
Iran offers the European Union Oil - Paid in Euros; not US Dollars!
Iran’s Hormuz Offer Isn’t a Diplomatic Gesture. It’s a Financial Weapon.
Iran just offered Europe transit access through the Strait of Hormuz. Most of the coverage treated it like a minor diplomatic development. A small gesture in a chaotic theatre of war. Standard geopolitics from a cornered regional power trying to split the Western coalition.
It is none of those things.
This is a direct attack on the petrodollar system, the financial architecture that has underwritten American global dominance for fifty years. Understanding why requires stepping back from the war coverage entirely and looking at what is actually moving underneath it. The surface story is a military conflict. The real story is a challenge to the monetary order that makes American power possible in the first place.
Start with the numbers, because the numbers explain the desperation on the European side.
The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 20 per cent of all the world’s oil consumption. Not 20 per cent of traded oil. Twenty per cent of everything the world burns. When that chokepoint is contested, the entire global energy market reprices almost immediately. In the first thirty days of the current conflict, Europe’s energy bill rose by $16.2 billion. Natural gas prices on the continent have doubled. Oil is up 60 per cent. Diesel is sitting at $200 a barrel. Europe is not watching this war from a comfortable distance. It is bleeding from it in real time, and its governments know that the longer this continues, the more politically untenable their position becomes.
Against that backdrop, Iran’s offer lands with an entirely different weight. It is not charity and it is not diplomacy in any conventional sense. It is leverage, applied with precision against the most vulnerable point in the Western coalition. Europe needs energy. Iran controls a critical pathway to it. The terms of any deal would reflect that imbalance completely.
And the terms are the whole story.
If Europe takes this deal, payment does not run through dollars. It runs through euros, or potentially yuan, depending on how the arrangement is structured. That single detail, easy to miss in coverage focused on military movements and nuclear timelines, is the most consequential development in global finance in a generation.
To understand why, you have to understand what the petrodollar actually is and how it actually works, because it is almost never explained clearly in mainstream coverage.
The petrodollar system was constructed in 1974, in the aftermath of the first oil shock. The Nixon administration, having just ended dollar convertibility to gold three years earlier, needed a new mechanism to sustain global demand for dollars. The arrangement reached with Saudi Arabia was straightforward: oil would be priced and settled exclusively in US dollars, and in exchange the United States would provide security guarantees to Gulf producers. Every nation on earth that needed oil, which was every nation on earth, now had to hold dollars to buy it. That created permanent, structural, non-negotiable demand for the American currency regardless of US fiscal behaviour, regardless of trade deficits, regardless of debt levels. You could not opt out. You needed oil. Oil required dollars. The system was self-enforcing.
That is not a trade advantage. That is the foundation of the entire American empire. It is what allows the United States to run deficits that would destroy any other country’s currency. It is what allows Washington to fund its military, its welfare state, and its global network of bases and institutions without ever facing the discipline that other nations face when they spend beyond their means. The dollar’s reserve status was not built on trust in American institutions or confidence in American economic management. It was built on oil. Remove the oil anchor, and the entire structure becomes exposed.
That structure is now under direct and coordinated pressure, and the Hormuz offer is the sharpest instrument yet applied to it.
Iran did not arrive at this moment by accident. It joined BRICS in 2024, aligning itself formally with the bloc that has made de-dollarisation a stated strategic objective. Russia has banned dollar transactions in its commodity trade. China has been systematically expanding yuan-settled oil contracts with Gulf producers, with some success. Gold has crossed $5,500 an ounce, reflecting a broad institutional reassessment of dollar-denominated reserve assets. The dollar’s share of global foreign exchange reserves has already fallen from roughly 70 per cent to 56.9 per cent over the past twenty-five years. None of this happened in a vacuum. It is the result of deliberate policy by a coalition of states that identified dollar dependency as a structural vulnerability and have been working, with varying degrees of coordination, to reduce it.
The Hormuz offer is that project moving from the margins to the centre of global politics.
ECB board member Panetta said it plainly on April 2: even if the Iran conflict ends, the damage has already been done. The disruption to energy markets, the demonstration that Hormuz can be selectively closed, the fracturing of Western consensus, all of it leaves a permanent mark on how the world calculates risk in dollar-denominated systems. Deutsche Bank called the war a catalyst for yuan displacement of the petrodollar. These are not fringe analysts working from ideological priors. These are institutional voices at the centre of the Western financial system describing, with unusual frankness, a fracture they can see developing in real time.
Follow the logic of what happens next, because each step is consequential and the chain moves fast once it starts.
Iran restricts Hormuz transit for the United States and its direct partners while offering Europe a separate bilateral arrangement. Europe, facing an energy crisis with no credible near-term exit and governments under serious domestic pressure, weighs the offer seriously. A deal is structured and settled in euros or yuan. The transaction completes. Every government watching, and every government in BRICS, the Global South, and the Gulf is watching closely, observes that a major Western economic bloc completed a significant energy transaction outside the dollar system and the world did not end. Markets did not collapse. No punishment was administered that outweighed the cost of continued dollar dependency during an energy crisis.
The conclusion that follows from that observation is immediate, contagious, and irreversible. If Europe can bypass the dollar on energy, so can anyone. The psychological barrier, which has been as important as any legal or structural constraint in maintaining dollar dominance, is gone. From there the cascade operates through simple market logic. Dollar demand softens as more transactions route around it. The dollar’s reserve share accelerates its existing decline. The United States, carrying more than $34 trillion in federal debt and dependent on foreign appetite for Treasury securities to finance it at manageable rates, finds the cost of that debt rising as the captive demand that dollar dominance created begins to erode. Inflation follows. The purchasing power of American households follows. The capacity to sustain a global military and political presence on deficit spending follows after that.
America does not lose a battle in that scenario. It loses the financial war it has been winning since 1974. And unlike a military defeat, there is no treaty that ends it and no territory to recover. Once the dollar’s monopoly on global energy settlement is broken in a visible and unpunished way, the architecture that made it irreplaceable is gone.
Two questions deserve to sit with you for a moment.
If dollar dominance is as secure and American power as overwhelming as the foreign policy establishment insists, why is Europe openly weighing an energy deal with the country the United States is actively bombing? Not a rogue state at the fringe of the international system. A country at war with America’s closest regional ally, currently under US military pressure, offering Europe a lifeline in exchange for moving outside the dollar system. And Europe is considering it seriously.
If Western unity is as solid as we are told, why did forty countries convene specifically to address the Hormuz situation and come away with nothing? Not a partial agreement. Not a framework for future negotiation. Nothing. Complete and total failure to produce any coordinated response to the most significant energy chokepoint event in decades.
The silence after that failure is more revealing than anything the coverage has told you about the war itself.
The conflict being shown to you is about nuclear weapons, regional security, and the Iranian regime’s survival calculus. Those things are real and they matter. But they are not the primary stakes of what is unfolding. The primary stakes are about who controls the system that allows one country to print the world’s reserve currency, export its debt to everyone else, and sustain global power without ever facing the monetary discipline every other nation lives under.
That system has been the decisive advantage of American power for fifty years. It is now the primary target. And the Hormuz offer just made that clearer than anything that has come before it.
Prepare accordingly.
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