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Trump move for Venezuela’s resources likely to weaken economic might of US | Heather Stewart

about 18 hours ago
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The word “loot” entered the English language from Hindi in the late 18th century, as the rapacious East India Company plundered its way across the subcontinent.It was a trading company, not a state – but it had the imprimatur of the English crown and its own large private army, mingling commerce and military force and opening the way for British imperial dominance of India.Donald Trump’s dead-of-night raid on Venezuela last week was the act of a government, not a corporation.But it harked back to a more brazen age, when looting a continent for its resources at the point of a cannon was regarded as a legitimate activity for an English gentleman.The US president made no effort to disguise the fact that the main motivation for the snatching of Nicolás Maduro was taking control of Venezuelan oil reserves on behalf of the fossil fuel companies that helped bankroll Trump’s re-election.

He did gesture at Maduro’s illegitimacy – the deposed president was widely accepted to have lost Venezuela’s presidential election in 2024.But handing power to Maduro’s deputy, with no timeline for a democratic transition, makes a nonsense of any claim to be fulfilling the aspirations of the Venezuelan people.Trump had already wielded US economic power particularly blatantly in trade negotiations over the first 12 months of his second term, using the threat of tariffs to bully and cajole rivals and supposed allies alike – including the UK.Last weekend’s events made clear he was also prepared to seize resources using military force, apparently with the intention of allowing favoured corporate allies (oligarchs, as we would call them in a Russian context) to exploit them.It sets a deeply alarming precedent, in terms of what Trump himself may feel emboldened to do, with a string of other targets apparently in his sights, and what rival powers even less concerned about international law could now venture, in pursuit of economic dominance.

Just as Trump’s music tastes are stuck in the days of his youth – he still likes a boogie to YMCA – his conception of what factors make the US economically successful feels hopelessly outdated.The global oil market is already well supplied, and the US has anyway become a significant net exporter since the shale boom, insulating its economy from the global energy price rises that hit Europe hard after the Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.There are some concerns about whether US hard-to-extract shale oil is economic at the current, relatively low oil price of less than $60 (£44) a barrel for the US West Texas Intermediate benchmark, however.Yet Trump appears to want to drive that price lower.He is unlikely to succeed any time soon anyway: Venezuelan oil is heavy, making it expensive to produce and refine; and analysts believe it will take many years, and billions of dollars, to increase output significantly.

As the Washington-based Institute of International Finance put it last week: “While medium- to long-term upside to Venezuelan supply exists, the balance of risks points to a gradual and conditional recovery rather than swift normalisation, with the potential for renewed setbacks if political or policy frictions intensify.”Instead of oil, the resource bottlenecks that most concern today’s corporations are in the raw materials required for the mass electrification of energy, as the world shifts to net zero (something Trump rejects, of course) – copper, aluminiumand lithium – not to mention staple foods such as cocoa and coffee, of which prices have been jacked up by global heating.Similarly, while Trump hoped his muscular trade policy would lead to a wave of reshoring, restoring US dominance in sectors such as carmaking and steel, manufacturing employment has continued to decline, with the sector shedding more than 200,000 jobs over two years.Slashing government grants for scientific research and attacking big US universities on culture war grounds appears unlikely to nourish the innovation widely seen as a key to US economic success.And rival countries hit hard by US tariffs are being pushed together, with the EU finally giving provisional agreement last week to the tortuously negotiated trade agreement with Mercosur, the South American bloc that includes Brazil and Argentina.

While Trump fantasises about bringing back metal bashing, the US’s great economic rival China is continuing to innovate in the fields of electric cars and cut-price solar panels, at the leading edge of the transition away from fossil fuels.Between January and May last year alone China added enough wind and solar capacity to power a country as large as Turkey or Indonesia.The Chinese AI company DeepSeek is reportedly preparing to release the next iteration of its large language model next month – a move that could spark alarm in Silicon Valley if, like its predecessor, it appears to outperform US equivalents at a fraction of the cost.Trump’s attempt at looting Venezuela’s resources is a raw exercise of military muscle, and there may be more – perhaps worse – to come.But by unleashing anarchy abroad and trashing the rule of law at home, he is more likely to undermine US economic power than enhance it.

sportSee all
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Jess Hull steers Australia to relay gold at world cross-country championships in US

The Olympic medalist Jess Hull has steered a star-studded Australian quartet to a mighty relay win at the world athletics cross-country championships in Florida.Ollie Hoare, Linden Hall, Jack Anstey and Hull took charge to claim gold in the 4x2000m mixed relay in Tallahassee on Saturday.It Australia’s fifth medal in the 46-edition history of the championships.The team clocked a time of 22min 23sec to win by three seconds ahead of France, followed by Ethiopia (22min 34sec), Kenya (22min 42sec) and the US (22min 43sec) among 15 teams.Hoare put the Australians in contention in the opening leg before Hall opened a lead of six seconds then Anstey consolidated and Hull commanded the anchor leg

1 day ago
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‘It doesn’t really hit your socials’: is this Australia’s best kept sporting secret? | Sarah Guiney

If there is one thing Australians pride themselves on, it’s playing sport in the elements. From long days of cricket at the height of summer, the sun beating down harsh and unforgiving, to mud-soaked footy in the dead of winter. It’s a test of character, and Australians wear it like a badge of honour.So perhaps it is a surprise that Australia has yet to embrace ice hockey; tucked away in rinks so cold you need a puffer jacket just to sit and watch, even during summer. Combine that with its speed and brutal physicality, and it seems to tick every box

1 day ago
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Coco Gauff beats Iga Swiatek but Poland best US to reach United Cup final

A statement victory for Coco Gauff over her great rival Iga Świątek proved to be insufficient to the American’s hopes of leading her team into the final of the United Cup. Poland showed their depth in an excellent team performance to close out a 2-1 win over the United States at the Ken Rosewall Arena in Sydney.Poland, who finished runners-up to the US last year, exacted their revenge courtesy of the doubles specialists Jan Zielinski and Katarzyna Kawa, who maintained their unbeaten run in the competition by defeating Christian Harrison and Gauff 7-6 (5), 7-6 (3) in the decisive third rubber. Poland face Switzerland in the final on Sunday after the Swiss defeated Belgium 2-1.The tie opened with another victory for Hubert Hurkacz, who continued his impressive comeback from injury by defeating the world No 9, Taylor Fritz, 7-6 (1), 7-6 (2)

1 day ago
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Kempton Park’s Lanzarote Hurdle card will go ahead but Warwick frozen off

Kempton Park’s Lanzarote Hurdle card will go ahead as planned on Saturday afternoon, but Warwick’s Classic Chase meeting has failed to beat the weather.Despite being passed fit for racing on Friday after managing to navigate a freezing week, the threat of sub-zero temperatures overnight had led to precautionary 8.00am raceday checks being called at both tracks.Warwick said on X: “Whilst the majority of the track is raceable, the back straight remains frozen in areas. The contingency plan we put in place yesterday, using the outer hurdle line, has frozen under the sheets and is unraceable

2 days ago
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NFL wildcard weekend predictions: Allen can carry Bills – if he can handle the pressure

The NFL playoffs kick off with ground-game battles, QB duels and a high-stakes edition of the Packers v Bears rivalryWhat the Rams need to do to win Hold on to the ball. Across five regular-season defeats, Matthew Stafford gave the ball away seven times with six interceptions and a fumble. In the Rams’ worst loss of the season, to the Panthers in November, Stafford held his team back from taking a commanding lead with two picks in the first quarter. Keep it tight.What the Panthers need to do to win The Panthers are massive underdogs but hold an advantage in the vital experience of having already upset the Rams

2 days ago
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Ashes 2025-26: our writers’ end-of-series England v Australia awards

Brainless moments, moral victories and tough lessons were abundant during a series that still provided plenty of dramaPlayer of the series Travis Head was the boxing kangaroo at the top of the Australia order. But this one goes to the other animal on the baggy green crest, Mitchell Starc bounding in like an emu, slicing through England during the live bit, and playing all five to finish with 31 wickets at 19 apiece. Elite.Best moment The old guard on both sides have done their thing plenty of times before, so this one goes to Jacob Bethell’s maiden Test century at the SCG. The style, the poise and the family looking on in bits made it poetry and cinema in one

2 days ago
businessSee all
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Game On: the Swiss sports brand using hi-tech and chutzpah to challenge Nike and Adidas

about 18 hours ago
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Trump move for Venezuela’s resources likely to weaken economic might of US | Heather Stewart

about 18 hours ago
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Lloyds CEO Charlie Nunn latest banking boss in line for huge bonus hike

about 23 hours ago
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Cream of the crop: small brewers take on Guinness with rival ‘nitro’ stouts

about 24 hours ago
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Why Russia’s economy is unlikely to collapse even if oil prices fall | Phillip Inman

1 day ago
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Wessex Water bosses handed £50,000 in extra pay despite Labour government’s bonus ban

2 days ago