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The New York Times - Rubio Lays Out Long-Term U.S. Involvement in Venezuela - January 7, 2026

 

The New York Times

Rubio Lays Out Long-Term U.S. Involvement in Venezuela

The secretary of state told lawmakers the administration has a three-phase plan for Venezuela after ousting its leader, including seizing oil and controlling the proceeds.


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Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth standing amid a group of reporters.


Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters that the first priority would be “the stabilization of the country.”Credit...Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Robert Jimison

By Robert Jimison


Robert Jimison covers foreign policy and defense issues in Congress. He reported from the Capitol.

Jan. 7, 2026


The Trump administration has a three-phase plan for stabilizing and rebuilding Venezuela and installing a new government, Secretary of State Marco Rubio told members of Congress on Wednesday, laying out a prolonged mission for the United States there following the military raid that captured President Nicolás Maduro.


Mr. Rubio’s comments during a classified briefing with senators on Capitol Hill suggested a far longer-term and more elaborate strategy for Venezuela, including potentially for the U.S. military, than the Trump administration has laid out publicly to date.


Following the briefing, Mr. Rubio told reporters that the first priority would be “the stabilization of the country.”


“We don’t want it descending into chaos,” he said, adding that he was working with Venezuela’s interim president, Delcy Rodríguez, with whom he had spoken several times since the weekend raid.


Central to that effort, Mr. Rubio explained, would be a tightened quarantine on Venezuelan oil, reflected in the seizure on Wednesday of two additional oil tankers.


“We are in the midst right now and in fact about to execute on a deal to take all the oil,” Mr. Rubio said, pointing to the most powerful economic lever the U.S. has over Venezuela.


“We are going to take between 30 and 50 million barrels of oil. We’re going to sell it in the marketplace at market rates, not at the discounts Venezuela was getting,” Mr. Rubio added. “That money will then be handled in such a way that we will control how it is disbursed in a way that benefits the Venezuelan people, not corruption, not the regime.”


The Venezuelan state oil company later confirmed in a statement that it was in negotiations to sell oil to the United States, but did not detail how such a deal would work.


Mr. Rubio’s remarks echoed comments President Trump made on social media the night before, when he said the seized oil “will be sold at its Market Price, and that money will be controlled by me, as President of the United States of America, to ensure it is used to benefit the people of Venezuela and the United States!”



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It was unclear what legal authority the administration would rely on to commandeer the oil money to use as it sees fit. The Constitution gives Congress control over government spending, barring any money from being expended except as appropriated by legislation.


The second phase of the plan, Mr. Rubio said, would be focused on the recovery of the nation that has lived under the Maduro government for more than a decade. Part of that effort, he said, would be funded by “ensuring that American, Western and other companies have access to the Venezuelan market in a way that’s fair,” he explained.


Lastly, Mr. Rubio said that the focus will be on “rebuilding civil society” and transitioning to a more representative democratic government. That would be done through a “process of reconciliation nationally within Venezuela, so that the opposition forces can be amnestied and released,” he said.


He sounded an optimistic note about the work ahead, saying, “we feel like we’re moving forward here in a very positive way.”


Robert Jimison covers Congress for The Times, with a focus on defense issues and foreign policy.


See more on: Marco Rubio, Nicolás Maduro, Donald Trump

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More on the U.S. Operation in Venezuela


On January 3, the U.S. military seized Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife in a strike on Caracas, the culmination of a campaign to oust Maduro from power.

Close Call for U.S. Commandos:  As a damaged U.S. helicopter struggled to stay aloft over Venezuela’s capital, the success of the entire operation hung in the balance.


Lawmakers Receive Classified Briefings: Republicans praised what they characterized as a narrow and well-executed plan, while Democrats expressed alarm, warning that the mission was vaguely defined. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told lawmakers the administration has a three-phase plan for Venezuela after ousting its leader, including seizing oil and controlling the proceeds.


Oil Tankers: The U.S. military seized two oil tankers, including a Russian-flagged ship that had been evading American forces for weeks, as the Trump administration moved aggressively to take control of Venezuela’s multibillion-dollar oil industry. Both are part of a so-called “ghost fleet” — vessels that surreptitiously transport oil for Russia, Iran or Venezuela in violation of sanctions.


Venezuelans Struggle to Pay for Food: A new Gallup survey found that more than half of Venezuelans reported struggling to afford food last year, with economic hardship reaching even the wealthy.


Trump Calls Colombia’s President: The conversation appeared to defuse a crisis that erupted after President Trump said military action against Colombia “sounds good.” President Gustavo Petro spoke to The New York Times just before the call.


Venezuelan Oil: Companies like Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips say that Venezuela owes them billions of dollars for confiscating their assets two decades ago. 


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