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Jay Shackford
(Editor’s note: From his bunker in Mar-a-Lago, President Donald Trump launched his air war against Iran two weeks ago. To add some historical context, just imagine FDR and Winston Churchill monitoring D-Day from a fancy resort in the Caribbean surrounded by suntanned vacationers. The final chapter of this war is yet to be written but, as John Cassidy describes in his Friday column in The New Yorker, it could change the course of history.
(Now Trump has done some bat-shit crazy things before and gotten away with it — imposing nonsensical and counterproductive tariffs, giving hundreds of billions of dollars in tax breaks to the rich while stealing health care from 16 million million Americans and pushing the economy closer to recession, shooting and killing American citizens protesting ICE tactics and his immigration policies, just to name a few — but the war in Iran exposes Donald Trump for his gross incompetence and stupidity in a way the world has never seen before. When asked yesterday when the war would end, Trump responded, “When I feel it in my bones.”
(To understand Trump, you really need to think like Trump. Honestly, he has no idea what’s going on; nor does he care. In reality, Stephen Miller — Trump’s little Nazi — is writing the policy and effectively running the show from the Situation Room while Trump plays a little golf and wanders around his Florida resort to chants of USA…USA…USA.
(But this is not just another crazy Trump gambit on the world stage, it is a military strike with potentially disastrous, world-wide consequences. God only knows what will happen if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed to oil tankers and cargo ships for months — not weeks as the President has promised. Think about the supply-chain disruptions during the Covid pandemic, and what that did to the world’s economy.
(During his first term, the President asked his chief-of-staff, Gen. John Kelly, “What’s the point of having nuclear weapons, if you can’t use them.” Trump’s war talk is like suicide. As a famous psychiatrist once said, “Not everyone who talks about suicide, actually commits it. But everyone who taken his own life, has talked to someone about it. )
Trump’s Inexcusable Unpreparedness for the Iranian Oil Crisis
In the President’s first term, Iran demonstrated what tactics it would use in a confrontation with the U.S. Yet the Administration seems to have no game plan.
By John Cassidy
March 13, 2026
Two weeks after the United States and Israel launched an air war on Iran, there has been no let up in the conflict—or its financial repercussions. On Thursday, Iran’s new Supreme Leader said that his country would keep closed the Strait of Hormuz, a vital shipping lane through which about a fifth of the world’s oil flows, and more vessels in the Persian Gulf were attacked, including two oil tankers that were set ablaze off the coast of Iraq. On world markets, the price of a barrel of crude jumped to more than a hundred dollars.
Here in the U.S., the price of gasoline has risen by about more than twenty per cent since the war began, and energy analysts warn that it could rise a lot further if the Strait isn’t reopened. The Dow has fallen by about four per cent. Donald Trump, having plunged the country into a potentially disastrous war, with no clear rationale or exit plan, is flailing around for ways to mitigate its economic consequences. On Thursday, he suggested in a social-media post that the U.S., as the world’s largest oil producer, makes a lot of money when prices go up—an argument that even the most slavish G.O.P. congressman facing a reëlection campaign might hesitate to embrace.
Perhaps the most startling thing about the whole situation is that the Trump Administration was apparently surprised by, and unprepared for, Iran’s capability to inflict economic pain on the U.S. and its allies. This despite the fact that during a showdown in Trump’s first term the regime in Tehran used the same tactics of threatening to block the Strait and of attacking oil infrastructure in neighboring Gulf states that are allied with the U.S. Whether out of arrogance, capriciousness, or collective amnesia, this recent history was ignored.
In 2018, after rashly pulling out of the nuclear deal that the Obama Administration had negotiated, Trump launched a “maximum pressure campaign” against the Islamic Republic, which included extensive sanctions on its oil industry, the country’s biggest revenue generator. The response from Tehran was robust. In February, 2019, the Navy commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said that if Iran had no buyers for its oil it would take military steps to close the Strait. Ultimately, it backed off—it was able to continue exporting oil to China and other countries that ignored the U.S. sanctions—but the government and its foreign proxies did carry out a campaign of aggression in and around the Gulf. In May and June of 2019, four oil tankers docked in the United Arab Emirates were sabotaged and two freight vessels, one Japanese-owned and the other Norwegian-owned, were damaged by Iranian mines in the Gulf of Oman, which sits below the Strait. Months later, in Saudi Arabia, drone attacks struck oil-pumping stations that were operated by Aramco, the state-run oil giant. According to a report from the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University, Tehran “meant to send a message to the Gulf states that if they continue to encourage the United States to cut off Iran’s oil sector, Iran will take actions to harm their ability to export oil.” The report continued, “The message to the United States is that the ‘maximum pressure’ campaign is not without costs, and if the United States seeks to pursue this approach, Iran will take steps that have a negative impact on the global economy.”
At the time, there was speculation that tensions between the U.S. and Iran could spiral into military conflict—Mike Pompeo, then Trump’s Secretary of State, had described one of Iran’s attacks on Aramco facilities as an “act of war.” The Columbia report considered various scenarios, including small-scale hostilities in the Gulf and a major war that closed the Strait of Hormuz and drew in other countries in the region. In the latter scenario, the price of a barrel of crude could spike up from sixty-five dollars to “$110–$170 after one month, $95–$125 after six months,” the report said. The good news, it went on, was that “none of the parties are interested in pursuing massive escalation and have shown little will to do so even as the crisis in the region has worsened.”
Enter Trump 2.0, whose addled mind seems to have difficulty keeping a thought in place for a few days, let alone for the six years that have passed since the previous showdown in the Gulf. A few weeks ago, in his State of the Union address, Trump pointed out how the price of a gallon of gasoline “reached a peak of over six dollars a gallon in some states under my predecessor—it was, quite honestly, a disaster.” Three days later, Trump signed the order for Operation Epic Fury, with eminently predictable results. Having survived the initial U.S.-Israeli onslaught, the Iranian regime rolled out an expanded version of its playbook from 2019, exploiting its choke hold on the Strait, while launching missile and drone attacks on U.S. bases and energy infrastructure in the Gulf states.
With the Strait effectively blocked and hundreds of tankers stranded, many millions of barrels of oil are stuck at sea. And as onshore storage facilities have filled up Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Kuwait have shut off some of their wells because they have nowhere to put the oil they produce. In volume terms, the hit to global supply is now the largest ever, energy analysts say, and, the longer the conflict goes on, the worse it will get. On an corporate earnings call last week, Amin Nasser, the chief executive of Aramco, said that a lengthy closure of the Strait would have “catastrophic consequences” for the world’s oil markets. Gas prices haven’t hit six dollars yet, but in parts of California they have come close. At a national level, the average price has risen from $2.94 a month ago to about $3.60, according to the American Automobile Association.
Last week, Trump floated the idea of the U.S. government providing insurance contracts to vessels to sail through the Strait—a proposal that seems to be in limbo. On Wednesday, the Paris-based International Energy Agency announced that its members, which include the United States, other Western nations, and their allies, would release more than four hundred million barrels of oil from emergency stocks to alleviate supply disruptions—the biggest such release ever seen. In the circumstances, this was a sensible move, but if the White House had been hoping that it would immediately bring down oil prices it was disappointed. Despite the announcement from the I.E.A., the price of crude closed the day up nearly five per cent.
The previous time that Trump almost blundered into an economic catastrophe was on “Liberation Day,” nearly a year ago, when, from the Rose Garden, he announced punitive tariffs on dozens of U.S. trading partners. Financial markets, including the U.S. bond market, which lies at the heart of the global financial system, promptly went into a tailspin. Fortunately for Trump, two of his top economic aides—Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick—were able to persuade him to back down and pause the tariffs before the cracks in the bond market developed into a full-blown crisis. Subsequently, many of the levies were modified. Thus, the legend of “taco”—“Trump Always Chickens Out”—was born. (Robert Armstrong, a journalist at the Financial Times, came up with the phrase.) On Wall Street, taco still has many believers, and not without reason. Trump remains obsessed with the markets. And with the midterms on the horizon the last thing that he and other Republicans want to talk about is higher gas prices.
But it turns out that doing a wartime taco is considerably harder than doing a peacetime one. The decision to cease hostilities isn’t Trump’s alone; Israel and Iran also have a say. The potential loss of face is much larger: at least seven American service members have been killed in Operation Epic Fury, while more than a hundred have been wounded. And oil wells and refineries can’t be turned back on overnight. “Many processes are out of (Trump’s) hand,” Marko Kolanović, a financial commentator who was formerly co-head of global research at JPMorgan Chase, remarked online last week.
It’s not all bad news for the taco Man. Among economists, there is a consensus that the U.S. economy is much less vulnerable to higher oil prices than it was in the nineteen-seventies, when two big price spikes that originated in the Middle East both predated deep recessions. Back then, most American families drove gas guzzlers, and manufacturing, which uses a lot of energy, contributed about twice as much to G.D.P. than it does today. In other words, the economy isn’t nearly as energy intensive as it used to be, and, for that reason, most economists don’t believe higher oil prices alone will plunge it into a recession. In 2022, after Russia invaded Ukraine, energy prices rose to even higher levels than they’ve reached this month, and the U.S. economy kept growing.
The economic optimists present a strong argument, but it isn’t infallible. In 2022, the economy was still rebounding strongly from covid, with the vestiges of a big fiscal stimulus at its back. In the past year, G.D.P. has continued to rise, but job growth has virtually ceased, raising questions about the economy’s momentum. An extended period of higher energy prices would hit low- and middle-income households, many of which are already struggling to keep up with the cost. It could also feed through to higher inflation, which could prompt the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates on hold, or even raise them. Assuming the Senate confirms Kevin Warsh, Trump’s nominee to replace Jerome Powell as Fed chair, an interest hike seems like an unlikely outcome, but the possibility of the Fed not responding to higher prices also raises awkward possibilities. If investors come to think that the central bank is going soft on inflation, there could be a big sell-off in the bond market. That would leave Trump in the same predicament he was in last year after Liberation Day.
Nothing is certain, except the fact that the President is floundering, making conflicting statements from one day to the next about how long the war will last. As it continues, rule at the whim of a strongman seems to be giving way to rule by slapstick. Growing up in England, I spent countless hours watching the comedies of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, which the BBC showed all the time. In each show, the two nitwits would set out on some caper, which would inevitably go horribly wrong, leaving them broke, or tied up, or in jail, or hanging over a cliff, or some other situation of great peril. At which point, Ollie would turn to Stan and say, “Well, here’s another nice mess you’ve gotten me into.”
Trump is turning into Oliver Hardy. Earlier this week, he said that he launched the war based on information he received from Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, Pete Hegseth, and Marco Rubio that led him to believe Iran was preparing to attack the United States. The search for the fall guy is on. Only the truth is we are all Trump’s fall guys—not just Americans facing higher fuel bills but the inhabitants of other countries, particularly energy-importing ones, such as Japan, Germany, China, and India, which will bear the brunt of higher prices. Hopefully, that will be the full extent of the economic damage caused by Trump’s recklessness. It can’t be guaranteed. ♦

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