Copied as received. Purportedly from an original translated from Arabic.....
Everyone is talking about Iran. They're talking about Khamenei. They're talking about Israel! I see something else.
The real war is elsewhere.
I'm going to show you two events. They seem unrelated. But they are connected… and I'll explain it to you.
Event One:
The United States carried out an operation in Venezuela. Maduro was arrested. Everyone said, “The dictator has fallen.” And they applauded. Some said it was against international law.
But no one asked this question: Who was Venezuela's biggest oil customer? China.
Venezuela was selling 800,000 barrels of oil per day directly to China. Maduro is gone… and that pipeline is cut off.
Event Two:
The United States and Israel struck Iran. Khamenei was killed. Everyone said, “The nuclear threat is over.” Some applauded. Some said it was against international law and protested.
But no one asked this question: Who was Iran's biggest oil customer? China.
Iran was selling 1.5 million barrels of oil per day directly to China. The war began… and that pipeline was cut. Different countries. Different continents. Different pretexts.
But the customer is the same: China. Is it a coincidence? No.
Let me explain…
Ray Dalio’s theory is clear: When a rising power approaches an established power, a clash becomes inevitable. This scenario has been explored before.
Germany rose to power and nearly surpassed Britain. The result: World War I.
Japan rose to power and approached America in the Pacific. The result: World War II.
The Soviet Union rose to power and challenged America. The result: The Cold War.
Now let’s look at China’s situation.
China alone produces 28% of the world’s oil. And every year it gets closer to America. Analysts’ predictions are clear: By 2030, China will be the world’s largest economy.
This is an existential crisis for America. The most dangerous moment for any superpower is when its rival is about to surpass it. Either you stop them at that moment… or you won't be able to stop them later. And everything you're seeing now is part of this process.
How?
China imports 73% of its oil. Its production isn't enough. It has to import.
Imagine this:
Before you is a very large engine. Very powerful. It powers a quarter of the world's production. It seems unstoppable.
But it has a weakness: it doesn't produce its own fuel.
This engine has four fuel pipelines:
First: Venezuela
Second: Iran
Third: Russia
Fourth: Saudi Arabia
What does America do?
It cuts off the pipelines.
Venezuela is cut off.
Iran is cut off.
Russia is restricted by sanctions.
And Saudi Arabia? Production has declined due to the war.
To stop an engine… you don't need to fight it.
Cut off its fuel supply… and it will stop on its own.
Mark this down:
Venezuela's oil supply cut off: 800,000 barrels per day
Iran's oil supply cut off: 1.5 million barrels per day
Total: 2.3 million barrels per day
China's daily imports: approximately 11 million barrels.
In just two months, 20% of China's oil supply was cut off.
And nobody noticed… because everyone was focused on Iran.
But energy isn't the only front.
China was building something else: the modern Silk Road. A massive trade network stretching from Beijing to the heart of Europe. Railways, ports, pipelines, trillions of dollars in investments.
Why?
Because whoever controls trade with Europe… controls the global economy. And Europe was leaning toward China.
Germany: Its primary trading partner is no longer America, but China.
France: Signing new agreements.
Italy: Officially joining the project.
Europe was gradually distancing itself from America and moving toward China.
And this is a second crisis for America.
First: China's economic supremacy.
Second: Europe's loss.
If America loses Europe… what will it have left? Weapons and the dollar. And that alone won't be enough.
And at that moment… Iran was attacked.
Iran was a crucial link in the Silk Road. Its stability was essential for China's access to Europe. That stability was destroyed.
With one move, America did two things:
It cut off China's fuel supply.
And it disrupted its trade routes.
The engine is without fuel… and the road is closed.
What next?
One point remains:
Taiwan.
Why is Taiwan important?
90% of the most advanced electronic chips are manufactured there.
Your phone, your car, your weapons… all depend on it.
Whoever controls Taiwan… controls 21st-century technology.
America says: “We will support Taiwan.”
China says: “Taiwan is ours… even by force.”
There is no room for compromise.
And here, Dalio's theory is proven true.
All these moves… are a prelude to that confrontation.
Imagine two boxers preparing for a fight. One cuts off the other's water and food supplies before entering the arena.
Venezuela: Cut off
Iran: Cut off
Russia: Restricted
Europe: Removed
The arena: Taiwan.
And the approach to it grows stronger day by day.
But there's something else:
America isn't just weakening China… it's also profiting.
Every war means arms deals.
When bombs fall in the Middle East… what do the Gulf states do?
They buy weapons.
And from whom? From America.
Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar… everyone increases their defense budget.
Every explosion = a deal
Every crisis = a contract
Every war = billions
America cuts off China's fuel supply… and fills its coffers.
One strategy… five gains:
1. Cutting off China's energy
2. Disrupting its trade routes
3. Controlling the region
4. Profiting from weapons
5. Weakening China before Taiwan
Everyone sees separate wars. I see one strategy. Venezuela is a front. Iran is one front. Russia is one front. Europe is one front.
But the war is one. And the target is one: - China
Everyone is talking about Iran. They're talking about Khamenei. They're talking about Israel! I see something else.
The real war is elsewhere.
I'm going to show you two events. They seem unrelated. But they are connected… and I'll explain it to you.
Event One:
The United States carried out an operation in Venezuela. Maduro was arrested. Everyone said, “The dictator has fallen.” And they applauded. Some said it was against international law.
But no one asked this question: Who was Venezuela's biggest oil customer? China.
Venezuela was selling 800,000 barrels of oil per day directly to China. Maduro is gone… and that pipeline is cut off.
Event Two:
The United States and Israel struck Iran. Khamenei was killed. Everyone said, “The nuclear threat is over.” Some applauded. Some said it was against international law and protested.
But no one asked this question: Who was Iran's biggest oil customer? China.
Iran was selling 1.5 million barrels of oil per day directly to China. The war began… and that pipeline was cut. Different countries. Different continents. Different pretexts.
But the customer is the same: China. Is it a coincidence? No.
Let me explain…
Ray Dalio’s theory is clear: When a rising power approaches an established power, a clash becomes inevitable. This scenario has been explored before.
Germany rose to power and nearly surpassed Britain. The result: World War I.
Japan rose to power and approached America in the Pacific. The result: World War II.
The Soviet Union rose to power and challenged America. The result: The Cold War.
Now let’s look at China’s situation.
China alone produces 28% of the world’s oil. And every year it gets closer to America. Analysts’ predictions are clear: By 2030, China will be the world’s largest economy.
This is an existential crisis for America. The most dangerous moment for any superpower is when its rival is about to surpass it. Either you stop them at that moment… or you won't be able to stop them later. And everything you're seeing now is part of this process.
How?
China imports 73% of its oil. Its production isn't enough. It has to import.
Imagine this:
Before you is a very large engine. Very powerful. It powers a quarter of the world's production. It seems unstoppable.
But it has a weakness: it doesn't produce its own fuel.
This engine has four fuel pipelines:
First: Venezuela
Second: Iran
Third: Russia
Fourth: Saudi Arabia
What does America do?
It cuts off the pipelines.
Venezuela is cut off.
Iran is cut off.
Russia is restricted by sanctions.
And Saudi Arabia? Production has declined due to the war.
To stop an engine… you don't need to fight it.
Cut off its fuel supply… and it will stop on its own.
Mark this down:
Venezuela's oil supply cut off: 800,000 barrels per day
Iran's oil supply cut off: 1.5 million barrels per day
Total: 2.3 million barrels per day
China's daily imports: approximately 11 million barrels.
In just two months, 20% of China's oil supply was cut off.
And nobody noticed… because everyone was focused on Iran.
But energy isn't the only front.
China was building something else: the modern Silk Road. A massive trade network stretching from Beijing to the heart of Europe. Railways, ports, pipelines, trillions of dollars in investments.
Why?
Because whoever controls trade with Europe… controls the global economy. And Europe was leaning toward China.
Germany: Its primary trading partner is no longer America, but China.
France: Signing new agreements.
Italy: Officially joining the project.
Europe was gradually distancing itself from America and moving toward China.
And this is a second crisis for America.
First: China's economic supremacy.
Second: Europe's loss.
If America loses Europe… what will it have left? Weapons and the dollar. And that alone won't be enough.
And at that moment… Iran was attacked.
Iran was a crucial link in the Silk Road. Its stability was essential for China's access to Europe. That stability was destroyed.
With one move, America did two things:
It cut off China's fuel supply.
And it disrupted its trade routes.
The engine is without fuel… and the road is closed.
What next?
One point remains:
Taiwan.
Why is Taiwan important?
90% of the most advanced electronic chips are manufactured there.
Your phone, your car, your weapons… all depend on it.
Whoever controls Taiwan… controls 21st-century technology.
America says: “We will support Taiwan.”
China says: “Taiwan is ours… even by force.”
There is no room for compromise.
And here, Dalio's theory is proven true.
All these moves… are a prelude to that confrontation.
Imagine two boxers preparing for a fight. One cuts off the other's water and food supplies before entering the arena.
Venezuela: Cut off
Iran: Cut off
Russia: Restricted
Europe: Removed
The arena: Taiwan.
And the approach to it grows stronger day by day.
But there's something else:
America isn't just weakening China… it's also profiting.
Every war means arms deals.
When bombs fall in the Middle East… what do the Gulf states do?
They buy weapons.
And from whom? From America.
Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar… everyone increases their defense budget.
Every explosion = a deal
Every crisis = a contract
Every war = billions
America cuts off China's fuel supply… and fills its coffers.
One strategy… five gains:
1. Cutting off China's energy
2. Disrupting its trade routes
3. Controlling the region
4. Profiting from weapons
5. Weakening China before Taiwan
Everyone sees separate wars. I see one strategy. Venezuela is a front. Iran is one front. Russia is one front. Europe is one front.
But the war is one. And the target is one: - China

