U.S. President Donald Trump says countries upset by high fuel prices should “go get your individual oil” as Iran maintains its chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump expressed his frustration toward allies which were unwilling to assist the U.S. reopen the critical passageway in a social media post.
“Go get your individual oil,” Trump wrote. He also said they can buy from the U.S. because “we have now plenty.”
His comments in a social media post on Tuesday got here as average U.S. gas prices shot past US$4 a gallon.
U.S. strikes hit a city Tuesday that’s home to one in every of Iran’s foremost nuclear sites, sending an enormous fireball into the sky, and Tehran attacked a totally loaded Kuwaiti oil tanker within the Persian Gulf.
The attacks were testament to the intensity of the war greater than a month after the U.S. and Israel launched their first strikes. The conflict has left greater than 3,000 dead and caused major disruptions to the world’s supply of oil and natural gas. On Tuesday, the common price of gasoline within the U.S. shot past US$4 a gallon — just one other sign of the war’s effects far beyond the Middle East.
Trump, who has vacillated between insisting there’s progress in diplomatic talks with Iran and threatening to widen the war, shared footage of the attack on Isfahan. The central city is home to one in every of three nuclear enrichment sites attacked by the U.S. in a 12-day war in June, and analysts imagine much of Iran’s highly enriched uranium is probably going stored there.
The war is roiling oil market
Iran’s stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz, the waterway leading out of Persian Gulf through which a fifth of the world’s oil is transported during peacetime, has driven up global oil prices, as have Tehran’s attacks on regional energy infrastructure. That has shaken stock markets around the globe and pushed up the fee of many basic goods.

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Spot prices of Brent crude, the international standard, hovered around US$106 a barrel Tuesday, up greater than 45 per cent for the reason that war began Feb. 28.
Trump warned this week that if a ceasefire is just not reached “shortly,” and if the strait is just not reopened, the U.S. would broaden its offensive, including by attacking the Kharg Island oil export hub and possibly desalination plants.
Israel, US launch a brand new wave of strikes
Israel and the U.S. launched a wave of strikes on Iran, hitting Tehran within the early morning.
The video shared by Trump appeared to indicate an enormous attack on Isfahan, and NASA fire-tracking satellites suggest explosions happened in a mountainous region on the town’s southern edge. Iran has not confirmed the attack.
A satellite image taken just before the June war suggests Tehran transferred a truckload of highly enriched uranium to a nuclear facility about 20 kilometers (12 miles) from Tuesday’s strikes.
Analysts imagine the truck — which the image showed going right into a tunnel loaded with 18 blue containers — likely carried most or all of Iran’s stockpile of uranium enriched as much as 60 per cent purity. That’s a brief, technical step to weapons-grade levels.
An Iranian drone hit a Kuwaiti oil tanker in waters off the United Arab Emirates city of Dubai, sparking a blaze that was later put out, the Dubai Media Office said. Authorities said no oil spill resulted.
4 people were also wounded when debris from an intercepted drone fell right into a residential area, and loud explosions could possibly be heard later from one other attack on Dubai.
Air raid sirens sounded in Bahrain, while Saudi Arabia said it intercepted three ballistic missiles launched toward its capital. Loud explosions were also heard in Israel not long after the military warned of an incoming missile barrage from Iran.
Gulf allies of america which were hit hard have urged Trump to proceed the conflict until Iran’s military capabilities are destroyed, in keeping with U.S., Gulf and Israeli officials.
In response to that growing anger, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi insisted Tuesday that Tehran is barely targeting U.S. forces within the region.
“Our operations are geared toward enemy aggressors who don’t have any respect for Arabs or Iranians, nor can provide any security,” Araghchi wrote on X.
Peacekeepers killed in Lebanon
The U.N. Security Council planned to convene an emergency session Tuesday after officials said three peacekeepers in southern Lebanon had been killed in lower than 24 hours during Israel’s invasion there.
The U.N. peacekeeping mission within the country, where Israel is battling the Iran-backed Hezbollah, didn’t say who was accountable for the deaths.
In Iran, authorities say greater than 1,900 people have been killed, while 19 have been reported dead in Israel.
Two dozen people have died in Gulf states and the occupied West Bank. In Lebanon, officials said greater than 1,200 people have been killed, and greater than 1 million displaced.
Ten Israeli soldiers have died in Lebanon, including the 4 announced Tuesday, while 13 U.S. service members have been killed.
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