7 resultsfor “impact of US foreign policy on Gulf countries”
countries are meeting at a Royal Air Force base north of London to put together a multinational mission to safeguard the Strait of Hormuz amid global concerns over oil and energy prices. A poll
policy of capping members’ production as a way to control prices and stabilise the market. The country has invested billions of dollars in increasing its oil production capacity from 3 to 5 million barrels
country’s chief nuclear negotiator and was a bridge between the security apparatus and the political establishment. He was killed in an Israeli air attack in early March, removing one of Tehran’s most experienced
Gulf ports. The blockade has created further uncertainty for shippers, oil companies and war risk insurers. On Wednesday morning, US central command (Centcom) said US forces had “achieved maritime superiority in the Middle East”. > double
foreign policy think tank Quincy Institute estimated that Washington’s costs incurred over the first month of the war were between $20bn and $25bn. A large-scale ground operation in Iran similar to that
foreign-flagged ships, including those previously deemed friendly, to pass until the US lifts its own naval blockade. Iranian First Vice President Mohammad Reza Aref said on April 19 that the “security of the Strait
policy analyst Javed Hassan, an adviser to the Islamabad-based Centre for Research and Security Studies (CRSS), told Al Jazeera. “Export revenues, the state’s fiscal lifeline, would contract sharply. And while Iran has improved