Iran launches first attacks since April ceasefire as oil price reports diverge and U.S. president comments on ceasefire
Iran began a new series of strikes, saying they mark the start of a week‑long campaign, while Israel and Iran exchanged fire. Reports differed on whether oil prices rose or fell after the attacks. U.S. President Donald Trump declared the ceasefire deal over, urged Israel not to retaliate, and signaled easing of sanctions on Russia. OPEC+ announced a production increase, and a ceasefire in place‑s
Iran launched its first attacks since the ceasefire that began on 17 April, and Israel and Iran exchanged strikes. Iran said the attacks marked the start of a full week of strikes.
Reports on oil‑price movements differed. Outlets in India, Israel, other regions, social media, Turkey and Western blocs reported that oil prices increased after Iran‑related attacks. By contrast, outlets in India reported that oil prices dipped as Iran and Israel paused attacks.
U.S. President Donald Trump declared the ceasefire deal with Iran is over, according to The Guardian. He also told Axios he would urge Israel not to retaliate, as reported by citinewsroom.com. Bluesky reported that Trump is easing sanctions and oil‑sale restrictions on Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Times of India reported that oil prices dipped as Iran and Israel paused attacks and that OPEC+ agreed to boost output.
Citinewsroom.com reported that a ceasefire agreement has been in force since 17 April and has been violated repeatedly.
This account was written only from facts that survived Augur's
corroboration pass — 4 corroborated across opposed news blocs,
1 contested (attributed to both sides), 6
single-source (attributed). Nothing was added; no significance was inferred.
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