掌控委大权后,美官员放话,石油中国可以接着买,但别想那么便宜
Sou Hu Cai Jing·2026-01-24 05:11

Group 1 - The core viewpoint is that the U.S. has gained complete control over Venezuela's oil exports, primarily redirecting them to the U.S. market, while allowing China to continue purchasing oil but at higher prices than before [3][5]. - The U.S. government's actions, including military interventions and the seizure of Venezuela's oil industry, are framed as justifiable, despite the apparent contradiction of claiming to benefit the Venezuelan people while profiting from the resources [3][5]. - The U.S. aims to monopolize Venezuela's significant oil reserves, which could weaken China's energy supply chain and extend its strategy of pressuring China beyond trade and technology to resource control [5][7]. Group 2 - The underlying strategy of the U.S. is to create a hegemonic supply circle that excludes major competitors, using control over key resources like oil and rare earths as political leverage [7]. - The disruption of Sino-Venezuelan oil cooperation is intended to diminish China's influence in Latin America and reassert U.S. dominance in the region, sending a warning to countries deviating from U.S. interests [7][9]. - China's response to U.S. threats has been pragmatic, emphasizing the diversification of energy import channels and maintaining that its cooperation with Venezuela is based on mutual consent, despite U.S. accusations of corruption [9].