Back to the Nordstream sabotage --
In the coming weeks, keep your eyes on European protests against the Russian sanctions, especially in Germany.
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=protest+against+sanctions+in+europe&sp=CAI%253D
As I said before, there was (and is) a strong movement in Germany to dump the sanctions against Russia, and resume gas deliveries through the Nordstream pipelines.
Elected German politicians are not free to express their desire for an end to the conflict, and an end to the sanctions. But talking to people on the street, especially in Europe's working classes, who are hit the hardest by the sanctions (and huge increases in energy costs), there's far less patience for the U.S. desire to prolong the conflict, and engage in a proxy war at Europe's expense.
The U.S. narrative has been that Russia is close to collapse, urging Europe, "Just a little bit longer -- we're almost there... Victory is just around the corner..."
The reality is that the NATO/Europe coalition is in for a brutal winter without Russian gas. The EU might not survive, economically.
It's clear that the U.S. had everything to gain by sabotaging the Nordstream pipelines between Germany & Russia. Germany was going to violate the sanctions before people started dying of hypothermia.
It's only a short-term gain, though. Russia isn't anywhere near as close to collapse, nor as desperate, as U.S. media is portraying. In the long run, the U.S. proves that its goal of "regime change" in Russia is all that it cares about, and it doesn't give a rat's rear about anyone's economic hardship or freezing to death, either in Europe or the U.S., or anywhere.
Expect markets in Europe & the U.S. to continue to tank, as businesses in Europe are forced to close due to extreme energy costs, and price gouging by U.S. LNG suppliers.
In the coming weeks, keep your eyes on European protests against the Russian sanctions, especially in Germany.
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=protest+against+sanctions+in+europe&sp=CAI%253D
As I said before, there was (and is) a strong movement in Germany to dump the sanctions against Russia, and resume gas deliveries through the Nordstream pipelines.
Elected German politicians are not free to express their desire for an end to the conflict, and an end to the sanctions. But talking to people on the street, especially in Europe's working classes, who are hit the hardest by the sanctions (and huge increases in energy costs), there's far less patience for the U.S. desire to prolong the conflict, and engage in a proxy war at Europe's expense.
The U.S. narrative has been that Russia is close to collapse, urging Europe, "Just a little bit longer -- we're almost there... Victory is just around the corner..."
The reality is that the NATO/Europe coalition is in for a brutal winter without Russian gas. The EU might not survive, economically.
It's clear that the U.S. had everything to gain by sabotaging the Nordstream pipelines between Germany & Russia. Germany was going to violate the sanctions before people started dying of hypothermia.
It's only a short-term gain, though. Russia isn't anywhere near as close to collapse, nor as desperate, as U.S. media is portraying. In the long run, the U.S. proves that its goal of "regime change" in Russia is all that it cares about, and it doesn't give a rat's rear about anyone's economic hardship or freezing to death, either in Europe or the U.S., or anywhere.
Expect markets in Europe & the U.S. to continue to tank, as businesses in Europe are forced to close due to extreme energy costs, and price gouging by U.S. LNG suppliers.