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The US Energy Secretary says that we can stop Iran from exporting oil

Chris Wright, the U.S. Energy secretary, said that President Donald Trump could increase pressure on Iran by stopping its oil exports. This would be part of his plan to put pressure on Tehran regarding its nuclear program.

Trump's return to the White House in January, after his first term, when he rescinded the United States' 2015 power agreement with Tehran and imposed restrictions on its oil sales, has once again brought a more aggressive approach towards the Middle Eastern country over its nuclear activities.

Wright said during a trip to Abu Dhabi that he believed Gulf allies were very concerned about an Iran with nuclear weapons and that they shared the U.S. conviction that such a result would be in no one's interest.

According to data from the industry, Iranian oil exports have recovered under Joe Biden who was elected president after Trump's second term. They are still showing no signs of decline in 2025. China, which is opposed to unilateral sanctions, purchases the majority of Iran's oil shipments.

"That is actually quite doable." Wright replied, "President Trump did it during his first term." Wright was asked about how the United States could enforce its maximum-pressure policy against Tehran. We can track the ships that leave Iran. We know their destination. We can stop Iran from exporting oil.

I won't discuss the exact method of how this will happen. "But can we completely turn the screws against Iran," he replied when asked if they would stop Iranian ships on the sea.

On Friday

The United States gave "a real chance" to the high-level nuclear talks on Saturday with China after Trump

Threatened bombing

if discussions failed.

Wright predicted that the markets' concerns about the economic growth would be proved wrong. Yousef SABA in Abu Dhabi, Alex Lawler writing in London and David Evans and Mark POrter editing.

(source: Reuters)