Newsweek

The Archives

1982

“Ugly border skirmishing between Iran and Iraq erupted last week into a full-scale war in the oil fields,” reported “Iranian jets bombed Baghdad while Tehran itself came under aerial attack…. The war threatened the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf—and the well-being of the industrialized world.” While relations among the countries have since cooled, the question of oil—and its prices—remains a big one. With the torrential floods in Libya and supply cuts from Russia, oil prices have significantly increased, increasing inflation and spawning worry on Wall Street.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Newsweek

Newsweek4 min read
‘It’s Time to Treat Addiction Like Cancer’
HAVING JUST COMPLETED SIX months of radiation and chemotherapy for stage 3B colorectal cancer, I’m thankful for an exceptional health care experience and the best possible outcome, which doctors cautiously call “No Evidence of Disease.” Though I’ll n
Newsweek1 min read
Green Menace
Contaminated water from the Endho dam, about 75 miles north of Mexico City, forms a green swirl on May 12. The capital city pipes all its waste to the dam, causing health and environmental hazards in the area. Further exacerbating the issue is the se
Newsweek9 min read
Biden’s Battleground Election
AMERICANS AREN’T FIGHTING abroad in Ukraine or Gaza as they once did in Vietnam and Iraq. But growing protests over U.S. military support for Israel have increased the likelihood that 2024 may join 1968 as a rare foreign policy-influenced election—an

Related Books & Audiobooks