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Trump Oil Blockade Raises Legal Issues 12/19 06:19
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump's "blockade" of sanctioned oil
tankers off Venezuela's coast is raising new questions about the legality of
his military campaign in Latin America, while fueling concerns that the U.S.
could be edging closer to war.
The Trump administration says its blockade is narrowly tailored and not
targeting civilians, which would be an illegal act of war. But some experts say
seizing sanctioned oil tied to leader Nicols Maduro could provoke a military
response from Venezuela, engaging American forces in a new level of conflict
that goes beyond their attacks on alleged drug boats.
"My biggest fear is this is exactly how wars start and how conflicts
escalate out of control," said Rep. Jason Crow, a Colorado Democrat who fought
in Iraq and Afghanistan. "And there are no adults in the room with this
administration, nor is there consultation with Congress. So I'm very worried."
Claire Finkelstein, a professor of national security law at the University
of Pennsylvania, said the use of such an aggressive tactic without
congressional authority stretches the bounds of international law and
increasingly looks like a veiled attempt to trigger a Venezuelan response.
"The concern is that we are bootstrapping our way into armed conflict,"
Finkelstein said. "We're upping the ante in order to try to get them to engage
in an act of aggression that would then justify an act of self-defense on our
part."
Republicans largely are OK with the campaign
Trump has used the word "blockade" to describe his latest tactic in an
escalating pressure campaign against Maduro, who has been charged with
narcoterrorism in the U.S. and now has been accused of using oil profits to
fund drug trafficking. While Trump said it only applies to vessels facing U.S.
economic penalties, the move has sparked outrage among Democrats and mostly
shrugs, if not cheers, from Republicans.
Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, said Trump going after sanctioned oil tankers
linked to Venezuela is no different from targeting Iranian oil.
"Just like with the Iranian shadow tankers, I have no problem with that,"
McCaul said. "They're circumventing sanctions."
The president has declared the U.S. is in "armed conflict" with drug cartels
in an effort to reduce the flow of drugs to American communities. U.S. forces
have attacked 28 alleged drug-smuggling boats and killed at least 104 people
since early September. Trump has repeatedly promised that land strikes are
next, while linking Maduro to the cartels.
The campaign has drawn scrutiny in Congress, particularly after it was
revealed that U.S. forces killed two survivors of a boat attack with a
follow-up strike. But Republicans so far have repeatedly declined to require
congressional authorization for further military action in the region, blocking
Democrats' war powers resolutions.
Sen. Roger Wicker, Republican chairman of the Senate Armed Service
Committee, has essentially ended his panel's investigation into the Sept. 2
strike, saying Thursday that the entire campaign is being conducted "on sound
legal advice."
Venezuela pushes back
Trump announced the blockade Tuesday, about a week after U.S. forces seized
a sanctioned oil tanker off Venezuela's coast. The South American country has
the world's largest proven oil reserves and relies heavily on the revenue to
support its economy.
The U.S. has been imposing sanctions on Venezuela since 2005 over concerns
about corruption as well as criminal and anti-democratic activities. The first
Trump administration expanded the penalties to oil, prompting Maduro's
government to rely on a shadow fleet of falsely flagged tankers to smuggle
crude into global supply chains.
The state-owned oil company Petrleos de Venezuela S.A., or PDVSA, has been
largely locked out of global oil markets by U.S. sanctions. It sells most of
its exports at a steep discount on the black market in China.
Nicols Maduro Guerra, Maduro's son and a lawmaker, on Thursday decried
Trump's latest tactic and vowed to work with the private sector to limit any
impact on the country's oil-dependent economy. He acknowledged that it won't be
an easy task.
"We value peace and dialogue, but the reality right now is that we are being
threatened by the most powerful army in the world, and that's not something to
be taken lightly," Maduro Guerra said.
Pentagon prefers the term 'quarantine'
It wasn't immediately clear how the U.S. planned to enact Trump's order. But
the Navy has 11 ships in the region and a wide complement of aircraft that can
monitor marine traffic coming in and out of Venezuela.
Trump may be using the term "blockade," but the Pentagon says officials
prefer "quarantine."
A defense official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to outline internal
reasoning about the policy, said a blockade, under international law,
constitutes an act of war requiring formal declaration and enforcement against
all incoming and outgoing traffic. A quarantine, however, is a selective,
preventive security measure that targets specific, illegal activity.
Rep. Adam Smith, the ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee,
said he was unsure of the legality of Trump's blockade.
"They're blockading apparently the oil industry, not the entire country,"
said Smith, who represents parts of western Washington state. "How does that
change things? I got to talk to some lawyers, but in general, a blockade is an
act of war."
The U.S. has a long history of leveraging naval sieges to pressure lesser
powers, especially in the 19th century era of "gunboat diplomacy," sometimes
provoking them into taking action that triggers an even greater American
response.
But in recent decades, as the architecture of international law has
developed, successive U.S. administrations have been careful not to use such
maritime shows of force because they are seen as punishing civilians -- an
illegal act of aggression outside of wartime.
During the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, President John F. Kennedy famously
called his naval cordon to counter a real threat -- weapons shipments from the
Soviet Union -- a "quarantine" not a blockade.
Mark Nevitt, an Emory University law professor and former Navy judge
advocate general, said there is a legal basis for the U.S. to board and seize
an already-sanctioned ship that is deemed to be stateless or is claiming two
states.
But a blockade, he said, is a "wartime naval operation and maneuver"
designed to block the access of vessels and aircraft of an enemy state.
"I think the blockade is predicated on a false legal pretense that we are at
war with narcoterrorists," he said.
Nevitt added: "This seems to be almost like a junior varsity blockade, where
they're trying to assert a wartime legal tool, a blockade, but only doing it
selectively."
Geoffrey Corn, a Texas Tech law professor who previously served as the
Army's senior adviser for law-of-war issues and has been critical of the Trump
administration's boat strikes, said he was not convinced the blockade was
intended to ratchet up the conflict with Venezuela.
Instead, he suggested it could be aimed at escalating the pressure on Maduro
to give up power or encouraging his supporters to back away from him.
"You can look at it through the lens of, is this an administration trying to
create a pretext for a broader conflict?" Corn said. "Or you can look at it as
part of an overall campaign of pressuring the Maduro regime to step aside."
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