WSJ What’s News - U.S. and Israel Consider Attacks on Iran’s Economy
Episode Date: April 6, 2026A.M. Edition for April 6. In an interview, President Trump says he could strike every power plant in Iran if Tehran doesn’t open the Strait of Hormuz by Tuesday evening. WSJ correspondent Dov Lieber... says that threat comes as both the U.S. and Israel step up attacks on Iran’s infrastructure. Plus, PepsiCo and Diageo pull their sponsorship of a major London music festival after Kanye West is booked as a headliner. And geopolitics reporter Jon Emont explains how the Trump administration's decision to push trade partners to use cheese names that the EU claims for itself is raising a stink in Europe. Luke Vargas hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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President Trump pledges to destroy Iran's power plants unless it opens the Strait of Hormuz.
Plus, Jamie Diamond warns of an inflation run-up stemming from the war,
and the Trump administration goes to bat for American cheesemakers, raising a stink in Europe.
The United States government has probably never really taken this level of consistent action
to try to make sure that American cheesemakers are not discriminated against an international market.
It's Monday, April 6th. I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal, and here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.
President Trump is due to hold a press conference on the Iran War this afternoon, likely detailing the rescue of an American aviator who had been trapped in Iran for more than 36 hours and potentially providing an update on diplomatic dealings with Tehran.
In an interview with Fox, Trump reportedly said that the U.S. could reach a deal with Iran as,
soon as today, even as he threatens to escalate the conflict. Trump has given Iran until Tuesday
evening to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and saying that hell will rain down if they don't.
And in an expletive-laden follow-up post yesterday, he promised to destroy Iran's energy sites and
bridges if the waterway isn't opened. Correspondent Dove-Leber said the warning comes as both the
U.S. and Israel have drawn up plans to shift the war into a new phase that's focused on striking
civilian infrastructure. The Israelis tell me that they have plans to hit Iranian energy facilities. That's
something that they promised they would hold off doing after Trump, but asked them to following a strike
on Iranian gas field. But now they've got new plans and they're waiting for permission from Washington
to hit those energy facilities. And what's happening here is that both the United States and Israel
are looking for a new type of leverage, a leverage they haven't been able to gain by going after
pure military sites. The U.S. has conducted talks with Iran, but those don't seem to be going
very well. And I think the two sides are hoping that by striking these infrastructure sites,
they will be able to increase the pain on the Iranian government and hopefully buy themselves
some leverage. Both U.S. and Israeli officials have brushed off concerns that attacking
civilian infrastructure risks violating international law saying they're legitimate targets because
they produce material used by Iran's military. However, Dove told me that pulling the trigger against
civilian targets risks putting economic facilities of importance to the U.S. and its allies
in the crosshairs.
There's no guarantee that even if Israel and United States hit all these sensitive energy
sites and infrastructure that the Iranians are going to give up anyway, and the Iranians
are promising to retali in kind across the region in a way that will seriously affect
the regional economy as well as the global economy, potentially for many months or years to
come.
And so we're getting into a new type of escalation here where there can be a lot of economic
paint on both sides. And it's not clear whether that will actually bring us to a resolution
either way. In addition to warnings from Iran's military, an Iran-backed militia in Iraq has pledged
to attack energy infrastructure across the Middle East should the U.S. try to open the Strait of Hormuz
by force, according to a statement posted by Iranian state media. Meanwhile, Japan appears to be
hoping that diplomacy can help unblock its oil exports trapped in the Gulf with Prime Minister Sinaai
Takeichi, saying that her government is seeking talks with Tehran to secure the release of vessels
stuck in the vital shipping lane. She added that she wants to see all vessels released from the
strait, regardless of their nationality, though it's an outcome that appears increasingly unlikely
without a change in direction from Iran. Its revolutionary Guard Corps Navy said yesterday that
it's working to enforce a new security order in the Persian Gulf and that the strait would,
quote, never return to its previous condition. It was, course,
The biggest unknown in this, of course, is Iran.
And I think a lot of shippers and insurance companies will not be willing to take on the risk of resuming shipping in the strait
if they don't have guarantees from Iran that Iran will not fire at ships.
So in a sense, it's also up to Iran to declare when the war is over.
The U.S. is definitely the dominant military power here.
But Iran has the ability to escalate things in the Persian Gulf and in the strait of Hamos.
and as long as Iran doesn't agree to cease hostilities
or to cease threats against ships going through,
well, then the uncertainty remains for international shippers.
A very important factor here's going to be
the amount of international pressure that's put on Iran.
And China is a major customer of Middle Eastern oil,
and it's also an important economic partner
and political partner of Iran.
So going forward, I would definitely be watching
for whether China steps up and is willing to exert
enough pressure on Iran to get this problem solved.
Chinese flagged vessels are among a limited number of ships that have been allowed through the
strait in recent weeks.
Meanwhile, oil futures are little changed after this weekend's escalatory rhetoric,
despite an agreement by a group of OPEC-plus countries to raise oil production by more than
200,000 barrels a day starting next month.
Their second consecutive such move.
And at J.P. Morgan Chase's Jamie Diamond is warning of more.
oil and commodity price shocks in the months to come. In his annual shareholder letter, Diamond warned
that the war could lead to prolonged inflation and ultimately higher interest rates, calling that a
skunk at the party scenario that could drag down financial markets this year. U.S. inflation figures
will be in focus at the end of this week with February's PCE price index due out on Thursday,
followed by the Consumer Price Index on Friday. Coming up, the Trump administration requires
trading partners to accept America's view on generic names for cheeses, including Asiago and Parmesan
and NASA astronauts head to the dark side of the moon. Those stories and more after the break.
What defines a cheese like Parmesan? According to the U.S. government, it's the product itself,
rather than where it's made, a view that runs counter to the European Union's policy on protecting
regional provenance. In an effort to boost global sales of U.S. made cheese, the Trump administration
is now requiring trade partners to accept America's view on cheese names like Feta, Bree, and Parmesan.
Journal reporter John Emont says the effort aims to protect American cheesemakers, many of whom are
large and efficient from international discrimination, though the move faces significant pushback.
If you take a cheese like FETA, the European Union's policy is that FETA can only come from
specific areas of Greece. And so when they sign trade deals with foreign countries, they frequently
require these other countries to accept the European Union definition of what FETA is. And what that
means is if you're a FETA producer in, say, Wisconsin or Vermont, you can't sell your FETA into the
market unless you call it something different, like a crumbly hard cheese or something. Parmesan
is another one that sometimes comes up in these discussions because American Parmesan producer,
can access a lot of foreign markets because of rules that originated in the European Union,
which say that these cheeses like Parmesan only comes from northern Italy.
American cheesemakers are very excited because going forward, it looks like they're going
to just have a lot more market access in some very big dairy markets, places like Argentina,
like Indonesia, like Malaysia, like Taiwan.
We're exclusively reporting that three sovereign wealth funds led by Saudi Arabia have agreed
to back Paramount's $81 billion.
takeover of Warner Brothers Discovery. The agreements could help to offset the cost,
the Ellison's and Redbird Capital Partners, which is also backing the deal. The Gulf
investors won't have voting rights in the new Paramount Warner entity, and their involvement
is not expected to trigger reviews by the Committee on Foreign Investment or the Federal
Communications Commission. Thousands of striking beef plant workers in Colorado are set to
return to work today, ending a three-week walkout at a slaughterhouse owned by JBS. The union
representing 3,800 workers said over the weekend that they would resume their shifts, as contract
negotiations with the world's largest meatpacker are set to restart later this week. And drinks giants,
Pepsi and Diageo have pulled their sponsorship of a summer music festival in London after Kanye West
was announced as a headliner to perform all three days of the event. British Prime Minister Kier-Starmour
has also criticized the decision to Book West, who now goes by Yee, and who's been promoting a new album.
West has been trying to repair his image after years of controversies, including denying the Holocaust.
In January, he took out a full-page ad in the Wall Street Journal,
where he blamed his behavior and anti-Semitic views on his bipolar disorder.
Representatives for the Wireless Festival and the rapper didn't respond to requests for comment.
To the Artemis 2 mission now, as NASA astronauts are set to make history with a lunar flyby
that will break a distance from Earth record currently held by the Apollo 13 mission.
Here was NASA's Lori Glaze speaking yesterday in Houston.
So we're really gearing up now for what's going to be an exciting lunar flyby tomorrow.
Our flight operations team and our science team are ready for the first lunar flyby in more than 50 years.
For the three Americans and one Canadian on board, the six-hour journey.
will offer unprecedented views of the moon's far side, regions that were either too dark or too
difficult for previous Apollo astronauts to see. And speaking of out of this world,
There's a huge universe out there.
The Super Mario Galaxy movie has achieved the biggest box office opening so far of 2026,
with estimated global earnings topping $370 million. The success of a second film around
more than 40-year-old Nintendo game reflects a trend around video games driving theater attendance
after last year's A Minecraft Movie based on the Microsoft series grossed more than $960 million globally.
According to ComScore, total domestic box office this year is up 26% from a year earlier.
And that's it for what's news for this Monday morning.
Today's show was produced by Hattie Moyer.
Our supervising producer was Daniel Bach, and I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal.
We'll be back tonight with the new show.
And until then, thanks for listening.
