Oil Prices Tell One Story but Trump Is Writing a Different One About Nuclear Iran

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The story being told by oil prices — of a historic supply crisis and global economic disruption — is not the story President Trump is writing on Thursday. In a Truth Social post, Trump stated that stopping Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons is “far greater” in importance than the oil price surge causing the IEA to record the worst supply shock in market history. Trump is writing a different story: one about nuclear security, existential threats, and America’s determination to prevent catastrophe.
The oil price story has its own dramatic narrative. Gulf producers have cut output by roughly 10 million barrels per day — about 10% of global demand. Brent crude gained as much as 10% Thursday to briefly exceed $100 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate approached $96. The IEA released 400 million barrels from members’ emergency reserves. The US pledged 172 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
Trump’s nuclear story begins with an economic observation — America profits from high oil as the world’s largest producer — and then pivots to the existential threat: Iran, an “evil Empire,” is pursuing nuclear weapons that could destroy the Middle East and the world. Trump pledged to write the ending of this story himself, vowing that he would never allow Iran to cross the nuclear threshold.
The two stories — oil crisis and nuclear confrontation — are running simultaneously but on different timelines. The oil crisis demands immediate resolution. The nuclear confrontation demands structural resolution. Trump’s insistence on prioritizing the nuclear story over the oil story signals that the administration is operating on the longer timeline, accepting short-term economic disruption in pursuit of long-term security.
Trump told reporters Wednesday that the US has struck Iran with historic force and is not finished. He dismissed concerns about Iranian retaliation against American soil. Oil prices tell one story, but Trump is writing another — and his story will not have a satisfying ending until Iran’s nuclear program is permanently resolved.

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