OFAC reopens Conviasa and Venezuela's telecommunications, but keeps CITGO frozen until August
For the second time running, OFAC renews protection of CITGO's collateral for under seven weeks —it used to do so for half a year. It does so on the same June 18 it opens two low-friction lanes: supply to Conviasa (GL 59) and telecommunications and mail (GL 24A). The signal is sequence: Treasury grants everyday reconnection and meters the strategic asset.
On June 18 OFAC issued three licenses the same day, but they don't point to the same place. GL 59 reopens supply to the state airline Conviasa and GL 24A modernizes the telecommunications and mail framework: two low-friction lanes aimed at consumers and the diaspora. GL 5X, by contrast, again defers the one piece that decides billions —the CITGO collateral behind the PdVSA 2020 bond— and does so for just 46 days, to August 4. It is the second sub-seven-week extension in a row; the series used to renew for half a year. The read is sequence, not politics: Washington grants the everyday and meters the strategic, syncing the CITGO clock to the judicial calendar, not the commercial one.
The June 18 action bundles three authorizations that are tempting to read as a single opening. They are not. Two —Conviasa and telecom— widen the soft surface of reconnection: what a citizen, a traveler or a courier touches daily. The third —the PdVSA 2020 bond— administers the country's most contested asset. OFAC stressed that none of the three lifts the rest of the economic, financial or commercial sanctions on the Government of Venezuela. The news is not how much opens, but what opens first, and at what pace.
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