Oil Crisis Puts Trump’s Nuclear-First Strategy Under the Spotlight

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The global oil crisis triggered by the US-Iran conflict has placed President Trump’s nuclear-first strategic doctrine squarely in the spotlight, revealing an administration willing to sustain significant economic disruption in pursuit of its primary objective: preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Trump stated this explicitly on Truth Social Thursday, saying that halting Iran’s nuclear program is “far greater” in importance than the oil price surge rattling global economies. His remarks came as global markets absorbed what the IEA called the worst oil supply disruption ever recorded.
Gulf oil production has fallen by roughly 10 million barrels per day — about 10% of global demand — as a result of the conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude surged as much as 10% Thursday to briefly exceed $100 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate climbed toward $96 before easing. The IEA coordinated the release of 400 million barrels from its members’ emergency reserves, and the US released 172 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
Trump acknowledged on Truth Social that America benefits financially from higher oil prices as the world’s largest producer. But he made clear this economic dimension does not shape his strategic priorities. Stopping Iran — characterized as an evil empire — from developing nuclear weapons and threatening the Middle East and the world is his overriding mission, he wrote, and one he pledged to fulfill without exception.
The nuclear-first doctrine has consequences for allied nations and global markets alike. It implies that the US will sustain military operations until the nuclear question is resolved, regardless of the economic fallout. This interpretation is supported by Trump’s comments Wednesday that the US has hit Iran harder than virtually any country in history and is not finished. Trump’s earlier suggestion that the war is ending soon adds to the confusion.
Trump said he is unconcerned about any Iranian strike on American soil. The global oil market disruption is described by the IEA as unprecedented. With no diplomatic breakthrough in sight, the nuclear-first strategy appears set to drive the conflict for the foreseeable future.

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