Thursday 20 October 2022

HYBRID WORLD WAR 3

We are in a hybrid WW3 for control of world energy resources i.e. the war to destroy the petrodollar. It started as a response to US sanctions on Nord Stream 2 in November 2019 with the release of Covid-19. The pandemic decreased demand for oil then the so called Saudi-Russian price war drove down the price of oil to 30 dollars per barrel. This killed the US fracking market. They had to be bailed out by the US taxpayer. Then things got hot. The Russians responded to US provocations in Ukraine and intervened. I think the war will end up in a Black Ops nuclear terrorist phase. The Russian nuclear weapons GRU Colonel Stanislav Lunev said were cached inside CONUS will be used again as they were used on 911. 

Western Ukraine is going to be a tough nut to crack. It will be used as a base of terrorist operations - aka special operations - inside mother Russia. The Russians are not likely going to tolerate another Chechen style US Special Ops led campaign that targets maternity wards and elementary schools. The whole thing could spin out of control into a nuclear terrorist war. A war where Special Forces of the US/NATO and RU, sheep dipped as "terrorists" blow up the city centers of the industrialized world. 

The timing of the problems with Starlink were timed to coincide with American nuclear exercises. Reports of Russian jamming of US doomsday bands go back to early April. Ham Radio Operators reported it. 






"A look at the U.S. Air Force’s High Frequency Global Communication System. What are Emergency Action Messages. Also the question has Russia been trying to jam these radio frequency ?  EAMs can be heard on these shortwave frequencies 4724khz, 6739khz, 8992khz, 11175khz, 13200khz, and 15016khz."


Sunday 16 October 2022

ENERGY OPEC Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo dies at age 63 PUBLISHED WED, JUL 6 20221:59 AM EDT UPDATED WED, JUL 6 202210:35 AM EDT

 https://www.cnbc.com/2022/07/06/opec-secretary-general-mohammad-barkindo-dies-at-age-63.html

  • Mohammad Barkindo, Nigerian politician and secretary-general of oil producer group OPEC, has died at the age of 63, just days before he was set to finish his term at the organization.
  • Barkindo’s unexpected death came as a shock to members of the oil and gas world, many of whom describe him as a giant in the industry. 
Mohammad Barkindo, a Nigerian politician and secretary-general of oil producer group OPEC, died at the age of 63, just days before he was set to finish his term at the organization.

The head of Nigeria’s National Petroleum Corp., Mele Kyari, announced the news in a tweet Wednesday, which was later confirmed by OPEC.

“We lost our esteemed Dr Muhammad Sanusi Barkindo,” a tweet early Wednesday morning from his verified Twitter handle read.

“He died at about 11pm yesterday 5th July 2022. Certainly a great loss to his immediate family, the NNPC, our country Nigeria, the OPEC and the global energy community. Burial arrangements will be announced shortly.”

The cause of death has not been announced.


Barkindo’s unexpected death came as a shock to members of the oil and gas world, many of whom describe him as a giant in the industry. 

His career spanned over four decades and included work at Nigeria’s National Petroleum Corp.,  Duke Oil, Nigeria’s Foreign Ministry and Energy Ministry, as well as OPEC.

Since taking the helm as secretary-general of OPEC in 2016, Barkindo oversaw tumultuous times for the oil producer group, which witnessed volatile markets rocked by historic events including the Covid-19 pandemic, the creation of the OPEC+ alliance with Russia and other non-OPEC states, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

While the organization lost two members, Qatar and Ecuador, during that time, Barkindo is nonetheless credited with guiding unity among the group’s members in an effort to stabilize global oil markets.

Mohammad Sanusi Barkindo, secretary general of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Mohammad Sanusi Barkindo, secretary general of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Aaron M. Sprecher | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Barkindo’s death comes at a time of volatile energy markets, global inflation, growing climate risks, and continued fallout from the pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war. Geopolitical conflicts and sanctions have led to much tighter oil supplies, pushing prices to multiyear highs amid fears of a global recession.

Barkindo had just been awarded a distinguished fellowship at the Atlantic Council, set to begin upon the completion of his term at OPEC on July 31.

Atlantic Council CEO Frederick Kempe had previously described Barkindo as having “unparalleled expertise on oil markets, security, and governance” and “a deep understanding of geopolitics in a volatile world.”

In a statement included in the council’s July 1 announcement of the new fellowship, Barkindo had said, “I am deeply honored to have been recognized as a distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council ... I look forward to contributing to the organization’s work on a plethora of energy-related issues, at a time when the world’s eyes are focused on both short- and long-term energy market outlooks.”

— CNBC’s Emma Graham contributed to this article.