A Record-Breaking Seizure
President Donald Trump confirmed Wednesday that U.S. forces have seized what he's calling the largest oil tanker ever captured, boarding a massive vessel off Venezuela's coast and dramatically escalating tensions with Nicolás Maduro's government and its Cuban allies.
"As you probably know we've just seized a tanker on the coast of Venezuela," Trump told reporters, according to the Associated Press. "Large tanker, very large, largest one ever seized, actually." When asked what would happen to the crude on board, his answer was blunt: "We keep it, I guess."
The operation involved Coast Guard personnel backed by the Navy's USS Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group, who boarded the Panama-flagged Skipper in international waters without casualties. U.S. officials say they were executing a federal seizure warrant connected to long-running sanctions targeting an illicit Iran-Venezuela oil network.
The tanker, previously known as the M/T Adisa, was carrying approximately 2 million barrels of heavy crude. About half the cargo was reportedly bound for a Cuban importer, and the vessel has been linked to schemes benefiting Iran's Revolutionary Guard and Hezbollah, according to the AP.
Attorney General Pam Bondi posted video footage on X showing FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, and Coast Guard teams fast-roping from helicopters onto the tanker's deck, guns drawn, in what looked like something out of an action movie.
Venezuela Calls It Piracy
Venezuela's government didn't mince words in its response, condemning the seizure as "blatant theft" and "international piracy." Officials accused Washington of targeting "our natural wealth, our oil, our energy" and pledged to challenge the action at international bodies, Reuters reported.
Part of a Broader Naval Campaign
The tanker seizure isn't happening in isolation. It comes amid a months-long U.S. campaign that's included deadly strikes on suspected drug-smuggling boats and a massive naval buildup in the Caribbean under Operation Southern Spear. The deployment has put the Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group and other warships in the region, operations that have left dozens dead at sea.
Former national security adviser John Bolton recently suggested in an interview that Trump has "put the gun on the table" in dealings with Maduro. He pointed to the carrier deployment and boat strikes as evidence the White House is blurring the lines between counter-narcotics operations and regime-change goals.
Trump offered few specifics about the Skipper case beyond saying the U.S. seized it "for very good reason," and hinted more actions could be coming.