TBM Report
Iran has flatly rejected a strategic offer from the United States to temporarily lift sanctions on its offshore oil reserves. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the Speaker of the Iranian Parliament, dismissed the move with derision, claiming that all of Iran’s stored oil has already been sold to alternative buyers. This bold defiance signals a significant setback for the Trump administration’s attempt to stabilize global energy prices.
The diplomatic friction peaked when U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced on Friday (March 20) a temporary license for the sale of approximately 140 million barrels of Iranian oil currently held in floating tankers. The intention was to increase global supply and lower soaring energy costs. However, Tehran appears to be signaling that it has successfully bypassed traditional Western financial blocks, rendering the U.S. offer irrelevant to their current economic strategy.
Mocking the U.S. proposal on the social media platform X (formerly Twitter), Ghalibaf wrote: “Lifting sanctions on Iranian oil stuck at sea? Sorry—all our oil has been sold.” His comments underscore Tehran’s growing confidence in its shadow fleet and alternative trade routes. As the White House struggles to rein in global inflation, Iran’s direct refusal creates a new layer of complexity in the already volatile Middle East energy corridor.




