Live
Updates: Oil and Gas Prices Jump as Iran War’s Economic Cost Climbs
The price
of oil surged to more than $90 a barrel and U.S. gasoline prices rose again.
Israeli airstrikes pummeled Tehran and Lebanon, and President Trump’s demand
for Iran’s “unconditional surrender” raised the prospect of an extended war.
Emmett
Lindner David E.
Sanger Adam
Rasgon Euan Ward
and Richard Pérez-Peña
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/03/06/world/iran-war-trump-israel-lebanon
Here’s
the latest.
Oil and
gasoline prices jumped again on Friday, a sign of how the world, including the
United States, will feel the economic pain of the U.S.-Israeli war against
Iran, as bombing in Iran and Lebanon continued unabated.
Futures
of the domestic benchmark crude, which traded around $67 a week ago, topped $90
on Friday for the first time in more than two years, and are now more than 30
percent above their prewar level. The average price of unleaded gasoline in the
United States reached $3.32 per gallon, up 11 percent since the war began. The
concurrent increases, which showed no sign of easing, could be a serious shock
to an already-slowing world economy.
Israeli
officials on Friday said their forces had destroyed an underground bunker that
had been used by Iran’s supreme leader before he died last week, part a fresh
wave of heavy strikes on Tehran. And President Trump demanded “unconditional
surrender” by Iran, the most uncompromising goal he has set so far for the war,
and one that could portend a much longer conflict in the Middle East.
The
Israeli military also pounded the southern outskirts of Beirut and issued more
evacuation warnings in Lebanon as it intensified its campaign there against
Iran-backed Hezbollah militants. About 300,000 people in Lebanon have fled
their homes since the bombing began, the Norwegian Refugee Council estimated.
“We
civilians are paying for the price of war,” said Mohamed Hjoula, 35, who had
taken refuge with about 40 family members on Beirut’s waterfront promenade
after leaving their homes.
Mr.
Trump’s post on Truth Social that there “will be no deal with Iran except
UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!” highlighted his shifting war aims. Days earlier, Mr.
Trump had told The Atlantic, “They want to talk, and I have agreed to talk, so
I will be talking to them.”
The
president made the post ruling out compromise after Masoud Pezeshkian, the
Iranian president, said earlier that some countries had begun what he called
“mediation efforts,” without elaborating on who was involved. Iran’s
intelligence ministry has reached out to the C.I.A. through intermediaries to
discuss terms for ending the war, according to officials briefed on the
outreach.
Iran’s
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps launched a wave of drones and missiles at
Israel, according to a statement from the force reported by IRNA, the country’s
state news agency. Air-raid sirens went off in Tel Aviv, and the Israeli
military said that it had detected missile launches from Iran, though there
were no immediate reports of major damage.
Here’s
what else we’re covering:
New
attacks: The Israeli military said it had struck more than 400 targets in
western Iran on Friday, including missile launchers and drone storage sites.
Bunker
strike: Iranian state television reported attacks on a compound in Tehran where
the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Israel published video showing
a series of airstrikes in roughly the same area, saying that its military had
destroyed an underground bunker in the compound. The New York Times reviewed
satellite imagery showing fresh damage to buildings at the site.
Gulf
nations: As Iran’s retaliatory strikes hit U.S. allies in the Persian Gulf,
Qatar’s foreign ministry said Tehran had carried out an attack on buildings in
neighboring Bahrain where members of the Qatari Navy were, but reported no
injuries. Saudi Arabia’s defense ministry said that it had intercepted and
destroyed three ballistic missiles launched toward a military complex south of
the capital, Riyadh, while the United Arab Emirates said it had intercepted
nine ballistic missiles and more than 100 drones on Friday.
Oil and
the economy: Stocks fell sharply as trading opened in New York as the surge in
oil and gas prices driven by the conflict set off fears of resurgent inflation.
A senior official in Qatar warned in a Financial Times interview of lengthy
disruptions to energy production, and shipping through the Strait of Hormuz
remained effectively closed because of attacks.
Evacuations:
The State Department is battling accusations from diplomats and travelers who
say the Trump administration endangered U.S. citizens by beginning a war
without adequate plans for helping Americans leave the Middle East.
Death
toll: Hundreds of people have been killed in Iran since the start of the
U.S.-Israeli attacks, according to the Red Crescent Society, Iran’s main
humanitarian relief organization, including at least 175, many of them
children, who died in the bombing of a girls’ elementary school. More than 200
people in Lebanon have been killed, according to the Lebanese health ministry.


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