US veteran freed from detention in Venezuela: envoy
The family expressed gratitude to US President Donald Trump, and to Grenell
Updated 21 May 2025
AFP
WASHINGTON: A US military veteran detained in Venezuela since last year was freed and returned to the United States on Tuesday, a senior White House official said.
“Joe St. Clair is back in America,” special presidential envoy Richard Grenell posted on X, adding photos of himself and the freed veteran.
“I met Venezuelan officials in a neutral country today to negotiate an America First strategy. This is only possible because Donald Trump puts Americans first,” Grenell added, echoing Trump’s slogan.
A US Air Force veteran, St. Clair “had been wrongfully detained in Venezuela since November 2024,” according to his family, which also said he has been safely released.
“This news came suddenly, and we are still processing it — but we are overwhelmed with joy and gratitude,” the former detainee’s parents, Scott and Patti St. Clair, said in a statement.
The family expressed gratitude to US President Donald Trump, and to Grenell.
They also thanked advocacy organizations for their help in the case, and said they remained in “solidarity with the families of those who are still being held.”
The statement did not provide details on the conditions under which St. Clair had been detained.
The release comes nearly four months after Caracas freed six Americans detained in the country, in what was presented as a diplomatic breakthrough of sorts with a government that Washington views as hostile.
At the time Grenell, who serves in a broad role as envoy for special missions, flew to Caracas and met with President Nicolas Maduro, who had called for a “new beginning” in ties with Washington.
Maduro is accused by Washington of stealing Venezuela’s 2024 presidential election.
Last week a two-year-old Venezuelan girl, whose parents were deported from the United States without her, was flown home to Caracas, earning Trump rare praise from Venezuela’s government.
This week, the US Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to end the temporary protected status that has legally shielded some 350,000 Venezuelans from potential deportation, while an appeal proceeds in a lower court.
US lifts some Venezuela sanctions to ease oil sales
Broad US license eases some sanctions on Venezuelan oil
Does not ease measures on production of Venezuelan crude
Updated 2 sec ago
Reuters
WASHINGTON: The administration of President Donald Trump lifted some sanctions on Venezuela’s oil industry on Thursday to make it easier for US companies to sell its crude oil, and said more restrictions on the country would be lifted soon. The move by the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control authorizes US companies to buy, sell, transport, store and refine Venezuelan crude oil, but does not lift existing US sanctions on production. A White House official said the measure “would help flow existing product” from Venezuela and that there will soon be more announcements on the easing of sanctions. Trump has said the United States intends to control Venezuela’s oil sales and revenues indefinitely since US forces seized the country’s leader Nicolas Maduro in a raid on the capital Caracas on January 3. He has said he also wants US oil companies to eventually invest $100 billion dollars to restore the OPEC-member nation’s production to its historic peaks following years of underinvestment and mismanagement. In the meantime, Washington and Caracas have already agreed an initial deal to sell 50 million barrels of Venezuelan crude oil, with European trading houses Vitol and Trafigura marketing the supply. Treasury’s new authorization, known as a general license, opens up Venezuela oil trade to additional companies, provided they are from the United States. It allows transactions involving the government of Venezuela and state oil company PDVSA related to “the lifting, exportation, reexportation, sale, resale, supply, storage, marketing, purchase, delivery, or transportation of Venezuelan-origin oil, including the refining of such oil, by an established US entity.” It specifically excludes firms and individuals from rivals like China, Iran, North Korea, Cuba and Russia. During President Donald Trump’s first administration, Treasury designated Venezuela’s entire energy industry as subject to US sanctions in 2019 after Maduro’s first re-election, which Washington did not recognize. The new license does not authorize any payment terms that are not commercially reasonable, involve debt swaps or payments in gold, or are denominated in digital currency. America first Oil producers Chevron, Repsol and ENI, refiner Reliance Industries, and some US oil service providers had sought licenses in recent weeks to expand output or exports from the OPEC member. Expanding production in the country would require additional US authorizations. Jeremy Paner, a lawyer at Hughes Hubbard & Reed and a former OFAC sanctions investigator, said the authorization is broad in the sense that it opens up many operations including refining, transportation and “lifting” of Venezuelan oil. But he said the scope is narrow in that it only applies to US companies. Kevin Book, an analyst at ClearView Energy Partners, said the authorization could provide clarity for US companies while maintaining the previous standard of case-by-case review for non-US entities. “In short, it appears to offer ‘America First, Others Ask’ sanctions relief.” The large number of individual requests to the US government had delayed progress on plans to expand exports and get investment moving quickly into Venezuela, two sources said this week. The new OFAC license, meanwhile, came as lawmakers in Venezuela on Thursday approved a sweetened reform of the country’s main oil law that is expected to grant autonomy to private producers in joint ventures or under new contracts to operate their projects and commercialize the output. It also formalizes an oil production-sharing model first introduced by Maduro and negotiated with little-known energy firms in recent years. Francisco Monaldi, director of the Latin American Energy Program at Rice University’s Baker Institute in Houston, said he wondered if the exclusion of Russian and Chinese entities would make it hard for PDVSA to operate or market oil from those ventures. Ventures with those countries produce about 22 percent of the oil, he said. “If they cannot export the oil coming from these ventures, that’s a big problem.”