Saturday, June 27, 2026

The US embargo of large equipment to Venezuela is impacting recovery efforts there.

 

The restriction of large industrial equipment and heavy machinery under U.S. sanctions has significantly hindered long-term structural rehabilitation in Venezuela, though it has seen major changes following massive political and geopolitical shifts. [1, 2, 3]
The impacts of these restrictions are divided across three critical areas:
1. Long-Term Energy Infrastructure Collapse
Historically, sweeping U.S. sanctions placed strict bans on the export of heavy machinery, specialized drilling hardware, and key industrial replacement parts to the state-owned oil firm PDVSA. [1, 2]
  • Production Drop: Deprived of technical updates, Western-built refineries and drilling rigs degraded rapidly, forcing Venezuela's crude production down from over 2 million barrels per day (bpd) to historic lows under 500,000 bpd. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
  • The Turnaround: Following the dramatic U.S. military capture of former President Nicolás Maduro, the Trump administration implemented an intensive policy pivot. To combat global oil price volatility, the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) began issuing sweeping general licenses (such as GL 48A and GL 52). These new waivers explicitly permit U.S. firms to export heavy oilfield equipment, parts, diluents, and maintenance services back into the country. Major global oilfield service companies, like ⁠SLB, have subsequently signed modernization framework agreements to reverse decades of infrastructure decay. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
2. Chronic Electrical Grid Instability
The prohibition of heavy electrical apparatuses left Venezuela's electrical grid crippled, leading to rolling blackouts that routinely halt industrial recovery. [1]
  • Waiver Realities: While recent 2026 sanctions overhauls expanded authorizations to include equipment needed for the generation, transmission, and distribution of electricity, the decades-long lag in basic physical upkeep has created a massive bottleneck. Restoring the grid to handle full-scale economic and oil sector production is estimated to require up to $100 billion in targeted private and corporate investments. [1, 2, 3, 4]
3. Immediate Disaster Response Bottlenecks
The long-term deterioration of public infrastructure caused by years of equipment embargoes has directly impacted Venezuela's capacity to handle sudden crises. [1]
  • The Earthquake Crisis: Following back-to-back 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes, the heavily deteriorated state of public services dramatically magnified the scale of the tragedy. Local responders initially faced severe shortages of specialized heavy lift and cutting equipment needed to clear hundreds of collapsed buildings. [1, 2, 3]
  • Emergency Sanctions Relief: To mitigate this, the U.S. Treasury issued an immediate temporary waiver specifically authorizing all financial transactions and logistics operations tied to earthquake relief. This has triggered a massive, direct humanitarian intervention, allowing the U.S. military to fly in heavy load-movement equipment, medical supplies, and urban search-and-rescue teams via C-17 Globemaster aircraft to manage the recovery. [1, 2, 3, 4]
The broad economic sanctions and sectoral embargoes blocking large equipment, heavy machinery, and financial access for state entities have been in place for roughly 7 to 9 years, depending on the specific industry sector. [1, 2, 3]
While the U.S. began issuing narrow, targeted sanctions against specific individuals as early as 2005, the structural limits on heavy hardware escalated over a distinct timeline: [1, 2]
2017: Financial and Infrastructure Separation
The shift toward restricting heavy equipment began in August 2017 under ⁠Executive Order 13808. This measure barred Venezuela’s government and its state oil firm, PDVSA, from accessing U.S. financial markets. This effectively choked off the long-term credit lines and international banking transfers required to purchase multi-million dollar Western industrial machinery, replacement turbines, and specialized hardware. [1, 2, 3]
2019: Direct Industry and Energy Embargoes
The explicit embargo on heavy equipment and engineering services solidified in January 2019. The U.S. designated PDVSA directly, making it illegal for U.S. firms or individuals to export heavy oilfield hardware, drilling rigs, and industrial equipment to the entity. This was compounded in August 2019 by Executive Order 13884, which instituted a total property freeze on the Venezuelan government and banned virtually all commercial dealings. [1, 2, 3, 4]
2025 – 2026: The Extreme Escalation and Recent Carve-Outs
Restrictions reached their most severe peak between mid-2025 and early 2026. During this time, remaining individual corporate waivers were systematically revoked, secondary tariffs were threatened globally, and a maritime naval blockade was enforced to seize shipping vessels. [1, 3, 4, 5]
However, following the January 3, 2026 U.S. military capture of Nicolás Maduro, the policy framework underwent a massive shift. While core sanctions remain legally active to preserve U.S. leverage over the transition government, the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has utilized rapid General Licenses throughout 2026 to create sweeping authorizations. These active waivers specifically permit the reentry of the heavy oilfield, electrical, and humanitarian equipment needed to rebuild the country's shattered physical footprint. [1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8]



Richard Engel reported on a UN report accusing the Israeli military of committing genocide and war crimes in Gaza.


NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel reported on a United Nations-commissioned report accusing the Israeli military of committing genocide and war crimes by deliberately targeting Palestinian children in Gaza. [1, 2]
The broadcast segment, published across official ⁠NBC News TikTok and ⁠NBC News Instagram Reel accounts, covers findings released by an independent UN International Commission of Inquiry. [1]
Key Findings Outlined in the Video
  • Casualties and Trauma: The independent UN panel reported that 21,000 Palestinian children died as a direct result of hostilities, with thousands more left severely injured. [1]
  • Targeting Allegations: Engel highlights testimony from a doctor within the report. The physician assessed that Israeli soldiers were intentionally shooting teenage boys through sniper scopes as a "game of target practice," tracking varying body parts depending on the day. [1]
  • Medical Crises: The report emphasizes that Gaza has the highest incidence of child amputations globally, many of which were forced to be performed without anesthetic. [1]
Official Responses
  • United Nations: The independent commission stated that the systematic targeting of children serves as a key indicator of genocidal intent to destroy the Palestinian population. [1]
  • Israel: The Israeli Foreign Ministry completely rejected the UN findings, labeling the document as "slander," "propaganda," and a "political blood libel". [1, 2]
Engel's Additional Reporting on the Ground
For independent field context on the humanitarian environment, you can view Engel's complementary long-form reporting. He has documented the physical toll of the conflict firsthand during rare military-chaperoned press access, publishing deep dives like ⁠NBC News' Richard Engel reports from inside Gaza and ⁠Inside Gaza: "I have never seen anything like this" on YouTube, where he evaluates the "utter devastation" and long-term legal and structural implications for the territory.


Non-citizens often form companies and pay federal, state and local taxes

 How do non-citizens who form companies and pay federal, state and local taxes?

Non-citizens form companies and pay federal, state, and local taxes by using specialized tax identification numbers issued by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), structuring their businesses legally to accommodate foreign ownership, and navigating specific jurisdictional tax rules. [1, 2]

Step 1: Secure Tax Identification Numbers
Non-citizens cannot use a standard Social Security Number (SSN) to file taxes if they lack work authorization or legal residency. Instead, they rely on two specific tax identifiers: [1]
  • Employer Identification Number (EIN): This is the tax ID for the business itself. Non-citizens obtain this by filling out⁠IRS Form SS-4 via fax or mail, as they cannot use the online IRS portal without an SSN. [1, 2]
  • Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN): This is the personal tax ID for the owner. It is issued via⁠IRS Form W-7 and allows the individual to report personal earnings, distributed business profits, or file individual tax returns. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Step 2: Pay Federal Taxes Based on Business Structure
How federal tax is paid depends entirely on how the business is legally structured:
Pass-Through Entities (LLCs and Partnerships) [1]
Most non-citizens form a Limited Liability Company (LLC). If it is a Single-Member LLC, the IRS treats it as a "disregarded entity". [1, 2]
  • Effectively Connected Income (ECI): If the business operates physically in the U.S. (e.g., has U.S. employees, offices, or inventory), profits are considered ECI. The non-citizen pays standard progressive income tax rates using⁠IRS Form 1040-NR. [1, 2, 3]
  • Foreign-Owned Disregarded Entities: If the owner lives abroad and the LLC has zero physical operations in the U.S. (e.g., a digital service), the income may not be federally taxable. However, the owner must still file⁠IRS Form 5472 and Form 1120 pro forma annually to avoid severe penalties. [1, 2]
C-Corporations
If formed as a C-Corp, the business pays a flat federal corporate tax rate on its net income using⁠IRS Form 1120. If the corporation distributes dividends to the non-citizen owner, a flat 30% withholding tax typically applies under FDAP rules, though this can be reduced if their home country has a tax treaty with the U.S.. [1, 2, 3]
Step 3: Satisfy State and Local Tax Obligations
State and local tax liabilities are determined by where the business is registered or where it has a physical or economic presence ("nexus"). [1]
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│               State & Local Tax Types                  │
└───────────────────────────┬────────────────────────────┘
                            │
         ┌──────────────────┼──────────────────┐
         ▼                  ▼                  ▼
┌─────────────────┐ ┌───────────────┐ ┌──────────────────┐
│  Income Taxes   │ │  Sales Taxes  │ │  Property Taxes  │
└────────┬────────┘ └───────┬───────┘ └────────┬─────────┘
         │                  │                  │
         ▼                  ▼                  ▼
  Paid to states     Collected from     Paid on owned or
  on net corporate    customers via     leased business
   or pass-through     state seller's     real estate and
   business profits     permits     equipment
  • State Income Tax: The business files state corporate or individual returns using its EIN or ITIN. States like Delaware and Wyoming are highly favored by non-residents because they impose no state income tax on LLCs that do not actively conduct business within those specific states. [1]
  • Sales Tax: If the business sells physical goods or certain digital products to customers in states where it meets economic thresholds, it must register for a seller's permit and collect/remit local sales tax. [1]
  • Franchise Taxes / Annual Fees: Most states require businesses to pay an annual franchise tax or filing fee simply to maintain the legal structure active in that jurisdiction, regardless of whether the business made money.
Step 4: Remit Payroll and Employment Taxes
If the non-citizen-owned company hires employees inside the U.S., it must use its EIN to handle payroll obligations. The business automatically withholds federal, state, and local income taxes from employee paychecks. [1, 2]
The company must also contribute its share of Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) taxes for Social Security and Medicare, unless the worker holds a specific visa status (like F-1 or J-1) that qualifies for a temporary exemption under an international Totalization Agreement. [1, 2]