-
America 24 posted an update
Day 21: Trumps Race Against Time - 120 Days To End The Iran War For Israel
Day 21: Trumps Race Against Time – Trump Has About 30 Days To End The War before oil and gas prices skyrocket to the moon. To $5-$10 per gallon of regular gas. Or worse. And that is just getting started.
Emergency Oil Release: Trump Fights High Gas Prices in Iran Conflict
In the past two weeks amid the escalating U.S.-led war with Iran, which has disrupted global oil supplies through attacks on shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and driven crude prices above $100 per barrel, President Trump has authorized a major release of 172 million barrels from the nation’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) to help ease skyrocketing gasoline prices for American consumers. This emergency drawdown, announced around March 11, 2026, and coordinated with the International Energy Agency’s broader release of 400 million barrels, aims to flood the market with additional supply over the next 120 days and counteract the sharp rise in U.S. gas prices—from around $2.98 per gallon before the conflict intensified to averages exceeding $3.70–$3.84 recently—providing some relief to households facing higher fuel costs from the geopolitical crisis. While experts question the long-term impact given the scale of the disruption, the move reflects Trump’s efforts to prioritize domestic energy affordability during this period of heightened Middle East tensions.
What happens when the 120 day oil-gas reserves are empty? And the Iran war is still going?
Israel 🤡💩Iran’s Oil: Zero to USA, Billions to China – Trump’s Silent War With China, & Forever Expansion Wars for Israel
Iran remains a significant but sanctioned oil producer and exporter; its crude oil production hovers around 3.3–4 million barrels per day (roughly 4% of world production), while Iran Oil exports have rebounded to approximately 1.5–2.1 million barrels per day in recent periods, primarily to China (often 80–90% or more of its exports, sometimes via indirect routes or shadow tankers to evade sanctions), with smaller amounts to countries like Syria, the UAE (as a transshipment hub), and others in Asia or the region. Despite ongoing conflicts and disruptions in the Middle East—including threats to the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20% of global oil passes—Iran’s oil contributes modestly to the world supply but plays a notable role in Asian markets, particularly for discount-seeking buyers, while having little direct impact on U.S. supply given America’s status as a major net exporter of petroleum products and its diversified import sources.