US Perspective on the Iran - Israel / US War

Financial Times spoke with energy traders at the end of the week who warned that slowing tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz could trigger a more severe supply crunch than the first round of the US-Iran war because emergency reserves and stockpiles around the world that cushioned the earlier disruption have been mostly depleted.

"We've burned through all of the buffers we had. Everything," said one trader. "All of that's now gone.

China ranks as the world’s largest importer of crude oil, yet it boasts abundant crude oil stockpiles combining national strategic reserves and commercial inventories held by domestic enterprises.
The country could sustain its oil demand for at least six months without importing a single drop of crude oil over the next half year. I fail to understand how the commentator arrived at such an absurd conclusion.

As the world’s largest crude oil importer, China stands to suffer severe harm from sky-high oil prices. It is certain that China will leverage its petroleum reserves to stabilize oil prices going forward.
Oil is of great significance, but with the advancement of new energy, the global oil market currently faces oversupply as a whole.

Meanwhile, China boasts highly sophisticated technologies for producing refined oil products via coal chemical processes. Once crude oil prices climb above USD 85 per barrel, coal-to-liquids production in China gains distinct cost advantages. Furthermore, China holds the world’s largest coal reserves.

Today’s global oil prices cannot be dictated merely by several oil exporters or a few strategic straits.

Right now, Russia, the U.S. and Saudi Arabia are all courting China’s government to boost China’s purchases of their oil.
 
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Wall Street and Western economic media outlets nowadays demonstrate shockingly poor analytical standards. It beggars belief that entities of such caliber purport to analyze and forecast crude oil prices
 
US appears to be severing Internet cables and cellular networks in southern Iran
I'm not sure about this claim of severing Internet cables, I know a few people have made this claim in various places.

But what is certainty known because even the semi official Iranian news outlet has also made mention of it - is that 116 telecommunications towers have been knocked out in the South of Iran by US strikes.
 
4m ago

U.S. concludes eighth straight night of strikes on Iran, Pentagon says​

The U.S. has concluded its eighth straight night of strikes on Iran, U.S. Central Command said.

As part of the latest round of strikes, the U.S. specifically targeted Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces that were believed to have launched Friday's attack that killed at least two U.S. soldiers on a Jordanian military base, CENTCOM reported.

The U.S. also "successfully hit Iranian military coastal surveillance and air defense facilities, maritime capabilities, and missile and drone storage sites to continue degrading Iranian military capabilities," CENTCOM added.

The strikes ended at around 11:30 p.m. ET, according to CENTCOM.
By Faris Tanyos
 

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