Why Venezuela is important
For years, Venezuela represented a lingering source of geopolitical and economic ambiguity: a sanctioned petro-state sitting atop the world’s largest proven oil reserves.
This resource-rich country of 30 million people, just a few hours by plane from Florida, has for more than a quarter century been ruled by a regime that was not only hostile to the United States, but also deeply embedded with America’s most significant adversaries.
There is not a single overriding reason that fixing Venezuela is strategically important for the United States. Rather, it is a combination of factors that are collectively quite meaningful, from energy markets and migration to homeland security, geopolitics, and stability across the Americas.
Venezuela has been a festering problem for the United States for decades. With Maduro removed, his successor, Delcy Rodriguez, now faces intense economic and military pressure to govern in a manner acceptable to the American government.
That pressure will center on clear priorities: restoring American property expropriated by the Chavez and Maduro regimes, revitalizing Venezuela’s oil sector through reintegration with global energy markets, and laying the groundwork for sustainable economic recovery for the Venezuelan people.
Remarkably, if these outcomes hold, the Venezuela problem may have been largely resolved—without the loss of a single American life.
The world’s largest oil reserves
Venezuela holds roughly 300 billion barrels of proven crude oil reserves, the largest in the world, representing about 17% of the global total. They are mostly found in the Orinoco Belt, with its heavy and extra-heavy crude deposits….
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