Reuters
Trump administration’s
U.N.
General Antonio Guterres
the Security Council
U.N. Security Council
PDVSA
Chevron
Halliburton
Financial Integrity Network
Maduro’s
RIA
Trump on the National Security Council
Trump’s
Commerce
the International Monetary Fund
All Rights Reserved
John Bolton
Nicolas Maduro
Donald Trump
Jorge Arreaza
Samuel Moncada
Hugo Chavez
David Murray
Fernando Cutz
Juan Guaido
Wilbur Ross
Mitra Taj
Roberta Rampton
Brian Ellsworth
Luc Cohen
Michelle Nichols
Alistair BellAll
Venezuelan
Peruvian
Venezuelans
Western
Latin American
the Western Hemisphere
No matching tags
U.S.
Washington
Venezuela
Lima
Russia
China
the United States
Britain
France
Cuba
Peru
Turkey
Bolivia
Iran
Beijing
Caracas
Maduro
New York
No matching tags
6 Min ReadLIMA (Reuters) - U.S. national security adviser John Bolton on Tuesday said Washington was ready to impose sanctions on any international company doing business with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, a sharp escalation of U.S. pressure on the leftist leader. Bolton, one of the Trump administration’s most influential hawks on Venezuela, told reporters the move forces companies around the world to choose whether to risk access to the United States and its financial system for business with Maduro. The order also could inflame the U.S.-China trade war if it hits Beijing hard, with Venezuela owing China oil deliveries as repayment for loans through 2021, said Fernando Cutz, a former top aide to Trump on the National Security Council.
As said here by Mitra Taj