Is Secretary Bessent Merging the Petrodollar with Argentina-Style Dollar Domination?

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In a landmark testimony before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee and follow-up statements, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has outlined a bold new strategy: expanding permanent dollar swap facilities with Gulf and Asian allies to reinforce U.S. dollar dominance amid global energy shocks. This comes as the traditional petrodollar framework—anchored by a 50-year arrangement with Saudi Arabia—has lapsed, and as the United States asserts greater control over Venezuelan oil flows. The question now circulating in energy and financial circles: Is Bessent fusing classic petrodollar mechanics with the proven “Argentina playbook” of targeted currency swaps to create a more resilient, institutionally locked-in system of dollar hegemony in global oil markets?

The Petrodollar’s Quiet Expiration

For decades, the petrodollar system—rooted in the 1974 U.S.-Saudi agreement—required Saudi Arabia to price its oil exports exclusively in U.S. dollars and recycle those revenues into U.S. Treasuries. In exchange, Washington provided military protection and security guarantees. The arrangement, which helped underwrite dollar reserve status and cheap U.S. borrowing, expired on June 9, 2024, and was not renewed. Saudi Arabia is now free to accept payments in other currencies, including the Chinese yuan, marking a symbolic—if not yet systemic—shift.

Analysts had long warned that de-dollarization pressures from BRICS nations, yuan swap lines, and alternative payment systems like China’s mBridge and CIPS could erode the petrodollar’s edge. Yet the dollar still accounts for the vast majority of global oil trade and reserves. The expiration created an opening that adversaries sought to exploit—until recent U.S. moves in Venezuela and the Gulf began to close it.
Venezuela: The Petrodollar Revival Through Control

In January 2026, the United States effectively gained operational control over Venezuela’s vast oil reserves following the ouster and arrest of President Nicolás Maduro. President Trump stated the U.S. would “run” Venezuela and sell its oil. The Treasury Department has since eased select sanctions via general licenses, authorizing U.S. firms and global buyers to transact with PDVSA (Venezuela’s state oil company). Critically, however, revenues are routed through U.S.-controlled accounts rather than directly to Venezuelan entities. This ensures dollar-denominated settlements and prevents flows to sanctioned actors or non-dollar channels previously used with China, Russia, and Iran.

Venezuela holds the world’s largest proven oil reserves. By bringing its production back under U.S. influence—initially targeting 30–50 million barrels but with indefinite marketing control—Washington has added supply to offset disruptions elsewhere while reasserting dollar primacy. This move has been explicitly linked by analysts to petrodollar preservation: countering the Maduro-era shift toward yuan and ruble settlements and muscling out Beijing and Moscow from a key energy player. During the ongoing Iran conflict, this extra supply has helped blunt price spikes and demonstrated how targeted control of oil assets can sustain dollar oil trade.
Will the Same Model Apply to Iran?

The Venezuelan approach—military/political intervention followed by U.S.-controlled oil marketing and dollar-locked revenues—has raised questions about Iran. The U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran, which escalated in early 2026 with strikes on nuclear sites and Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, has already disrupted roughly 10 million barrels per day of Gulf output at peak. While full “Venezuela-style” regime change and oil takeover are not currently on the table, the U.S. maintains maximum-pressure sanctions on Iranian oil, with selective temporary waivers (e.g., for at-sea cargoes) aimed at market stability rather than de-control.

Analysts note that any post-conflict settlement could involve heightened sanctions enforcement, infrastructure targeting (e.g., Kharg Island terminals), or incentives for dollar-compliant trade. The goal appears to be limiting non-dollar channels that Iran has used with China, rather than outright U.S. custodianship of Iranian fields. Whether Bessent’s financial toolkit extends to Iran depends on conflict outcomes, but the Venezuela precedent shows how energy leverage can be converted into currency leverage.
Reshaping Global Oil Markets: Supply, Pricing, and Currency Power

These developments are already reshaping oil markets in three key ways:

  1. Supply Stabilization: Venezuelan barrels are returning to global markets under U.S.-aligned terms, helping offset Hormuz-related shortfalls and moderating prices that spiked above $120/barrel. This reduces volatility for consumers and importers while favoring U.S. and allied producers.
  2. Dollar Reinforcement in Trade: By controlling Venezuelan revenues and offering swap lines, the U.S. ensures oil transactions remain dollar-centric. This counters petroyuan experiments and makes alternative systems less attractive for intermediaries like the UAE or Saudi Arabia.
  3. Geopolitical Realignment: Gulf producers facing revenue shocks from the Iran war gain guaranteed dollar liquidity without turning to Beijing. This deepens financial integration and locks in dollar funding centers in Abu Dhabi, Riyadh, and beyond—extending the “Argentina model” globally.

    The UAE’s Request: A Pivotal Piece in the Dollar Puzzle

The United Arab Emirates—hit hard by damaged infrastructure and blocked Hormuz exports—has directly engaged Secretary Bessent on currency swap lines. UAE officials, including Central Bank Governor Khaled Mohamed Balama, raised the issue in Washington meetings in April 2026. Bessent has publicly confirmed that “many” Gulf allies (including the UAE) and Asian partners have requested permanent facilities, describing them as tools to maintain dollar funding order and prevent disorderly U.S. asset sales.

Unlike traditional bailouts, these swaps are collateralized, interest-bearing exchanges that have historically been profitable for the U.S. (as seen in the Argentina case). For the UAE, with its $285 billion in reserves and $2 trillion+ sovereign wealth funds, a swap provides a backstop against oil-revenue shortfalls without forcing yuan experimentation. For Washington, it cements the dirham’s dollar peg, deepens integration, and signals to other Gulf states that dollar primacy offers permanent benefits. This is the Argentina template scaled up: a $20 billion swap line stabilized the peso ahead of key elections, generated U.S. profits, and pulled Argentina away from Chinese influence.
The Argentina Playbook as the New Template

In October 2025, the U.S. extended a $20 billion currency swap to Argentina via the Exchange Stabilization Fund to support President Javier Milei’s reforms. The facility was drawn upon, markets stabilized, and it was repaid in full—with the U.S. earning tens of millions in profit and no taxpayer losses. Bessent has cited this as proof that such tools are commercially sound, not giveaways. Scaling this to oil-rich Gulf partners creates “new U.S. dollar funding centers” that operate 24/7, making yuan alternatives redundant and embedding dollar liquidity in energy trade hubs.

Outlook: A Hybrid Petrodollar for the 21st Century?
Secretary Bessent’s strategy appears designed to merge the petrodollar’s energy foundation with Argentina-style financial statecraft. By controlling Venezuelan oil flows in dollars, offering swap lifelines to Gulf states like the UAE amid war-induced shocks, and creating permanent dollar infrastructure, the U.S. is rebuilding dominance by design rather than inertia. Whether this fully revives the petrodollar or evolves it into something broader remains to be seen. But for global oil markets, the implications are clear: more predictable dollar-denominated supply from new levers (Venezuela), reduced de-dollarization risk in the Gulf, and a stronger U.S. hand in pricing and liquidity. Energy traders, producers, and importers should watch the next round of swap negotiations closely—they could define the next decade of oil finance.

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