Tag energy policy

Follow the Oil -Part 2- Europe Without Oil

Europe didn’t suddenly stumble into an energy crisis - it sidelined itself step by step. With the destruction of Nord Stream, the political decoupling from Russia, and the simultaneous escalation in the Middle East, two of its key energy lifelines collapsed at once: East and South. What remains is a continent stripped of strategic agency - militarily unable to secure resources, economically dependent on costly imports, and politically trapped in contradictions it can no longer reconcile.
As Hormuz is blocked, Bab al-Mandab comes under pressure, and the United States openly states that Europe should “secure its own oil,” a new reality is emerging: energy is no longer just an economic factor, but a geopolitical weapon. Part 2 of this series examines how Europe has drifted into structural dependency - and why other actors are capitalizing on it.

Germany as a Protectorate

Germany is considered a sovereign state – but does it act like one?
This analysis examines why the Federal Republic has operated with limited autonomy in foreign, security, and economic policy since 1945.
From U.S. military bases and intelligence dependency to the Nord Stream sabotage: a sober assessment of German sovereignty beyond official narratives.

The United States Declares War on Europe

The new US National Security Strategy marks a historic rupture: Europe is no longer seen as a partner, but as a liability. Energetically detached, economically weakened, and politically downgraded, the continent is being strategically discarded. This is not a misunderstanding — it is a silent declaration of war.

Venezuela, China, and the Defense of the Petrodollar: Libya 2.0?

Venezuela, China, and the Defense of the Petrodollar: Libya 2.0? * The escalating U.S.–Venezuela confrontation is not about drug trafficking – it’s about oil, China and the survival of the petrodollar. As Caracas shifts its exports into Yuan and Tether, Washington responds with military pressure. Is this the prelude to a “Libya 2.0” — a strike to protect the dollar’s global dominance?