# The Petrodollar: Is the US-Iran War Really a War for the Dollar?

> We pulled the receipts on the petrodollar theory of the US-Iran war: the 1974 Saudi deal, three deposed leaders, and what the reserve data actually shows.

- Author: Barebone Research, Barebone AI
- Published: 2026-03-25
- Canonical: https://barebone.ai/resources/petrodollar-is-the-us-iran-war-a-war-for-the-dollar
- Publisher: Barebone AI (https://barebone.ai)

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## The Theory Everyone Is Suddenly Trading

On Monday afternoon, a single social media post about unconfirmed peace talks knocked $13 off a barrel of Brent crude — from roughly $113 in the morning to a $99.94 settle, down 10.9% in a day. Tehran flatly denied any talks were happening. The market repriced the world's most important commodity anyway.

Underneath that war trade, a darker theory has been spreading through every corner of financial social media. It goes like this: the war that began on February 28 was never really about oil, or even about Iran's nuclear program. It's about defending the system that lets the United States borrow almost $39 trillion — because every leader who tried to sell oil in something other than dollars has ended up gone.

Saddam Hussein switched to euros. Invaded. Muammar Gaddafi pitched a gold-backed currency. Dead. Nicolás Maduro sold Venezuela's crude to China for yuan. Captured on January 3 and flown to New York. Fifty-six days later, American bombs fell on Iran — the other major producer selling its oil outside the dollar.

It's a seductive story containing real history. So we used Barebone to pull every receipt it rests on: the 1974 paperwork, the three dossiers, the reserve data the de-dollarization crowd never quotes. Parts of the theory survive contact with the evidence. The most quoted part does not.

Two numbers frame everything that follows. The dollar's share of global reserves: **56.9%, the lowest on record**. The dollar's share of global currency trading: **89.2% — and rising**. Both are true at the same time. That tension is the whole story.

## What the Petrodollar Actually Is

Start with what the system is, because most viral threads get it wrong.

In 1971, Nixon ended the dollar's convertibility into gold, leaving the world's reserve currency backed by nothing but trust. Three years later, with oil prices quadrupled and Washington terrified of where OPEC's windfall would land, Treasury Secretary William Simon flew to the Gulf and reached an understanding with Saudi Arabia: the Kingdom would keep pricing oil in dollars and park its surplus petrodollars in US Treasury bonds. The arrangement was informal — and partly secret; Bloomberg only pried the details of the Treasury side-deal loose in 2016.

That loop is **petrodollar recycling**: the world needs dollars to buy oil, oil exporters accumulate dollars they don't spend, and those dollars flow back into Treasuries — a structural bid for both the currency and the bonds that finance American deficits.

One correction before going further, because it resurfaces every time this topic trends: there was never a formal petrodollar treaty. When viral posts claimed in June 2024 that a "50-year US-Saudi petrodollar agreement" had expired, fact-checkers went looking and found nothing to expire — a US government review back in 1979 had already concluded no formal agreement on dollar oil pricing existed. The system was never a contract.

It's a habit. And a habit can't be cancelled — but it can be defected from. Which brings us to the dossiers.

## Three Dossiers and a Calendar

| Leader | The move away from the dollar | What happened next |
|---|---|---|
| **Saddam Hussein** (Iraq) | Nov 2000: switches UN-supervised oil sales from dollars to euros | Mar 2003: US-led invasion; regime falls 28 months after the switch |
| **Muammar Gaddafi** (Libya) | Promotes a gold-backed pan-African dinar as an oil currency | Oct 2011: killed amid NATO-backed intervention |
| **Nicolás Maduro** (Venezuela) | Post-2017 sanctions: pivots crude sales to China, settled increasingly in yuan | Jan 3, 2026: captured in a US military operation |

**Iraq.** In November 2000, Saddam Hussein demanded the UN oil-for-food program pay Iraq in euros rather than what Baghdad called "the currency of the enemy." Twenty-eight months later, the United States invaded. The regime that made the switch did not survive it.

**Libya.** Gaddafi spent his final years promoting a gold-backed African currency for oil trade. The most-cited evidence is a memo that adviser Sidney Blumenthal sent Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in April 2011, under the subject line "France's client and Qaddafi's gold":

> "Qaddafi's government holds 143 tons of gold, and a similar amount in silver... intended to be used to establish a pan-African currency based on the Libyan golden Dinar."

The memo claimed French intelligence discovered the plan and that it shaped President Sarkozy's decision to attack. Hold that thought — we'll come back to how solid this document actually is.

**Venezuela.** Maduro sat on the largest proven oil reserves on the planet and, after US sanctions cut PDVSA off from the dollar system in 2017, spent years routing crude away from it. By the mid-2020s, per a US congressional review of China's sanctioned-oil purchases, roughly **55% of Venezuela's oil exports went to China**, paid for in yuan and other non-dollar arrangements. On January 3, US forces captured Maduro and his wife in Caracas; the Attorney General announced narco-terrorism charges the same day. President Trump was explicit about what came next:

> "We're going to have our very large United States oil companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money for the country."

Within weeks the new interim government had signed a 50-million-barrel supply deal — the first $300 million arrived by January 20 — passed a law opening oil production to private companies, and watched Washington lift sanctions and issue trading licenses. Venezuelan barrels began flowing back toward dollar channels almost immediately.

Then, 56 days after Maduro's capture, the US and Israel struck Iran — the strikes killed Iran's Supreme Leader, and the Strait of Hormuz has been shut since the first week of March.

Two producers selling oil outside the dollar. Both hit inside two months. You can see why the theory writes itself.

## The Case That It's Real

Strip out the conspiracy framing, and a few hard facts genuinely support the petrodollar reading of 2026.

**Iran runs the world's largest non-dollar oil operation after Russia.** Locked out of dollar clearing for years, Iran sends roughly **87% of its oil exports to China** — about 1.38 million barrels per day in 2025 — settled in yuan or through barter structures that never touch the US financial system, according to the same congressional review. Together, Iran and Venezuela supplied about 17% of China's oil imports, almost none of it in dollars. In early January, days after Maduro's capture, trade publications were already reporting Chinese refiners would backfill lost Venezuelan barrels with more Iranian crude. The yuan-oil channel didn't shrink when Venezuela flipped — it concentrated in Tehran.

**The non-dollar share of oil is no longer a rounding error.** J.P. Morgan's commodities team estimated that nearly **20% of global oil** was already trading in non-dollar currencies — and that estimate dates to 2023, before this war. The bank's own research desk calls commodities the place where de-dollarization is most visible.

**The borrower has never needed the bid more.** US gross national debt crossed $37 trillion in August 2025, $38 trillion in October, and stood at **$38.86 trillion** by this month's congressional tally — growing $2.64 trillion over the past year, about $7.23 billion per day. When you borrow $7 billion a day, who buys your bonds stops being a market question and becomes a national-security one.

<Chart name="PetrodollarDebtChart" />

**And the restoration mechanism is observable, not hypothetical.** Whatever the war's motives, its effects run one direction: Venezuela's oil is being re-plumbed into dollar channels under US licenses right now, and a post-war Iran would be the last big yuan-oil supplier left to flip. The theory's prediction and the facts on the ground currently agree.

## The Case That It's Overstated

Now the other side of the ledger — and it's heavier than the theory's fans admit.

**Every one of these wars has a non-dollar explanation.** Iraq was prosecuted over weapons of mass destruction, Libya under a NATO civilian-protection mandate, Venezuela as a narco-terrorism operation, Iran over its nuclear program. A theory that explains every war regardless of its stated cause is doing something closer to faith than analysis.

**The timing is terrible for a hit list.** Maduro sold oil outside the dollar for the better part of a decade — through two US administrations — before anyone moved on him. If the system executed defectors, it took eight years to get around to it. And the largest non-dollar oil seller on Earth is Russia, which has sold its crude eastward in yuan and other friendly currencies since 2022. Nobody has invaded Russia.

**The Libya evidence is thin.** The Blumenthal memo is a single-sourced intelligence tip, never verified; one Clinton aide privately dismissed that channel's reporting as a "thin conspiracy theory," and the fact-checking organization Africa Check concluded there's little evidence a concrete gold-dinar plan ever existed. The strongest card in the petrodollar deck is also the least reliable.

**And the de-dollarization data cuts both ways.** Yes, the dollar's share of global reserves has slid from 71% at the turn of the century to **56.9%** as of the latest IMF data — a record low. But look at what replaced it: the euro sits at 20.3%, roughly where it's been for years, and the Chinese yuan — the currency supposedly inheriting the oil trade — holds just **1.9% of global reserves, down from its 2.8% peak**. The leak is real; the challenger is missing.

<Chart name="PetrodollarReserveShareChart" />

Meanwhile the dollar's grip on actual currency plumbing tightened. The BIS's once-every-three-years survey — the definitive census of the $9.6-trillion-a-day FX market — found the dollar on one side of **89.2% of all trades in April 2025, up from 88.4% in 2022**.

<Chart name="PetrodollarFxTurnoverChart" />

Even that 20% of oil trading outside the dollar deserves a second look: it's overwhelmingly Russia, Iran and pre-capture Venezuela — sellers who were *pushed* out of the dollar by sanctions, not buyers choosing to leave it. De-dollarization, so far, is something Washington has mostly done to its adversaries, not something the world has done to Washington.

So no — the creditors are not walking away. But they are doing something quieter.

## What's Actually Eroding

Watch what central banks do, not what BRICS communiqués say.

Central banks bought **863 tonnes of gold in 2025** — a slowdown from the 1,000-plus tonnes they bought in each of the three prior years, but still far above the historical norm, and the cooling looks price-driven: gold spent 2025 setting repeated record highs, which made reserve managers cautious about chasing it, not uninterested. Poland alone added 102 tonnes, its second straight year as the biggest buyer. Official gold holdings worldwide stand near 36,359 tonnes, the highest in decades.

That's the honest signature of dollar doubt: not a switch to yuan, but a hedge into the one reserve asset nobody can sanction or print.

The currency itself tells the same story. The dollar index lost roughly a tenth of its value in 2025 — its worst year in five decades, touching the 95–96 range at the lows — and trades near **99 today, still below the 100 line it surrendered last spring**. Sit with that: a Gulf war, a closed Hormuz, an 11-million-barrel-a-day supply hole by the IEA's count, and the classic wartime flight into dollars can't even lift the index back to 100. The safe-haven bid showed up. It just isn't what it used to be.

Here's the read we'd defend: the petrodollar is the wrong KPI. Oil invoicing can be restored at gunpoint — Venezuela is the live demonstration — but the system's real foundations are the network effects in that 89.2% number, and its real solvent is the $7-billion-a-day borrowing habit the system exists to finance. The war can flip barrels back into dollars. It cannot flip the fiscal arithmetic that made the theory plausible in the first place.

## What This Means

The petrodollar theory of this war is unprovable. The petrodollar *stakes* of this war are not — and they're checkable in real time. Five things worth watching:

- **Saturday's deadline.** The five-day strike pause expires March 28. Whether the war re-escalates or winds down resets every number in this piece.
- **Where Venezuela's barrels settle.** The new licenses are the cleanest live test of the restoration thesis. If those cargoes clear in dollars through Western banks, the loop is demonstrably being rebuilt.
- **The IMF's next reserve report, due at month-end.** A war-quarter acceleration in the dollar's slide below 56.9% would mean reserve managers are reading 2026 the way the theory does.
- **Central-bank gold in 2026.** A re-acceleration past the 1,000-tonne pace, at record prices, would say the hedging is structural, not opportunistic.
- **The DXY against 100.** A reserve currency that can't rally during a Gulf war is information. So would be a dollar that finally reclaims the line if Iran's oil re-enters the dollar system.

The petrodollar was never a treaty — just a 50-year habit of pricing the world's most traded commodity in the currency of its most indebted government. Habits this old rarely die of assassination; they die of arithmetic. The question this war will answer isn't whether the dollar survives. It's whether the habit can still be enforced faster than the arithmetic erodes it.

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*Data: Barebone | Sources: IMF COFER data brief (December 2025), BIS Triennial Central Bank Survey (September 2025), US Treasury fiscal data and Joint Economic Committee debt releases (March 2026), congressional review of China's sanctioned-oil purchases, World Gold Council Gold Demand Trends FY2025, GAO-cited 1979 review of US-Saudi arrangements, State Department-released Blumenthal memo (April 2011), CRS report on the capture of Nicolás Maduro (January 2026), dated wire reports March 21–25, 2026 | Data as of March 25, 2026*
