Supply Chain
Date Range
Score Range
Framed as the central consequence of the deal, with emphasis on commercial recovery
The article repeatedly centers economic impacts—oil flows, commodities, inflation—elevating supply chain normalization as the primary outcome of the deal, overshadowing humanitarian or security dimensions.
“I do think it’s going to result in some opening up of some of those supply chains through the Middle East.”
Framing war-related supply chain disruptions as economically and socially harmful
[selective_coverage], [appeal_to_emotion]: The article focuses on condom shortages as a punchline, but still frames them as a real economic consequence, using humor to highlight harm rather than policy.
“Karex, the world’s largest manufacturer of condoms, may have to raise their prices by 20 to 30 percent because of supply chain issues caused by the war.”