Iran’s clerical establishment made its position clear over the weekend: it was prepared to go to war across the entire region, appoint a new supreme leader from within the ruling family, and push global oil prices toward $200 per barrel rather than accept any limitation on its military campaign. The message was unambiguous, and oil markets responded accordingly, crossing $100 per barrel.
Israeli strikes on oil storage and fuel distribution facilities near Tehran killed four workers and left the capital blanketed in black smoke. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards responded by threatening $200 crude and launching strikes against Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait, confirming that the Guards’ warnings were operational orders, not mere rhetoric.
Saudi forces intercepted 15 drones, Bahrain’s desalination plant was hit, two Saudi civilians were killed, and a US service member died from wounds sustained in an Iranian attack — the seventh American fatality of the war. Reports of Russian intelligence support for Iran’s targeting of US military assets deepened concerns about the conflict’s expanding scope.
Iran’s clerical assembly simultaneously appointed Mojtaba Khamenei as supreme leader, a historic and controversial decision that concentrated power at the top of the Iranian political system. His appointment was seen as a signal that the religious establishment had fully committed to the current military strategy, with no intention of seeking accommodation.
Washington pledged not to target Iranian oil infrastructure and predicted only short-term supply disruptions. But the combination of a newly empowered hardline leadership, military operations across six countries, and oil above $100 suggested that Iran’s clerical establishment was playing a long game — one with potentially catastrophic consequences for global energy markets and regional stability.