Global oil markets are absorbing the worst supply shock in recorded history while President Trump’s attention is directed at what he considers a far larger danger: Iran’s nuclear weapons program. Trump stated on Truth Social Thursday that preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons is more important to him than the oil price crisis, even as Brent crude crossed $100 per barrel. His remarks came as the IEA took the extraordinary step of coordinating the largest emergency reserve release in its history.
Gulf producers have slashed output by roughly 10 million barrels per day — nearly 10% of global demand — and the Strait of Hormuz remains closed. Brent crude gained as much as 10% Thursday before briefly exceeding $100 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate climbed toward $96. The IEA released 400 million barrels from member nations’ emergency reserves, and the United States separately announced a release of 172 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
Trump’s Truth Social post noted that as the world’s largest oil producer, America stands to gain financially from elevated crude prices. But he made clear this financial dimension is secondary: his paramount concern is stopping Iran — an “evil Empire” in his words — from obtaining nuclear weapons that could bring catastrophe to the Middle East and the world. He pledged he would never allow this to happen.
By publicly stating that the nuclear mission ranks above the oil crisis, Trump is essentially telling global markets and foreign governments that economic pressure will not be sufficient to end the conflict. The administration is committed to a strategic objective that transcends short-term market conditions. Trump reinforced this outside the White House Wednesday, confirming that military operations are ongoing and that Iran has been struck with historically unprecedented force.
Trump said he has no concern about Iran striking US territory. The IEA’s emergency release and US reserve drawdown have provided modest market relief without resolving the underlying supply crisis. The global economy is contending with an extraordinary conjunction of military, nuclear, and energy crises — and Trump has made clear which one drives his decision-making.
