Trump Pledges 'Complete Victory' Over Iran Within Two Weeks, Forecasts Oil Price Collapse
Trump predicts a 'complete victory' over Iran within two weeks, linking a deal to a sharp drop in oil prices, as Tehran analysts dismiss the claim as election-year market psychology.

Donald Trump has declared that the United States will announce a 'complete victory' over Iran within the next two weeks, promising that a final deal will trigger a collapse in oil prices. Speaking at a tele-rally for Senator Lindsey Graham, the president insisted that Tehran is 'ready to give us everything' and willing to forgo nuclear weapons. 'I think we are winning this battle, but in the next two weeks, when we announce complete victory, it will happen very soon and oil prices will go down sharply,' he said.
The two-week horizon recycles a pattern that first emerged with the ceasefire announced on 7 April, which was initially intended to last a fortnight while the two sides worked towards an agreement to end hostilities. Analysts in Tehran view the latest pledge less as a diplomatic forecast than as a psychological instrument aimed at calming energy markets ahead of US elections. By anchoring expectations to a imminent breakthrough, the White House seeks to dampen oil-price volatility without yet delivering tangible progress.
Viewed from Washington, Vice President JD Vance injected a note of nuance, acknowledging that American and Israeli interests do not perfectly align and suggesting that recent developments have opened a window for a durable settlement on Iran's nuclear programme. The combination of Trump's theatrical deadline and Vance's more measured tone indicates an administration calibrating both domestic and international audiences.
Moscow's coverage added an ironic layer: Russian agencies noted that Senator Graham, the host of the rally, appears on the country's list of terrorists and extremists. The detail passed without editorial comment yet served to frame the event as a piece of geopolitical theatre observed with detachment from rival capitals. Meanwhile, the broader Arab media spotlighted Vance's remarks, underscoring the regional hope that a lasting bargain might replace the cycle of ultimatums.
Whether the two-week countdown yields a settlement or merely resets the clock remains uncertain. But the explicit link between victory over Iran and cheaper oil lays bare the economic pressures driving the narrative, and ensures that markets and foreign ministries alike will scrutinise the next fortnight with heightened attention.
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