U.S. troops entered Venezuela overnight—was it about security or oil power in 72 hours?
This video breaks down the Venezuela oil war through the lens of power, money, and democracy. As American troops move in without a congressional vote, oil executives are quietly summoned to Washington. Lawmakers from both parties begin asking uncomfortable questions: who controls the oil, who controls the money, and who ultimately profits?
We examine how U.S. executive power, private energy interests, and Venezuela’s collapsed oil infrastructure collide at a critical moment. From Chevron and ExxonMobil meetings to war powers resolutions in Congress, this analysis reveals how modern conflicts are shaped long before the first shot is fired.
Beyond Washington, the consequences ripple outward. Venezuela’s oil is not just a national asset—it is a global lever. Markets react, rivals watch closely, and energy security calculations shift in Beijing, Moscow, and across Latin America. This episode explores how oil, democracy, and geopolitical leverage intersect in a system where oversight lags behind power.
We also lay out three possible paths forward: managed oversight, gray-zone drift, or institutional fracture. None are predictions—but all are grounded in the mechanics already visible today.
If you care about transparency, accountability, and how wars are decided in the modern era, this is the analysis to watch. Subscribe for deeper breakdowns, and share your view in the comments.
FAQ: Did U.S. oil companies influence the Venezuela military decision?
FAQ: What is the latest status of U.S. involvement in Venezuela today?
CHAPTERS
0:00 — Introduction
1:30 — Troops Enter Venezuela
3:10 — Oil CEOs at White House
5:00 — Congress Bypassed
6:40 — Venezuela Oil System Collapse
8:20 — War Powers Vote: 5 Republicans
10:10 — Global Oil Reactions
12:00 — 3 Future Scenarios
13:40 — What This Means for Democracy
HASHTAGS
#Venezuela
#OilPolitics
#USForeignPolicy
#Geopolitics
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