The US Justice Department on Friday confirmed it had seized the fuel cargo aboard four tankers sent by Iran to crisis-wracked Venezuela, tying the shipments to Tehran's Revolutionary Guards and stepping up the pressure on its foe.
"With the assistance of foreign partners, this seized property is now in US custody," the Justice Department said, putting the total at more than one million barrels of petroleum and calling it the largest-ever seizure of fuel shipments from Iran.
The department had issued a warrant last month to seize the cargo of the tankers Bella, Bering, Pandi and Luna.
The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday, citing US officials, that the ships had been seized at sea and were en route to Houston.
The Justice Department did not offer details about the circumstances of the seizure.
It accused Iran of "forcibly" boarding an unrelated ship after the four tankers were seized "in an apparent attempt to recover the seized petroleum."
US military officials said Thursday that incident took place in the Gulf of Oman, with Iran using a helicopter and two ships to take over the vessel, a Liberian-flagged oil and chemicals tanker, for several hours.
The US has accused Iranian businessman Mahmoud Madanipour, who allegedly had links to the Revolutionary Guards, of arranging oil shipments for Venezuela using offshore front companies and ship-to-ship transfers to get around sanctions on Iran.
The US State Department, led by Special Representative for Iran Brian Hook, assisted in the seizure operation, spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said.
Proceeds from the gasoline could go to a fund for US victims of state-sponsored terrorism "instead of those engaging in terrorism," like Iran's Revolutionary Guards, she said.
"The United States remains committed to our maximum pressure campaigns against the Iranian and (Venezuelan President Nicolas) Maduro regimes," Ortagus added. READ MORE