Russia helps Iran kill Americans, and we reward them with an oil deal
I’m not sure why more people aren’t talking about this.
Russia is reportedly giving Iran the locations of American warships, aircraft, and military bases in the Middle East.
The drones Iran is using to hit those bases? Russia taught them how to use those more effectively, too, sharing the specific attack strategies they perfected bombing Ukraine for four years. Six American soldiers died on March 1st when an Iranian drone hit a makeshift command center in Kuwait. Dozens more were wounded, some with brain trauma, burns, shrapnel. At least one nearly lost a limb.
The Trump administration’s response to all of this was to suspend sanctions on Russian oil.
Russia is helping Iran target our troops. Our troops are dying. And within days, we’re cutting Russia a check. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called it “unfortunate” that Russia would benefit.
Unfortunate. Like it’s a rainy day at a barbecue and not a country actively helping kill American soldiers getting rewarded with a massive financial lifeline.
Here’s what happened.
On March 6th, the Washington Post reported that Russia was providing Iran with intelligence on the locations of American forces. CNN followed up days later with a Western intelligence source confirming Russia was giving Iran advanced drone tactics, the same ones Moscow spent years developing against Ukraine. These aren’t vague allegations from anonymous bloggers. Multiple U.S. officials confirmed the intelligence sharing on the record, speaking to NBC, CNN, the Washington Post, and others.
When a Fox News reporter asked Trump about it, he snapped at him. Called it a stupid question. When Pete Hegseth was asked how Russian intelligence helping Iran target American bases made him feel, he said he wasn’t concerned. “The only ones that need to be worried right now are Iranians that think they’re gonna live.”
Meanwhile, the actual Americans in the line of fire were sitting in a triple-wide trailer in Kuwait with, according to sources, basically zero drone defense capability. One source told CBS they had no counter-drone system at all. Warning sirens that had been working all week failed the morning of the actual attack.
Steve Witkoff, Trump’s special envoy, said the U.S. was taking Russia “at their word” that they weren’t helping Iran. This was after the intelligence community had already confirmed Russia was helping Iran.
Then, on March 11th, Putin’s economic envoy Kirill Dmitriev flew to Florida to meet with Witkoff, Jared Kushner, and a White House advisor named Josh Gruenbaum. They had what both sides called a “productive meeting.” Less than 24 hours later, the Treasury Department announced a 30-day waiver allowing countries to buy roughly 124 million barrels of Russian oil currently sitting on tankers at sea. That’s about $10 billion worth, according to Zelenskyy.
Dmitriev, who is basically Putin’s bag man for these things, then went on Telegram and gloated. He said the U.S. was “beginning to better understand the key, systemic role of Russian oil and gas” and called sanctions against Russia “ineffective and destructive.” He told European leaders that “energy markets will punish them” for maintaining their embargoes.
Russia’s daily oil revenue has already jumped 14% since the Iran war started. They’re pulling in about $588 million a day from oil and gas exports. The sanctions that were finally starting to squeeze them, the ones that had driven Russian oil prices down to $40 a barrel by December, are now being peeled back because the war in Iran that Russia is profiting from created an energy crisis that gave Russia leverage to demand sanctions relief.
If you’re having trouble following that, don’t worry, the circular logic is the whole point. Russia helps Iran attack American soldiers. The Iran war disrupts global oil markets. Oil prices spike. The U.S. panics about gas prices before midterm elections. The U.S. lifts sanctions on Russian oil to bring prices down. Russia makes more money. Russia uses that money to continue its war in Ukraine and presumably to keep helping Iran.
Senator Brian Schatz summed it up pretty perfectly on X: “Looks like we fought Iran and Russia won.”
The European response has been furious. Macron said the situation “in no way justifies lifting sanctions” on Russia. Germany’s Merz called it “the wrong thing to do.” The European Commission president said Russia should “absolutely not benefit” from the Iran war. Even Zelenskyy pointed out the obvious, that the money Russia earns from energy sales goes directly to weapons being used against Ukraine.
Meanwhile, Ukraine, the country we’ve been slow-walking weapons to for four years, is the one that actually showed up to help defend American bases. Zelenskyy sent counter-drone teams to the Gulf. Ukraine has been fielding requests from 11 countries for its interceptor drone technology, the same cheap, effective systems they built to counter the exact drones Russia taught Iran how to use. The irony is so thick you could choke on it.
The whole thing has a very specific smell. The kind where your buddy helps your enemy jump you, and then you go buy your buddy lunch because he’s the only restaurant open. And your buddy sits there eating his steak telling everyone at the table how grateful you should be that he agreed to let you pay.
Senator Jeanne Shaheen nailed the dynamic: as Putin helps Iran target Americans, the president is filling the Kremlin’s war coffers. Instead of squeezing Russia’s already faltering economy, this war is handing Putin a windfall while American families pay higher prices at the pump.
I keep waiting for someone to explain this in a way that doesn’t sound insane. Nobody has yet.
Sources
- Al Jazeera – US downplays reports Russia gave Iran intel to strike US assets
- FDD – Russia helps Iran attack U.S. and its allies, Ukraine helps defend them
- TIME – Iran war and Russia oil
- Washington Post – Russia providing Iran intelligence on US targets
- CNN – Russia sharing drone tactics with Iran
- Washington Post – Russian oil sanctions lifted amid Iran war
- Fortune – US sanctions, Russian oil tankers, and the Strait of Hormuz
- CNN – US Russia sanctions relief on oil
- Al Jazeera – Ukraine, EU slam US decision to roll back Russia oil sanctions
- Washington Post – Russia oil sanctions, Iran war, and Trump
- PBS – U.S. eases some sanctions on Russian oil
- CBS News – Trump administration allows purchase of Russian oil at sea
- CBS News – Iran strike Kuwait, officials question fortifications
- CNN – Six soldiers killed in Iranian strike in Kuwait
- Moscow Times – Putin envoy Dmitriev meets Witkoff and Kushner
- Kyiv Independent – Putin’s envoy meets US delegation in Florida