Trump's Iran War Just Gave Putin a Lifeline
A 30-day sanctions waiver on Russian oil reveals the geopolitical chaos created when America's war collides with global energy markets.

War creates strange bedfellows. Russia just got a 30-day pass to sell stranded oil — courtesy of the Trump administration.
The same president who started a war with Iran is now helping Putin fill his war chest. Not out of affection. Out of desperation.
When Oil Hits $100
Brent crude crossed $100 a barrel Thursday. First time since 2022. Iran's shuttering of the Strait of Hormuz — 20% of the world's oil and gas supply — sent traders into panic.
Countries released a record 400 million barrels from emergency reserves. Prices didn't budge. The IEA called it the largest stockpile dump in history. Markets shrugged.
Trump's Treasury issued the waiver late Thursday night: Russian oil currently stuck at sea can now be delivered. A 30-day window. The Kremlin called it a "pragmatic step." Ukraine called it a betrayal.
The Perception Divide
The Albis Perception Gap Index scored this story 6.6 — one of the sharpest framing splits this week. US outlets led with betrayal. European coverage mixed pragmatic necessity with alarm about Putin's windfall. Middle Eastern sources barely touched the Russia angle, focusing on Hormuz.
Social media lit up. One commenter summarized it: "Russia's sanctions lifted, sounds like a betrayal to the Ukrainian cause."
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Washington's move came as a "surprise" during a Friday press conference in Norway. "We think that's wrong," he added. "There is currently a price problem, but not a supply problem."
French President Emmanuel Macron echoed the frustration: "Prices rising doesn't mean we should review our sanctions policies against Russia."
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was blunter. "The lifting of sanctions means Russia will receive more money and there will be more drone attacks," he said in Paris. "Russia will get money for its war machine."
But Trump's hand was forced. His own war choked off Gulf energy exports. Gas prices spiked. Political pressure mounted. The Strategic Petroleum Reserve can't plug a 20% global supply cut forever.
So he called Putin. Then he issued the waiver.
What Actually Changed
The waiver doesn't lift all Russian oil sanctions. It lets seaborne crude already at sea — stranded by prior enforcement — reach buyers. Another 172 million barrels from US reserves will hit the market too.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced it late Thursday. Trump said the US will hit Iran "very hard over the next week." The two statements weren't contradictory. They were linked.
You can't blockade Hormuz and sanction the world's second-largest oil exporter at the same time. Not without crashing your own economy.
Europe refused to join. Germany, France, and the UK reaffirmed their Russian oil bans. British Energy Minister Michael Shanks called the timing "critical" for Ukraine. They're holding the line while Trump blinks.
India and China — already buying Russian oil under the table — now get cover to do it openly. For 30 days.
The Price That Didn't Drop
Oil closed Friday at $101 per barrel. The waiver barely dented it.
Goldman Sachs warned prices could hit $150 by month's end if Hormuz stays shut. UBS's Paul Donovan said the market's now driven by "Iranian actions," not supply management.
Historic reserve release. Politically explosive sanctions relief. Neither worked.
Because the real problem isn't stranded Russian oil. It's the Strait of Hormuz. As long as that's closed, energy markets stay volatile.
Trump's Iran war created a crisis that only Putin could help solve. Moscow's getting paid. Ukraine's losing leverage. And the Strait stays shut.
What's Next
The 30-day waiver expires April 12. If the war's still raging, Trump faces an impossible choice: extend relief and enrage Ukraine supporters, or let prices spiral.
Europe's watching. They're betting Trump won't risk domestic gas price spikes before midterms. That calculation gives Moscow room to maneuver.
Meanwhile, Iran's new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei vowed to keep Hormuz "effectively shut" until US forces withdraw from the region. That's not happening in 30 days.
So the cycle continues. War in the Gulf. Sanctions relief for Moscow. Europe furious. Oil traders betting on chaos.
Trump started a war to contain Iran. Instead, he's funding Russia, alienating allies, and watching oil prices ignore every tool in his arsenal.
Strange bedfellows, indeed.
Sources & Verification
Based on 5 sources from 3 regions
- The Washington PostNorth America
- Politico EuropeEurope
- ReutersInternational
- BBC NewsEurope
- CNN BusinessNorth America
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