Home » Oil Crisis Deepens as Trump Sets Out His Non-Negotiable Condition for Peace With Iran

Oil Crisis Deepens as Trump Sets Out His Non-Negotiable Condition for Peace With Iran

by admin477351

President Trump effectively set out his non-negotiable condition for peace with Iran on Thursday: the complete removal of its nuclear weapons threat. In a Truth Social post, Trump stated that stopping Iran from developing nuclear weapons is “far greater” in importance than the oil price crisis, calling Iran an “evil Empire” and pledging to prevent it from going nuclear under any circumstances. The statement came as global oil markets recorded the worst supply shock in their history.

Gulf producers have cut oil output by approximately 10 million barrels per day — nearly 10% of world demand — while the Strait of Hormuz remains closed. Brent crude rose as much as 10% Thursday to briefly exceed $100 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate climbed toward $96 before retreating. The IEA deployed 400 million barrels from members’ emergency reserves, and the United States released 172 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Trump’s Truth Social post began with an economic argument: America, the world’s largest crude producer, profits when oil prices rise. He then stated that this benefit is secondary to the mission of stopping Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons that could destroy the Middle East and the world. His pledge was categorical — he would never allow this to happen.

By framing the nuclear issue as a non-negotiable condition for peace, Trump has defined what any ceasefire or diplomatic agreement must contain. This is unlikely to be easily satisfied and suggests the conflict may continue for an extended period. Trump added on Wednesday that American forces have struck Iran with historically unprecedented force and are not finished with the campaign. His earlier suggestion that the war might end soon remains unexplained.

Trump expressed no concern about Iran attacking American soil. The oil market disruption is historic in scale and there is no immediate path to resolution. Trump’s non-negotiable nuclear condition has, in effect, set the terms for when and how the current crisis might eventually end.

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