Marco Rubio, the US Secretary of State, said Washington wants to end Russian oil waivers "as soon as we possibly can" 1. The remark targets General License 134C, the OFAC authorisation covering vessel services for Russian oil shipments, which expires on 17 June with no GL 134D announced. OFAC is the US Treasury's sanctions enforcement office; a general license is the carve-out that lets specific transactions continue despite sanctions.
The waivers had rolled over monthly since March, which had trained the market to treat each expiry as a formality. Rubio's wording breaks that routine. When the senior US diplomat says the goal is to end the cover rather than extend it, the 17 June date stops being a rollover and becomes a genuine cliff, repricing the risk for everyone holding Russian-linked cargo.
India carries the most exposure as the primary off-take for discounted Russian crude under this cover. Lose the waiver on 17 June and Indian refiners face the choice of finding compliant alternatives at higher cost or risking secondary sanctions. Rubio's statement sharpens the 17 June cliff the prior briefing had already flagged , turning a quiet administrative deadline into the single largest sanctions hinge on the calendar.
