The United States announced sanctions relief for Venezuela on October 18, 2023,Footnote 1 a day after representatives of Nicolás Maduro and opposition leaders from the Unitary PlatformFootnote 2 signed an electoral roadmap agreement (the Barbados Agreement) that the United States had quietly facilitated.Footnote 3 The relief involved issuing or amending four Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) general licenses, authorizing or temporarily authorizing certain prohibited transactions and trading bans, leaving all other sanctions in place.Footnote 4 The sanctions relief was subject to two conditions: Venezuela had to reinstate opposition candidates who had been banned from running for president, and Venezuela had to release wrongfully detained U.S. nationals and Venezuelan political prisoners.Footnote 5 On January 30, 2024, the United States announced the non-renewal of one of the general licenses and the revocation of another after “Maduro and his representatives . . . [took actions that were] inconsistent with the [Barbados] agreements.”Footnote 6 The deal, which the United States had hoped would be a “concrete step toward resolution of Venezuela's political, economic, and humanitarian crisis,” appears to be dead.Footnote 7
The United States has imposed sanctions on the government of Nicolás Maduro pursuant to a series of executive orders and regulations issued since 2015.Footnote 8 More than 350 sanctions designations have been made, including on: Maduro and other high-ranking officials; the government-controlled oil and gas company Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PdVSA); the state-owned mining company CVG Compania General de Mineria de Venezuela CA (Minerven);Footnote 9 and Venezuela's central bank.Footnote 10 All Venezuelan government property in the United States has been blocked since 2019.Footnote 11 The United States has maintained that it “will consider lifting sanctions for those who take concrete, meaningful, and verifiable actions to support democratic order and combat corruption in Venezuela.”Footnote 12 In November 2022, as an inducement to Venezuela, Chevron was issued a license authorizing certain transactions related to its joint ventures with PdVSA, including for the “[s]ale to, exportation to, or importation into the United States of petroleum or petroleum products.”Footnote 13
On October 17, 2023, Maduro's representatives and opposition leaders signed the Barbados Agreement.Footnote 14 The agreement established: a timeline for presidential elections during the second half of 2024; electoral guarantees, including access of international election observers and media; and “the right of each political actor [i.e., the ruling party and the opposition] to choose their candidate for the presidential elections freely and in accordance with their internal mechanisms” and Venezuelan law.Footnote 15 That same day, U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell Fontelles, Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Mélanie Joly, and UK Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs James Cleverly jointly “welcomed” the agreement, “call[ed] for the unconditional release of all those unjustly detained, the independence of the electoral process and judicial institutions, freedom of expression including for members of the press, and respect for human and political rights,” and committed to “work with our international partners and others to address the urgent needs of all Venezuelans inside and outside their country and to alleviate the humanitarian crisis.”Footnote 16 The next day, Secretary Blinken announced that, “[c]onsistent with [the United States’] longstanding commitment,” it would “provide U.S. sanctions relief in response to concrete steps toward competitive elections and respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms.”Footnote 17 He cautioned that the “United States and the international community will closely follow implementation of the electoral roadmap, and the U.S. government will take action if commitments under the electoral roadmap and with respect to political prisoners are not met.”Footnote 18 He also specified the two conditions noted above that were required for continued sanctions relief. The Barbados Agreement and the easing of sanctions came on the heels of Venezuela's agreement for the first time in years to accept flights of Venezuelan nationals deported from the United States.Footnote 19 The number of encounters of Venezuelan nationals along the southwest border of the United States reached new highs in 2023.Footnote 20 The United States hoped that a presidential election would bring political change that would reduce migration and induce Venezuelans who had left to return.
The sanctions relief comprised the issuance of two general licenses (GL 43 and GL 44) and two amended general licenses (GL 3I and GL 9H).Footnote 21 GL 43 authorized transactions involving Minerven and its subsidiaries that had been prohibited.Footnote 22 GL 44 authorized “all transactions . . . that are related to oil or gas sectors operations in Venezuela” for a period of six months.Footnote 23 Authorized transactions included: “(1) [p]roduction, lifting, sale, and exportation . . . ; (2) [p]ayment of invoices for goods or services . . . ; (3) [n]ew investment in oil or gas sector operations in Venezuela; and (4) [d]elivery of oil and gas from Venezuela to creditors of the Government of Venezuela. . . .”Footnote 24 GL44 specifically included transactions involving PdVSA,Footnote 25 which is a “primary source” of the Venezuelan government's income.Footnote 26 GL 44 explicitly did not authorize transactions involving: most blocked financial institutions; Russia-related operations; new debt transactions; virtual assets issued by, for, or on behalf of Venezuela; and debt owed to Venezuela.Footnote 27 It also did not authorize the unblocking of any property.Footnote 28 GL 3I (superseding GL 3H)Footnote 29 and GL 9H (superseding GL 9G)Footnote 30 “remov[ed] the secondary market trading bans on purchases of certain Venezuelan sovereign bonds and pre-2017 bonds or equity issued by [PdVSA].”Footnote 31 All other sanctions, including those against Maduro and other senior Venezuelan officials, remained in place. The sanctions relief was considerable, insofar as it provided Venezuela with much-needed sources of revenue.
On December 1, the Department of State issued a statement “welcom[ing] the steps taken to implement the electoral roadmap agreement . . . [but also expressing] deep[] concern[] by the lack of progress on the release of wrongfully detained U.S. nationals and Venezuelan political prisoners.”Footnote 32 About three weeks later, Venezuela released ten U.S. nationals, including six the United States had designated as “wrongfully detained.”Footnote 33 Venezuela also extradited Leonard Francis (Fat Leonard), a Malaysian national who had pled guilty in federal court to bribing “scores” of U.S. Navy officials but fled to Venezuela in 2022 while out on bail awaiting sentencing.Footnote 34 In exchange, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. granted clemency to Alex Saab, a Maduro ally who was on trial in Florida on money laundering charges.Footnote 35 Venezuela also released twenty political prisoners.Footnote 36
On January 22, 2024, Venezuelan authorities began a crackdown on the opposition and civil society due to several alleged “terrorist plots,” including one to assassinate Maduro.Footnote 37 Maduro stated that the Barbados Agreement was “mortally wounded” by the claimed conspiracies against him and the government and that he hoped the agreement could proceed “without plans to murder [him].”Footnote 38 The United States denounced the arrests as “without due process [and] . . . contrary to the spirit of the October 2023 electoral roadmap agreement.”Footnote 39 On January 26, the Venezuelan Supreme Court announced that it would not permit María Corina Machado, who won the opposition's primary in October,Footnote 40 to run in the presidential election or hold public office for fifteen years.Footnote 41 Machado had been barred from office on charges of corruption and appealed her ban in December under a procedure (established the month before under pressure from the United States) for candidates to lift electoral disqualifications.Footnote 42 Following the court's ruling, Machado stated that “[t]he regime decided to end the Barbados Agreement” but that “[w]hat is NOT ending is our fight to conquer democracy through free and fair elections.”Footnote 43 The Department of State declared that the court's decision went against “the commitment by Nicolás Maduro's representatives to hold a competitive Venezuelan presidential election in 2024.”Footnote 44 A few days later, State Department Spokesperson Matthew Miller announced that the United States would revoke GL 43 and, “[a]bsent progress between Maduro and his representatives and the opposition Unitary Platform, particularly on allowing all presidential candidates to compete in this year's election, the United States will not renew” GL 44 when it expires in April.Footnote 45 GL 3I and GL 9H were unaffected.Footnote 46 Miller noted that the United States “remains strongly committed to supporting dialogue between the parties” and “will continue to . . . leverage mechanisms at [its] disposal to encourage a return to the principles in the Barbados [A]greement.”Footnote 47 Reports speculated that the United States might yet renew GL 44 since increasing the global supply of oil would help keep U.S. gas prices low during an election year.Footnote 48 Responding to the U.S. sanctions announcement, Venezuela discontinued accepting flights of deportees from the United States.Footnote 49 It also ordered the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to leave the country.Footnote 50 In March, a national electoral commission prevented a second candidate endorsed by the opposition's coalition from appearing on the presidential ballot.Footnote 51 Subsequently, a third opposition-endorsed candidate was “provisionally registered” for the July election.Footnote 52 In April, the Biden administration let GL 44 expire, marking the end of the sanctions relief granted with the signing of the Barbados Agreement.