A Vision for Venezuelan Recovery
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick isn't mincing words about what he sees as Venezuela's potential. In a Monday post on X, he laid out the Trump administration's rationale for getting involved in a country that, by his telling, should be thriving but instead became an economic disaster zone.
"Venezuela was once a great, rich and dynamic country," Lutnick wrote, ticking off an impressive list of natural assets. The country sits on enormous reserves of oil and natural gas, hundreds of millions of tonnes of nickel and bauxite, and thousands of tonnes of gold. Much of this wealth is concentrated in the Orinoco Mining Arc, which Lutnick described as "one of the largest mineral and mining regions in the hemisphere."
So what went wrong? According to Lutnick, pretty much everything under Nicolás Maduro, who was apprehended by American forces over the weekend.
Maduro Destroyed Prosperity, Trump Will Fix It
"Maduro didn't unlock prosperity. He destroyed it," Lutnick said bluntly. He accused the Venezuelan leader of crushing his people "while stealing their money, resources and heritage."
The Commerce Secretary's pitch is straightforward: Trump "will fix the broken Venezuelan economy and rebuild the country." And this isn't just about Venezuela, Lutnick argued. "A strong, exporting Venezuelan economy is great for America," as well as for the entire Western Hemisphere.
Billions in Oil Investment Coming, Maybe
Trump announced last week that U.S. oil companies are gearing up to invest billions of dollars to revive Venezuela's oil sector. The country currently produces around 800,000 barrels per day, dramatically below its 1990s peak, despite holding the world's largest proven reserves at 303 billion barrels.
Here's where things get interesting: executives at the largest U.S. energy companies have denied holding meetings with the administration about this, either before or after Maduro's ouster last week. So there's a bit of a disconnect between the grand plans being announced and what the oil industry is actually saying.
The challenges are real, too. Venezuela's oil is predominantly extra-heavy crude, which is harder to extract and more expensive to process than lighter varieties. The state-run oil company, PDVSA, has suffered from decades of mismanagement and underinvestment, resulting in dilapidated infrastructure. All of which could pose serious problems for whatever the administration has in mind.
Bipartisan Backlash Against Military Action
Trump's Venezuela operation isn't playing well across the political spectrum. Senator Bernie Sanders didn't hold back, declaring that "The President of the United States does NOT have the right to unilaterally take this country to war." Sanders suggested Trump should focus on "crises at home" instead of trying to "run" Venezuela for "Big Oil."
More surprisingly, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a former Trump ally, also criticized the military action, calling it a betrayal of the "America First" agenda that got Trump elected.
"This is the same Washington playbook that we are so sick and tired of that doesn't serve the American people, that actually serves the big corporations, the banks, and the oil executives," Greene said.
Market Response
The United States Oil Fund LP (USO), which tracks daily price movements of crude oil, rose 1.83% on Monday, closing at $70.22. The fund was down 0.36% in overnight trading. According to market data, USO scores poorly on momentum metrics, showing an unfavorable price trend across short, medium, and long-term periods.
Whether Lutnick's vision of a rebuilt Venezuelan economy materializes remains to be seen. The country has enormous potential on paper, but the gap between announcing billions in investment and actually deploying capital into a country with crumbling infrastructure and uncertain political stability is substantial. And with criticism coming from both Bernie Sanders and Marjorie Taylor Greene, the administration faces a rare moment of bipartisan skepticism about its approach.




