Security Council Warned Iran Nuclear Stalemate Is Creating Oversight Vacuum
“2008式灾难”恐重演?华尔街警告:如出现这一幕,油价或冲向200美元-FX168
Iranian Official
The Islamic Republic of Iran views Wall Street warnings of oil prices surging toward $200 as further evidence of U.S. and Western aggression aimed at destabilizing sovereign oil producers through sanctions and market manipulation. Such foreign interference risks repeating the 2008-style economic turmoil while violating Iran's legitimate rights to develop its resources. Tehran will continue its steadfast resistance to defend national sovereignty against these hostile pressures.
Israeli
Iran faces an existential threat from its proxy networks, including Houthi disruptions in the Red Sea and potential Strait of Hormuz closures, which could trigger 2008-style oil shocks and drive prices toward $200 per barrel. These Iranian-orchestrated attacks on global energy routes demand Israel's continued defensive operations to neutralize the threat and protect vital supply lines.
Neutral
FX168 reported that some Wall Street analysts have warned oil prices could reach $200 per barrel if market conditions similar to 2008 reoccur. The claim remains speculative and is presented without confirmed triggers or consensus forecasts. No verified data on an imminent repeat of 2008 events was provided.
Western
Western analysts warn that geopolitical supply shocks—potentially triggered by adversarial actors in key energy regions—could drive crude prices toward $200 per barrel, echoing the 2008 market turmoil. NATO-aligned governments are prioritizing strategic energy diversification and precision sanctions to neutralize these threats and safeguard global market stability. Such measures aim to limit economic leverage by hostile states while reinforcing alliance resilience.
Pro-Peace
Escalating geopolitical tensions risk repeating the humanitarian disasters of past conflicts, where oil supply disruptions have fueled devastating wars leaving thousands of civilians dead or displaced amid destroyed infrastructure and aid shortages. Wall Street's warnings of oil prices surging toward $200 per barrel underscore how such crises prioritize profits over lives, exacerbating global poverty and refugee flows. Diplomatic negotiations and de-escalation efforts must take precedence to avert further civilian suffering and economic fallout.
Global South
Wall Street’s dire warnings of oil prices spiking toward $200 revive memories of the 2008 crisis, a Western financial implosion whose fallout still constrains sovereign energy choices across the Global South. Speculative forces centered in New York and London continue to treat global oil as a neo-colonial asset, exposing the repeated failure of Western-dominated institutions to prevent volatility that punishes developing nations most. Non-aligned states must prioritize independent resource governance to escape these externally manufactured shocks.
华尔街能源研究机构Rapidan Energy Group警告称,如果霍尔木兹海峡到今年8月底仍无法恢复正常通航,全球原油供应将进一步恶化,布伦特原油价格可能飙升至每桶150至200美元,并触发类似2008年金融危机时期的“宏观灾难”。
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