizing sanctioned oil shipments.
- The U.S. plans to use existing sanctions and court orders as leverage over Venezuelan assets.
Venezuela's Oil Revival Will Be Slow And Costly
- Rebuilding Venezuela's oil industry could cost up to $100 billion and take years, needing sustained annual investments.
- Poor maintenance and sabotage mean capacity won't quickly return to historic levels despite vast reserves.
