By Editorial Dept – Jul 25, 2025, 9:00 AM CDT

Politics, Geopolitics & Conflict
Multiple sources have confirmed to mainstream media that Washington has quietly reauthorized Chevron to resume limited operations in Venezuela, reversing its earlier stance. Reports this week claimed that Chevron will regain access to joint venture oil flows under a tightly controlled framework allegedly designed to prevent direct financial benefit to Maduro’s regime. The license is time-bound, likely capped at six months, and excludes any royalty payments or new investments. While hardliners like Secretary Rubio publicly oppose the move, senior officials are framing it as a pragmatic step to stabilize supply chains and reassert U.S. commercial leverage in Latin America.
??A string of unexplained explosions aboard Russian commercial vessels is forcing Moscow to reassess (quietly) maritime security beyond Ukrainian waters. While Russian authorities blame technical failures or “external influences,” Western intelligence appears to view the incidents as part of a deliberate sabotage campaign. The attacks span the Black Sea, Baltic, and Mediterranean, suggesting a coordinated strategy to disrupt dual-use shipping, particularly vessels linked to military logistics or sanctioned cargo. So far, no actor has claimed responsibility. The pattern points to a slow-burn pressure track designed to raise costs on Russia’s gray-zone trade flows without triggering overt escalation.
Clashes between Thai and Cambodian forces near…
COMMUNITY MEMBERSHIP
(FREE)
GLOBAL ENERGY ALERT
($697 $279 PER YEAR)
- Breaking energy stories before they hit the mainstream media
- Top quality analysis from industry veterans
- Exclusive investment opportunities
- Digestible data breakdowns
- Geopolitical insights from our network of over 600 operatives
- Risk-free 30-day money back guarantee