The Day

U.S. sanctions Venezuelan president

- By PATRICIA MAZZEI and FRANCO ORDONEZ

The Trump administra­tion on Monday froze assets, banned travel and prohibited Americans from dealing with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, calling him a dictator and accusing him of underminin­g democracy after he carried out an election Sunday for an all-powerful new legislativ­e assembly in defiance of warnings from the internatio­nal community.

As part of what are expected to be a series of escalating sanctions, the Treasury Department added Maduro to its growing list of sanctioned current and former members of the Venezuelan government and military.

“Maduro is not just a bad leader: He is now a dictator,” national security adviser Henry McMaster said from the White House briefing room Monday, reading a statement from President Donald Trump.

The U.S. has yet to settle on “strong and swift” economic actions that Trump threatened ahead of Sunday’s Venezuelan election for a new constituen­t assembly with the power to dissolve the opposition-held parliament, effectivel­y wiping out the remnants of Venezuela’s democracy. McMaster called the vote a “sham election.”

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the U.S. would continue to monitor Venezuela but declined to detail potential future economic sanctions.

“Yesterday’s illegitima­te elections confirm that Maduro is a dictator who disregards the will of the Venezuelan people,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said. “By sanctionin­g Maduro, the United States makes clear our opposition to the policies of his regime and our support for the people of Venezuela who seek to return their country to a full and prosperous democracy.”

Mnuchin reiterated the threat to sanction all 545 constituen­t assembly members once they are seated. That would include Maduro’s wife, Cilia Flores, and powerful congressma­n Diosdado Cabello, as well as lowly socialist party members with no U.S. finances. The new assembly is supposed to take over in the next two days.

Mnuchin wouldn’t say what assets, if any, Maduro might hold. The U.S. has estimated Venezuelan Vice President Tareck El Aissami, who was sanctioned as a drug kingpin in February, has foreign assets of roughly $500 million.

Maduro is the fourth head of state sanctioned by the U.S. The others: Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, Bashar Assad of Syria and Kim Jong Un of North Korea.

“He joins a very exclusive club,” McMaster quipped.

The U.S. plans to refrain from deploying its harshest sanction — a ban on Venezuelan oil imports — though it had raised that possibilit­y ahead of Sunday’s election. Instead, the Trump administra­tion is considerin­g Russian-type financial sanctions to limit U.S. companies from trading in sovereign debt on primary or secondary markets. The sanctions could even be retroactiv­e, affecting Goldman Sachs’ widely criticized May purchase of $2.8 billion worth of bonds issued by Venezuela’s state-owned oil company, PDVSA, according to a former U.S. official who is familiar with the discussion­s.

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