WASHINGTON — The Trump administration soon will allow Venezuela to sell oil now subject to U.S. sanctions, with the revenue initially dedicated to basic government services such as policing and health care and subject to Washington's oversight, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Wednesday.
The United States will retain control in the short term to ensure the oil revenue is used to stabilize Venezuela, Rubio said at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing. He noted that the interim leaders of the South American country will submit ''a budget'' every month of what they need funded.
''The funds from that (oil sales) will be deposited into an account that we will have oversight over,'' Rubio said, adding that the U.S. Treasury would control the process. Venezuela, he said, ''will spend that money for the benefit of the Venezuelan people.''
Rubio offered new insight into how the U.S. is planning to handle the sale of tens of millions of barrels of oil from Venezuela, which has the largest proven reserves of crude in the world, and oversee where the money flows. After the U.S. raid that captured then-President Nicolás Maduro this month, the U.S. is working to influence the next steps in the South American country through its vast oil resources.
The U.S. will not subsidize oil industry investments in Venezuela, Rubio said, and is only overseeing the sale of sanctioned petroleum as an ''interim step.''
''This is simply a way to divide revenue so that there isn't systemic collapse while we work through this recovery and transition,'' Rubio said.
Democrats and some Republicans on the committee pressed Rubio for more details about Trump's plans for Venezuela's oil. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., asked for assurances from Rubio that the sale of Venezuelan oil will be fair and open, not rigged to benefit oil companies allied with Trump.
''You are taking their oil at gunpoint, you are holding and selling that oil … you're deciding how and for what purposes that money is going to be used in a country of 30 million people,'' Murphy said. ''I think a lot of us believe that that is destined for failure.''