US ‘unsanctions’ Russian oil amid Middle East crisis

Mar 7, 2026 | BUSINESS

The move would cool the market after attacks on Iran sent global crude prices soaring

Washington has eased sanctions on some volumes of Russian oil to help stabilize global energy markets following the Middle East escalation, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Friday in an interview with Fox News. He added that the US is looking to take further steps to bring oil prices down.

The US and Israel launched joint air strikes on Iran last weekend, triggering retaliatory attacks targeting American military bases across the Middle East. The escalation has disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a vital energy chokepoint through which about one-fifth of global oil and LNG supplies pass.

Global oil prices have surged as the conflict approaches the one-week mark and the strait remained effectively closed to through-traffic. Brent crude climbed about 30% to above $94 per barrel, its biggest weekly gain since April 2020. US benchmark WTI rose more than 38%, briefly crossing $92 per barrel and marking its largest weekly jump since at least 1985.

Bessent stated that Washington had given India “permission” to buy Russian crude “to ease the temporary gap of oil around the world.” He also said that the US “may unsanction other Russian oil” to further boost supply.

Read more

Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting with members of the government via videoconference at the Kremlin in Moscow.
Russia could end gas supplies to EU immediately – Putin

“We’re going to keep a cadence of announcing measures to bring relief to the market during this conflict,” he added.

Bessent also promised that US Navy ships would begin escorting civilian vessels through the Strait of Hormuz within one or two weeks.

India and China became the main buyers of Russian crude after the US and EU imposed sanctions on Moscow over the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022. Washington has long urged New Delhi to halt the imports, with US Ambassador to India Sergio Gor saying last month that the White House was using trade talks to push India to buy Venezuelan oil instead. President Donald Trump claimed that New Delhi “agreed to stop” deliveries from Moscow.

India, however, never confirmed such a commitment. Speaking at the Munich Security Conference last week, Indian Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar said New Delhi pursues “strategic autonomy” and makes energy decisions it considers in its “best interest” based on costs and risks.


READ MORE: Oil price surges to highest since 2023

Moscow likewise said it had no information suggesting that India has put Russian crude imports on hold. The Kremlin has condemned the US-Israeli strikes on Iran as a “premeditated and unprovoked act of aggression” with no justification.

Read More

Pin It on Pinterest