Monday, March 09, 2026

Trump vows control over Iran leaders as officials seek to calm oil concerns




Trump vows control over Iran leaders as officials seek to calm oil concerns


Any new supreme leader in Iran will ‘not last long’ without US approval, Trump says; officials say oil disruptions ‘temporary’


United States President Donald Trump speaks to reporters as US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth listens while traveling aboard Air Force One [Mark Schiefelbein/The Associated Press]



By Al Jazeera Staff
Published On 8 Mar 2026


United States President Donald Trump has again promised to exert influence over who is selected as Iran’s next Supreme Leader, saying that, without Washington’s approval, whoever is picked for the role is “not going to last long”.

The statement on Sunday came just hours after a member of Iran’s Assembly of Experts said the clerical body had selected the replacement for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in the hours after the US and Israel launched the war with Iran on February 28.

“He’s going to have to get approval from us,” Trump told ABC News, referring to a new supreme leader. “If he doesn’t get approval from us, he’s not going to last long.”

Trump added that he didn’t want future administrations to have “to go back” in the years ahead, an apparent reference to future military action.

“I don’t want people to have to go back in five years and have to do the same thing again, or worse, let them have a nuclear weapon,” he said.

Officials in Iran, which has launched retaliatory attacks across the Middle East, have repeatedly rejected the notion of Washington asserting influence over the selection.



Trump, Xi to hold high-stakes talks as US strikes on Iran test fragile US–China trade ties



How Iran’s ballistic missiles reach Israel despite advanced air defence systems



Who's in control in Iran and how will Gulf states react to attacks?


Earlier on Sunday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi again vowed “we will allow nobody to interfere in our domestic affairs”.

“This is up to the Iranian people to elect their new leader,” he said, adding that Iranians had elected the Assembly of Experts, which will select the next supreme leader.


Oman says nuclear talks were ‘making progress’

Trump’s comments came as the war entered its ninth day, with the death toll in Iran rising to 1,332, with at least 11 killed across the Gulf, 11 killed in Israel, and six US soldiers killed to date.

The US president has offered shifting justifications for the war, repeatedly pointing to Iran’s nuclear ambitions, its ballistic missile programme, as well as the totality of Iran’s actions in the region since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Critics, including the majority of Democratic US lawmakers, have said Trump has provided scant evidence to prove Iran posed an immediate threat.



Trump threatens to expand attacks in Iran, claims Tehran's military capability 'wiped out'


On Sunday, Oman Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi, who had been overseeing indirect US-Iran talks on Iran’s nuclear programme, again rejected US officials’ claims that Tehran had not entered into the negotiations in good faith.

Speaking during a ministerial meeting of the Arab League, Albusaidi said diplomatic initiatives seeking a “fair and honourable solution were making progress” when the US-Israeli attacks began.

He further warned that the region is facing “a dangerous turning point” as fighting escalates.
‘Short-term disruption’

Attacks from both sides appeared to have widened, with the US and Israel for the first time striking oil storage and refining facilities in Tehran, and Iran launching more strikes across the Gulf, including a drone attack that caused material damage to a desalination plant in Bahrain.

Both Bloomberg and Axios news have reported that the US and Israel have considered a special ground operation to seize Iran’s enriched uranium, with Israeli Ambassador to the US Yechiel Leiter telling CBS’s Face the Nation news programme that securing the nuclear fuel is “on our radar screen and we’re going to take care of it”.

For their part, top Trump administration officials spent Sunday seeking to alleviate concerns over the war’s knock-on effects on global oil and gas prices.

Rapidly rising prices represent a particular political vulnerability for Trump as his Republican Party faces legislative midterm elections in November.

Speaking to Fox News, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said the administration was responding to what she called a “short-term disruption”.



US public approval of Iran war hits 27 percent, lower than Vietnam War


She said the administration was “tapping into our newfound market in Venezuela”, referring to access US companies had gained to the South American country’s oil industry in the wake of the January 3 US abduction of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro.

Energy experts have said that rebuilding Venezuela’s oil industry would likely be a multi-year process, and have questioned what immediate impact it could have in offsetting current shortages.

Speaking on CBS’s Face the Nation, Energy Secretary Chris Wright also maintained that the war would not drag on and that any economic fallout would be fleeting.

Trump, who came into office vowing to end so-called “endless wars”, has said the operations against Iran could last “four to five weeks”, but he also said the conflict has “no time limit”.

Wright pointed to “a temporary period of elevated energy prices”, but denied there was an energy shortage “at all in the Western Hemisphere”.

He also underscored that the US has 400 million gallons of oil in the strategic oil reserves and the administration is “more than happy to use that if it’s needed”.

“What you want is emotional reactions and fear that this is a long-term war,” Wright said. “This is not a long-term war; it’s a temporary movement.”


***


The idiotic pedophile thinks he is Emperor of the World


11 comments:

  1. Rumor is Jimmy Lai may get some “special treatment” for 47’s visit.

    But Starmer was a Wanker, even though Jimmy is a British citizen.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The same fate awaits the female footballers when they are home.

    Remember brave Iranian athlete Elnaz,who took off her headscarf 1 month after the revolution.

    Her passport was taken, her family was arrested,their business were destroyed and she was imprisoned.

    She did her duty in the right time,place in the best way.

    https://x.com/azatalsalim/status/2030278334274322897?s=46

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. what a fart!

      Elnaz Rekabi gained global attention in October 2022 when she took part in championships in South Korea without wearing the headscarf required for women in the Islamic republic.

      She returned home and largely vanished from public view, with some Persian-language media based outside Iran reporting she had been placed under house arrest and banned from competing abroad. However, this was vehemently denied by Iran's Seoul embassy.

      Rekabi has left Iran & moves to Dpain. Her brother Davood wrote in an Instagram story quoted by the IranWire website and Iran International television channel, that also expressed hope she could return in the future.

      Delete
  3. ISIS brides and children from Syrian Camps Most Welcome to Aussieland….

    Iranian women footballers sorry lah, Go Home, Good Luck….

    Hello Australia, this is your moment. We need your support.
    Iran’s women’s football team refused to sing the regime’s anthem right after the killing of Ali Khamenei.
    State TV called them “war-time traitors.”
    Now they’re on a bus back to Iran, flashing the SOS hand signal through the window.
    I call on Australian government to them. Don’t send them back to danger. Please give them protection.

    https://x.com/alinejadmasih/status/2030778620507988240?s=46

    ReplyDelete
  4. I signed oredy…

    We ask everyone to please take a moment to sign this petition calling on the Australian Government to protect the Iranian women's national football team and allow them to remain in Australia until their safety is guaranteed.

    change.org/p/provide-prot…

    Today on International Women's Day, these courageous women face severe consequences for refusing to sing the islamist anthem at the start of a game. Regime media called them "traitors." If forced to return to Iran, they could face the death penalty.

    To every Iranian in Australia:
    Don't remain silent. These women are your sisters, your daughters, your own people. They showed courage in the face of a monstrous regime that punishes even the smallest act of dignity. You have a voice the regime cannot silence. USE IT. Contact your local MP and urge them to act.

    Stand with these brave women. πŸ’š

    https://x.com/iranroyalists/status/2030781831537451013?s=46

    ReplyDelete
  5. Starmer, fate would have it your parents named you Keir.

    Look up what that translates to in Farsi. You Wanker.

    Countries that have designated Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organization:

    πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ The US
    πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ Canada
    πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¦ Saudi Arabia
    πŸ‡¦πŸ‡Ί Australia
    πŸ‡§πŸ‡­ Bahrain
    πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡ͺ Sweden
    πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡¨ Ecuador
    πŸ‡΅πŸ‡Ύ Paraguay
    πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί The EU

    Countries that have not:

    πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ United Kingdom

    https://x.com/eyakoby/status/2030702925748531672?s=46

    ReplyDelete
  6. fuck is fantasising that he can do a Delcy RodrΓ­guez with Iran.
    Iran is a very different kind of authoritarian state from Venezuela.
    Caracas was controlled by a small group of Chavezists , with a large number of hanger-ons who benefited from the regime, but have no real loyalty.

    Iran is a massive extreme Islamic theocracy with a large cadre of armed ideological forces. It is more like a communist state. Very difficult to bring about change externally.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Albo & Penny, blood wil be on your hands if something happens to these women….

    These are the names of the 25 Iranian footballers who stood in silent defiance against the Islamic Regime.

    Say their names.
    Save our girls.

    Fatemeh Shaban
    Fatemeh Makhdoomi
    Mohaddeseh Zolfi
    Atefeh Imani
    Zahra Pourheydar
    Fatemeh Amineh Borazjani
    Melika Motevalli
    Atefeh Ramazanizadeh
    Fatemeh Pasandideh
    Sara Didar
    Roujin Tamrian
    Afsaneh Chatrenoor
    Zahra Sarbali
    Golnoush Khosravi
    Mona Hamoudi
    Maryam Dini
    Shahnaz Jafarizadeh
    Raha Yazdani
    Mahnaz Rezazadeh
    Zahra Khajavi
    Sana Sadeghi
    Zahra Ahmadizadeh
    Zahra Ghanbari
    Koswar Anbari
    Maryam Yektaei

    https://x.com/samanthataghoy/status/2030820623602126975?s=46

    ReplyDelete
  8. Aussie refused to deport Sirul Azhar because he faced death penalty. These women may suffer the same fate at the hands of the IRGC if they are forced to return.

    Will Albo & Penny take that risk? Blood on their hands?

    πŸ”΄ BREAKING:

    It appears the Iranian women's football team are still in Australia.

    The Australian government can not send them back to Iran while the regime has assured they will punish them as "wartime traitors" on state TV.

    Keep them safe. Keep them far away from airports.

    Urgent. Iran women's football team bus is at the hotel. I have credible evidence women wishing to claim asylum have been prevented from accessing a human rights lawyer. Watch, listen, share.

    https://x.com/traceyleeholmes/status/2030801515678777759?s=46

    ReplyDelete