
Donald Trump’s energy secretary has warned that the Iran war could likely last for several more weeks and deflected a question about whether it was possible that oil prices could hit $200 a barrel.
Chris Wright appeared on several programs on Sunday as he presented the Trump administration’s domestic response to a war in Iran that despite the president’s proclamations seems far from over just yet.
Speaking on NBC’s Meet the Press, Wright was questioned by moderator Kristen Welker about a prediction from Iranian officials that oil would soon reach $200 per barrel.
“I would pay no attention to what Iran says, but, there is a lot of energy that flows through the Strait of Hormuz,” Wright responded. “And depending upon the timing and the manner upon which this conflict comes to an end, we’re going to see some elevated pricing until we get there.”
The Trump administration is contending with two public image issues surrounding its war with Iran, launched with the stated intention of inflicting regime change and destroying the country’s nuclear program: an unclear perception of the administration’s goals and whether they’re being achieved, and the impacts of yet another expensive military campaign in the Middle East.
Wright addressed the latter Sunday as he responded to the sharp spike in gas prices over the last two weeks as Iranian forces have mined the Strait of Hormuz and closed off the key waterway for commercial shipping vessels, strangling the global oil supply and driving prices past $100 per barrel for the first time in years.
He insisted in multiple interviews across NBC, ABC, Fox and CNN that disruptions to the U.S. oil supply would last “weeks” not “months” and insisted that even the Trump administration’s “worst-case” scenario saw the conflict being wrapped up in the immediate days ahead.
But he also admitted that in war, nothing is certain.
“You never know exactly the timeframe of this, but in the worst case this is a weeks, this is not a months thing,” he told CNN’s Jake Tapper.
“There’s no guarantees in wars at all,” he added on ABC’s This Week. “This is short-term pain to get through to a much better place.”
The Trump administration still hasn’t laid out the parameters by which it is judging whether its military objectives have been completed.
Whether American forces will be deployed to the region also remains unclear, as Republicans briefed on the administration’s plans in Congress have only ruled out a large-scale invasion, but not a limited troop presence.
In an interview with NBC News on Saturday, Trump said that he wasn’t open to ending the war just yet.
“Iran wants to make a deal, and I don’t want to make it because the terms aren’t good enough yet,” he told NBC’s Kristen Welker.


