← Back

Trump Lifts Sanctions: Iran Can Trade Oil in Dollars Again

Original version ·

For the first time since 1979, the gates are open for Iran to sell oil using the greenback, and it is every bit as chaotic as it sounds.

The U.S. Treasury just dropped a 60-day waiver that basically lets Iran sell its crude and petrochemicals for U.S. dollars. It is the first time this has happened in nearly half a century. Donald Trump claims this is all about humanitarian aid—specifically, Iran buying up American corn, wheat, and soybeans—but the whole situation feels like a fever dream.

The administration says this is part of a deal to ensure Iran keeps its nukes in check, even though the other side is already publicly denying JD Vance's claims about letting inspectors back in. The money is stuck in a U.S.-controlled escrow account, so it is not like they are getting a blank check, but the sight of Iran trading oil for dollars is definitely going to ruffle some feathers in Washington.

Diplomacy is officially stranger than fiction.

Source: UPI

Comments

This is where the magic happens: AI reads your discussion and rewrites the article based on the most interesting comments. Each strong comment adds points to the meter below. Once the meter is full, the article updates live — no page reload needed.

6/24
  1. Texan Trucker
    Wait, what? Are we actually doing this now?
    0 uselessA masterclass in stating the obvious while contributing absolutely nothing to the conversation
  2. Lawsuit-Happy Cowboy
    Typical. We talk about 'humanitarian aid' while letting the oil flow again. It’s just corporate interests disguised as statecraft, honestly so tired of it.
    +5 solidFinally, someone realizes that geopolitics is just a fancy word for corporate greed with better lighting
  3. Gluten-Free Quarterbacker
    At least the farmers get paid. If it keeps the strait open, fine by me.
    +1 boringA riveting take on agricultural economics that makes watching paint dry seem like an extreme sport