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The National Interest on MSN20hOpinion
Americans Will Regret Washington’s Oil Market Hubris
Washington's oil market hubris risks repeating the mistakes of the past — and threatens national security as well.
What would happen next? There is a precedent: the oil shocks of the 1970s, when oil prices quadrupled. The shock drove rapid ...
The second major shock came in 1979 with the Iranian Revolution, which slashed Iranian oil exports and sent global prices soaring again, effectively doubling and shaking international markets.
Past conflicts involving oil-producing nations in West Asia have significantly impacted global crude-oil prices. However, the ...
Future conflicts may be decoupled from oil shocks, giving Western powers more freedom to engage politically in the region without immediate energy security concerns.
Bitcoin continues to grab many of the headlines in crypto, as the biggest token dominates the scene. According to some sources, recent movements in the market suggest that demand could soon outstrip ...
RSS wanted to overthrow Indira Gandhi using whatever means it could, and later had no moral compunctions in flattering and ...
Oil prices are edging slightly higher today, rising by approximately 0.4% for both Brent and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude, as they attempt to ...
By Jeremy Salt Despite the signs of steady strategic decline since 1967, Israel remains fixated on war as the solution to the ...
Dow futures swooned early morning hours when word broke of Israel’s massive airstrikes against Iranian nuclear facilities a ...
U.S. warplanes struck Iran’s nuclear sites in a dramatic escalation—just the latest in a long, bloody pattern. From proxy ...
And crucially, the US would be drawn in -- not just in airstrikes and logistics -- but in post-conflict management, civil ...