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After weeks of pursuit, the US seizes a Russian-flagged, Venezuela-linked oil tanker

Two U.S. officials said on Wednesday that the United States was attempting to seize an oil tanker flying the Russian flag with "links" to Venezuela, after a two-week pursuit across Atlantic. A Russian warship and submarine were also close by.

The tanker, known originally as Bella-1, had slipped past a U.S. "blockade" maritime of sanctioned oil tankers, and refused to allow the U.S. Coast Guard to board it.

Officials, speaking under condition of anonymity said that the Coast Guard was involved in the operation, as were the U.S. Military.

It was the first time since recent memory that the U.S. Military attempted to seize an American-flagged ship.

The Russians also said that there were?vessels of the Russian military in the general area, including a Russian sub. The vessels' proximity to the operation near Iceland was not clear.

TANKER IS ONE OF THE VESSELS TARGETED by the U.S.

Last month, the U.S. Coast Guard attempted to board the vessel but it refused. It has been registered under the Russian flag since then.

The U.S. Coast Guard has targeted the Marinera tanker as part of its pressure campaign against Venezuela since Donald Trump began his campaign.

U.S. officials have confirmed that the U.S. Coast Guard has intercepted a second Venezuela-linked oil tanker in Latin American water. The U.S. is continuing to enforce a maritime "blockade", of vessels sanctioned from Venezuela.

These?moves are just days after U.S. Special Forces swooped in Caracas at dawn on Saturday to?capture President Nicolas Maduro, and bring him to the United States. The U.S. Military handed him over to the?federal authorities in order to prosecute him on charges of alleged drug trafficking.

Venezuelan officials have called Maduro’s capture as a kidnapping, and accused the U.S. for trying to steal Venezuela’s vast oil reserves.

Trump and other top U.S. officials, in turn, have accused Venezuelans of stealing U.S. crude oil. This is an apparent reference to Venezuela's nationalization in waves of its energy industry over the last half century. (Reporting and editing by Andrew Heavens, Frances Kerry and Idrees Stewart)

(source: Reuters)