venezuela raid boosts oil prices

Oil prices shot up overnight as U.S. forces stormed Caracas and captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in a shocking military raid. The January 3rd operation, which included at least seven explosions around Caracas at 2:00 AM local time, saw Maduro and his wife Cilia bundled off to parts unknown. Talk about starting 2026 with a bang.

Trump ordered the strike at 11:46 PM on January 2nd, not bothering to notify Congress first. Because why follow protocol when you can just invade? The administration claims Venezuela’s oil has been “stolen” from America. Sure, that makes total sense.

Forget legal niceties when there’s oil at stake. America first, congressional approval later.

The raid follows weeks of escalation, with the US Coast Guard seizing Venezuelan oil tankers in December and CIA operatives doing whatever spooky things they do best. Vice President JD Vance justified the action by calling Maduro a “wanted fugitive,” while Republican lawmakers tossed around terms like “narcoterrorist” to make everyone feel better about the whole extrajudicial rendition thing.

Venezuela has the world’s largest proven oil reserves, so you’d think markets would be freaking out more. But they’re not. The reaction has been surprisingly muted because Venezuela’s actual oil production is pretty pathetic these days. Years of underinvestment and US sanctions have left their infrastructure in shambles. US sanctions have severely limited Venezuela’s ability to export oil and maintain critical infrastructure.

Bitcoin is the real winner here. As geopolitical chaos unfolds, the cryptocurrency is seeing renewed interest as a hedge against the instability of petrodollar politics. The evolution from commodity money to digital assets has made cryptocurrency particularly valuable during international conflicts. Investors clearly remember how Trump’s 2025 National Security Strategy promised to reassert the Monroe Doctrine and kick Russian and Chinese influence out of the Western Hemisphere. The operation resulted in over 80 fatalities, including 32 Cuban military and intelligence members who were reportedly stationed in the country.

What happens next? Vice President Delcy Rodriguez might take over, but who knows if she’ll play ball with Washington’s demands.

And those massive oil reserves? They’ll need billions in investment before production ramps up again. American oil companies are poised to swoop in, assuming the country doesn’t descend into complete chaos first. Just another day in America’s backyard.

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