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Trump's Iran Speech Wednesday Night: What He Said and What Europe Did the Next Morning
Trump addressed the nation on the Iran war Wednesday night. Here is what he actually said, how markets reacted immediately, and what European governments did by Thursday morning.
Trump addressed the nation on the Iran war Wednesday night. Here is what he actually said, how markets reacted immediately, and what European governments did by Thursday morning.
- Trump addressed the nation on the Iran war Wednesday night.
- The White House had been building anticipation for Trump's Wednesday evening address since April 1, with press secretary Karoline Leavitt describing it as an 'important update' without further specifics.
- The key elements of the speech, and their immediate consequences: Trump confirmed the 'two to three weeks' timeline for ending US operations in Iran, providing the most specific timeline to date.
Trump addressed the nation on the Iran war Wednesday night.
The White House had been building anticipation for Trump's Wednesday evening address since April 1, with press secretary Karoline Leavitt describing it as an 'important update' without further specifics. When Trump delivered the speech — from the Oval Office, in the formal presidential address format typically reserved for significant national moments — its content contained specific elements that markets and European governments were waiting for.
The key elements of the speech, and their immediate consequences: Trump confirmed the 'two to three weeks' timeline for ending US operations in Iran, providing the most specific timeline to date. He said Iran had agreed to 'most of' the US's 15 demands and described the situation as moving toward resolution. He repeated his warning about Iran's power infrastructure while simultaneously suggesting US forces would 'leave Iran very soon.'
Oil market reaction was immediate: Brent crude dropped approximately 4 percent in the 20 minutes following the speech's key lines, as markets priced a higher probability of Hormuz reopening. European gas futures followed, with TTF falling from its recent peak levels though remaining well elevated above pre-war norms.
European government reactions by Thursday morning were notably divided by their specific economic exposure. Germany, whose industry has been most severely affected by energy costs, was most publicly welcoming of any signs of de-escalation. France, whose foreign policy establishment has been most vocal in its criticism of the war's conduct, was more measured — welcoming the directional signal while noting that the specific demands Iran would need to meet remain unspecified. Eastern European governments, whose primary concern is the Russia threat and who see NATO coherence as paramount, were most anxious about the simultaneous NATO withdrawal threat.
For European energy markets, the single most important takeaway was not the Iran deal progress but Trump's framing of Hormuz responsibility: 'That's not for us.' If the US considers Hormuz reopening a European problem after US forces leave, European energy security cannot depend on American military presence to enforce it.