Washington — U.S. forces boarded the Panama-flagged tanker Veronica III in the Indian Ocean on Sunday after tracking the vessel from the Caribbean, the Pentagon said. The department described the action as a right-of-visit, maritime interdiction and boarding conducted without incident under INDOPACOM authority. Officials said the ship was linked to networks evading U.S. sanctions on Venezuelan oil; video released by Pentagon showed troops boarding the vessel. The action follows a February 9 interception of the Aquila II and stems from an operation that U.S. leaders said aimed to disrupt illicit oil shipments. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
U.S. enforcement agencies and allied partners strengthened their ability to disrupt sanction-evasion networks, potentially reducing illicit Venezuelan oil shipments and demonstrating enforcement reach across oceans.
Operators of sanctioned tanker networks, intermediary brokers, and elements of the Venezuelan sanctioned oil export apparatus faced operational disruption, interdiction, and increased legal and financial risks.
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U.S. Forces Board Sanctioned Tanker After Long Pursuit
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