For years, analysts warned that a major conflict in the Middle East could push oil prices above $100 per barrel and remain there for an extended period. That scenario is no longer hypothetical. Israel and Iran are at war, Gulf states are under fire, American troops are dying, and crude prices have crossed the threshold that economists associate with meaningful global economic damage.
Israeli strikes on oil storage facilities near Tehran killed four workers and left the city cloaked in smoke. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards responded by threatening $200 crude and launching strikes against Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait, damaging a Bahraini desalination plant and killing two Saudi civilians.
A seventh US service member died from wounds sustained in an Iranian attack in Saudi Arabia. Reports that Russia had been feeding targeting intelligence to Iran for use against US military assets represented a dangerous escalation of great-power involvement in a conflict that had already defied repeated predictions of containment.
Iran’s clerical assembly appointed Mojtaba Khamenei as supreme leader, completing a political transition that analysts said was unlikely to produce any moderation in Iran’s military posture. His appointment marked the first hereditary transfer of supreme leadership in the Islamic Republic’s history, drawing immediate international condemnation.
Washington pledged restraint on Iranian energy infrastructure and predicted brief market disruptions. But the warning signs had been present for weeks, and the world had chosen to wait and see. Now, with oil above $100, seven Americans dead, and a new untested supreme leader in Tehran, the window for easy solutions had closed.
Oil’s Spike Above $100 Is a Warning That the World Can No Longer Ignore
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