President Trump issued a blunt ultimatum to Tehran on Sunday, warning that Iran must move quickly toward a peace deal or “there won’t be anything left of them.” The threat marks a sharp escalation in rhetoric as Washington struggles to break an impasse in a conflict that has rattled global energy markets and sent ripple effects through digital asset prices.
The US and Israeli forces launched major strikes on Iran beginning February 28. Since then, diplomatic progress has been essentially nonexistent, leaving markets to price in a prolonged period of instability across the Middle East’s most critical energy corridor.
The conflict and its energy market fallout
Washington has reportedly threatened to destroy Iranian civilian power plants and infrastructure if Tehran refuses to engage in serious peace negotiations. Iran, for its part, has rejected a US 15-point peace proposal outright. Iranian officials have countered with warnings of their own, threatening retaliation against energy infrastructure in US-allied Gulf states if further strikes are ordered.
Iran is, however, reportedly considering a separate ceasefire proposal from Pakistan, which could offer a diplomatic off-ramp that bypasses the stalled US framework entirely.













