Tuesday, April 28, 2026

The Fertilizer Shock of 2026-2027: A Man-Made Famine in the Making


The Fertilizer Shock of 2026-2027: A Man-Made Famine in the Making


We are watching a catastrophe unfold that was entirely predictable. The current fertilizer crisis is not a natural disaster -- it is the direct result of globalist policies, financialization, and a just-in-time supply chain that prioritizes profit over food security. The triple shock -- the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, China’s export ban, and Russia’s quota system -- has already doubled urea prices in many markets, but the real story is how vulnerable countries have been left exposed by a system that values corporate margins over human lives. In my view, the mainstream media and international institutions are downplaying the severity because they have no solution that doesn’t challenge their own power structures.

The historical record shows that manmade famines are not accidents but engineered outcomes. As William Maxwell McCord wrote, “Manmade famines in Asia and Africa, the worldwide debt crisis, political tyranny and corruption…” . We are now repeating that pattern on a global scale. The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization warned back in 2022 that high fertilizer prices could cause global grain production to plummet by 40 percent . That warning was ignored, and now we are living the consequences. The crisis is not a surprise; it is a choice made by those who run the system.

The direct loss of Gulf fertilizers is only the tip of the iceberg. The second-order effects are crippling domestic production in nations like Bangladesh and Egypt, where natural gas -- the primary feedstock for nitrogen fertilizer -- is now prohibitively expensive due to the destruction of Qatar’s LNG trains. As I reported in a recent analysis, “the recent confirmation that retaliatory strikes have destroyed two of Qatar’s fourteen critical LNG ‘trains’ is not a distant geopolitical blip. It is a world-altering event” . Without affordable gas, ammonia plants shut down, and with them the supply of urea and ammonium nitrate.


Meanwhile, Russia’s decision to halt ammonium nitrate exports from March 21 to April 21 has tightened global supplies even further . China’s export restrictions, while rational for their own farmers, reveal the hollow promise of global trade interdependence: every nation looks out for itself when crisis hits. And the sulfur crisis is another hidden dagger: the destruction of Gulf refineries has cut off critical sulfur supplies for phosphate production. As I detailed in a previous report, “zero spot sulfur is available on the global market” . Even major producers like Morocco and Russia cannot escape this bottleneck. The cascading failures are not random -- they are the logical outcome of a system built on fragile, centralized infrastructure.


The Human Toll: Tier 1 and Tier 2 Countries on the Edge of Famine

The numbers are staggering: approximately one-fourth of all globally traded nitrogen fertilizer normally travels through the Strait of Hormuz . That artery is now effectively closed. The UN has warned that this disruption threatens one-third of the global fertilizer trade at a critical moment for spring planting, and could trigger a broader food crisis unless shipments resume quickly . But no one is listening.

Sudan is the most exposed -- more than half its fertilizer comes from the Gulf, the country is in the grip of a civil war, and its planting season runs from June to July. This is a recipe for mass starvation, and it is being treated as a secondary concern. Ethiopia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka each face their own ticking clock: fertilizer that doesn’t arrive by May is fertilizer that won’t be applied. 

The ripple effects will hit the lean season of 2027. Even countries like India and Brazil have some buffers through stockpiles or later planting windows, but that only masks the systemic fragility. The poorest smallholders in Bihar or the Sahel have no such safety net. As one study notes, “below certain income levels it may simply not be possible to obtain an adequate diet” . These are the people who will die first.


Where Political Instability Will Concentrate

The political fallout is just as predictable as the food shortages. Countries where food already consumes over 50 percent of household income -- Nigeria, Pakistan, Bangladesh -- are defenseless against a 25 to 30 percent price spike. History shows that food riots topple governments. The link between food prices and political stability is well documented: “another indirect indication of food problems in specific areas is the price of food in relation to income levels, that is, the ability to purchase food” . When that ability evaporates, the social contract breaks.



Egypt’s bread price history is a flashing red light. The Sisi government’s price caps may delay the explosion, but the IMF program ensures the pressure will build. Sri Lanka’s 2022 collapse was triggered by a fertilizer ban; the political memory is fresh, and this crisis could reignite unrest far more rapidly than officials admit. As the fertilizer bottleneck at Hormuz raises the risk of food inflation and worsening global hunger, we are sitting on a powder keg . The only question is where the first spark will ignite.


Iran FM blames US for failure of talks as he meets Putin


Iran FM blames US for failure of talks as he meets Putin
AFP


Iran's top diplomat blamed Washington Monday for the failure of Middle East peace talks during a visit to Russia, where President Vladimir Putin promised him Moscow's support in ending the war.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was in Saint Petersburg on a whirlwind diplomatic tour, having sandwiched a trip to Oman in between two visits to Pakistan, the main mediator in the Mideast war.

Islamabad hosted a first, unsuccessful round of US-Iran talks, and Araghchi's visit raised hopes for more negotiations over the weekend -- until US President Donald Trump scrapped a planned trip by his envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.

"The US approaches caused the previous round of negotiations, despite progress, to fail to reach its goals because of the excessive demands," Araghchi said Monday.

Trump told Fox News if Iran wanted talks, "they can call us" -- adding the cancellation does not signal a return to hostilities.

Iran's envoy to the UN said Tehran would first need guarantees Washington and Israel would not attack again if it was to offer security assurances in the Gulf.

"Lasting stability and security in the Persian Gulf and the wider region can only be achieved through a durable and permanent cessation of aggression against Iran, supplemented by credible guarantees of non-recurrence," Amir Saeid Iravani told a UN Security Council session.

Meanwhile in Saint Petersburg, Putin and Araghchi both voiced their commitment to their countries' "strategic relationship" following their meeting.

Araghchi said the war with the United States and Israel showed "Iran's true power" and stability.

But back home in Tehran, the mood was more sober.

"Everything in the country is up in the air right now. I have not worked for a long time," small business owner Farshad told Paris-based AFP journalists.

"The country is in complete economic collapse."

Highlighting back-channel diplomacy, the Fars news agency said Iran passed "written messages" to Washington via Pakistan spelling out its red lines in negotiations -- including nuclear issues and the Strait of Hormuz.

Trump met with his top security advisers Monday to discuss an Iranian proposal that would reportedly reopen the vital strait as broader negotiations over the war continue, the White House said.

When asked about the reported plan, spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told a White House briefing the proposal was "being discussed".

Though the US-Iranian ceasefire holds, the war's economic shock waves continue to reverberate.

Tehran resident Shervin, a photographer, said he was feeling the pinch.

"It is the first time that I have reached a point where I was late on my rent. I still don't have any projects," said Shervin, 42.

Iran has blockaded Hormuz, cutting off flows of oil, gas and fertiliser and sending prices soaring.

In response, the United States has imposed a blockade of Iranian ports.

Iran's Revolutionary Guards say they have no intention of easing their market-rattling chokehold of the strategic waterway.

Ebrahim Azizi, head of the national security commission in Iran's parliament, said a proposed law for managing the strait would make the Islamic republic's armed forces the overseeing authority, with levies to be paid in Iranian rial.

The head of the UN's maritime agency, Arsenio Dominguez, said there was "no legal basis" for imposing transit fees.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio also rejected the idea.

"They cannot normalise -- nor can we tolerate them trying to normalise -- a system in which the Iranians decide who gets to use an international waterway, and how much you have to pay them to use it," he told Fox News Channel's "America's Newsroom".


Monday, April 27, 2026

Rubio Insists US 'Will Not Tolerate' Deal Which Makes Iran Gatekeeper Over Hormuz


Rubio Insists US 'Will Not Tolerate' Deal Which Makes Iran Gatekeeper Over Hormuz
 TYLER DURDEN



Summary

  • Putin tells FM Araghchi that he's been in contact with the new Supreme Leader, and says Iran fighting for 'sovereignty'

  • After a weekend of stalemate malaise, Iran reportedly offers new proposal for opening ship traffic, while postponing the thorny nuclear issue; Rubio says 'will not tolerate' Iran control of strait

  • Trump says peace could come via telephone rather than face-to-face meetings, also warning Iranian oil infrastructure could explode from within unless flow resumes; Tehran later says Trump has requested new talks

  • Iranian FM has been sending written messages to US via Pakistani intermediaries 

  • Israel strikes deep into Lebanon in Beqaa Valley for first time of 3-week ceasefire.



    The latest via WSJ on what Iran is proposing, centered on immediately lifting the US naval blockade on Iranian ports:

    Iran has presented regional mediators with a new offer to stop its attacks in the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for a full end to the war and a lifting of the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports, according to officials familiar with the matter. The proposal, presented by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi during his tour of the region and Pakistan over the weekend, is designed to break the deadlock in the conflict and set talks back in motion, the people said. It would see discussions about Iran’s nuclear program shelved. Washington hasn't responded to the proposal, one of the people said. Iran’s mission to the United Nations didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    But US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has told Fox News on Monday that the US will not tolerate Iran controlling or establishing a toll system in the Strait of Hormuz. Rubio further asserted that the strait would remain open either through international pressure or a coalition-led effort.

    Iranian Foreign Minister told Russia’s President Putin that US ‘destructive habits’, ‘unreasonable demands’ and frequent changes in positions are slowing diplomatic progress

    Just days ago Iran began declaring that the first toll passage funds had been successfully transferred to the Central Bank of Iran, after Trump stated the US won't allow a toll system. Rubio further said the US will not normalize the Iranians being essentially a gatekeeper, with countries seeking permission from Iran.


    Putin Says He's in Contact with Ayatollah in Araghchi Moscow Meeting

    President Putin, FM Lavrov, and Iranian FM Araghchi have been meeting in Moscow, after warm greetings and amid competing narratives over the future of the Strait of Hormuz. The Russian leader said something surprising right out of the gate, at a moment Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei has not been seen since the US-Israeli war began: "Last week I received a message from the Supreme Leader of Iran," he told Iran's Araghchi

    Additionally Putin pledged, "The people of Iran are courageously and heroically fighting for their sovereignty." This certainly stands in sharp contrast from the US and Western consensus. Putin also stressed, "Russia will do everything that serves the interests of Iran and the region to achieve peace as soon as possible." 

    This after Tehran on Monday made clear that it sees the future of the Strait of Hormuz as being under Iranian military control - an earlier headline which pushed crude prices up, and within hours later on this as well:


    Hours prior, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov described of Araghchi's arrival, "the importance of this conversation is difficult to overestimate in terms of how the situation around Iran and in the Middle East is developing." Araghchi to Putin: "It’s been proven to everybody that Tehran has friends and allies such as Russia... Allies that, in times of need, are standing next to Iran - and we are grateful to you for your support."


    The moment Putin greeted the Iranian top diplomat and his team (below), and where things stand on Iran's proposal...

    Iran has reportedly sent a new proposal to the U.S. that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but only after an end to the war and guarantees it will not resume, according to sources and regional reports. Under the plan, broader talks on the nuclear program and maritime navigation would come later.

    More...



A World Preparing For War:


A World Preparing For War – Global Military Spending Surges
PNW STAFF


There are moments in history when numbers stop being abstract--and start telling a story. The latest report from Stockholm International Peace Research Institute does exactly that. At first glance, a 2.9% rise in global military spending might not sound like much. But step back, and the picture sharpens: nearly $2.9 trillion poured into defense in a single year, representing 2.5% of the entire global economy--the highest share since 2009. That's not just a budget trend. It's a signal.

And the signal is hard to ignore: the world is preparing, quietly but unmistakably, for conflict.

The raw numbers alone are staggering. The United States continues to dominate with $954 billion in spending, followed by China at $336 billion and Russia at $190 billion. But the more revealing story isn't just who spends the most--it's who is accelerating the fastest. 

Across Europe, defense budgets surged 14% in just one year, the sharpest increase since the early Cold War era. Countries like Belgium, Spain, and Norway posted increases nearing or exceeding 50%. Germany, long cautious about military expansion, now ranks fourth globally.


These are not routine adjustments. They are generational shifts.

Why now? Because the global order feels less certain than it has in decades. The war in Ukraine continues to grind on, consuming resources at a historic pace. Ukraine itself is dedicating an astonishing 40% of its GDP to defense--an economic posture that reflects not strategy, but survival. Russia, meanwhile, is committing 7.5% of its GDP, reinforcing the reality that this conflict is far from contained.

But Europe's surge isn't just about Ukraine. It's about something deeper: a growing realization that long-standing assumptions about security--particularly reliance on the United States--may no longer be guaranteed. NATO allies are rearming not just because they want to, but because they feel they must.

The same pattern is unfolding in Asia.

Japan, historically restrained in its military posture, has reached its highest defense spending as a share of GDP since 1958. Taiwan is boosting its budget at the fastest pace in decades. China, meanwhile, has increased military spending for 31 consecutive years, with a fresh 7.4% jump in 2025 alone. That's not just modernization--it's momentum.

And then there are the quieter, less headline-grabbing regions. Africa saw an 8.5% increase in military spending. India boosted its defense budget by nearly 9%, driven by tensions with Pakistan. Even in the Middle East, where spending dipped slightly in some areas, underlying realities--like Iran's off-the-books funding mechanisms--suggest the true numbers may be higher than reported.

In other words, this isn't isolated. It's global.

One of the most telling insights from the SIPRI report is what happens when you remove the United States from the equation. Without U.S. spending, global defense expenditures didn't just rise--they surged by 9.2%. That means the rest of the world is ramping up even faster than the headline figures suggest.

This matters because it points to a broader psychological shift. Nations aren't just reacting to current conflicts--they're preparing for future ones. Defense budgets are, in many ways, a reflection of fear, expectation, and anticipation. And right now, those expectations appear to be leaning toward instability.

Even more concerning is what lies ahead. The U.S. has already approved over $1 trillion in defense spending for 2026, with proposals reaching $1.5 trillion for 2027. Ongoing conflicts, including a costly war involving Iran, are accelerating that trajectory. According to projections, 2026 could see even steeper increases worldwide.

So what does this mean for the average person?

It means we are living in a time where governments--across continents, across political systems--are prioritizing military readiness at a scale not seen in years. That doesn't guarantee war. But it does suggest that leaders believe the risk of major conflict is rising, not falling.

History offers a sobering lesson: large-scale military buildups rarely happen in isolation. They tend to cluster in periods of uncertainty, rivalry, and shifting power balances. Sometimes they act as deterrents. Other times, they become preludes.

Right now, it's too early to say which path the world is on. But the direction is clear.

A world spending nearly $3 trillion on defense isn't just maintaining peace--it's bracing for what might come next.



Iran said to offer US deal to reopen Hormuz, end war and put off nuclear talks


Iran said to offer US deal to reopen Hormuz, end war and put off nuclear talks


Iran has proposed a deal with the United States to reach an agreement on reopening the Strait of Hormuz and ending the war, while delaying negotiations on Tehran’s nuclear program to a later stage, according to a report Sunday, after hoped-for talks in Pakistan over the weekend failed to materialize.

The Axios report, citing a US official and two sources familiar with the matter, was published as Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi briefly returned to Islamabad after visiting Oman on Saturday, despite US President Donald Trump signaling that he did not plan to dispatch a negotiating team anytime soon.

Instead, after calling off a planned delegation to Pakistan at the last minute the previous day, the president said on Sunday that the Iranian team could reach Washington by phone if they wished to speak, and Araghchi departed Pakistan again, this time headed for Russia.

According to Axios, Iran’s attempt to kickstart negotiations again by solving the issues centered on the Strait of Hormuz was conveyed to the US by Pakistani mediators.


Trump was expected to discuss the Iranian proposal and other issues held up in the stalled negotiations during a Situation Room meeting with national security and foreign policy teams on Monday, Axios said.

But resolving the standoff over the Strait of Hormuz, lifting the US blockade and allowing Iran’s oil exports to flow again would leave Trump and Washington without much leverage for future negotiations.

It is also unclear whether Trump would agree to push off the nuclear talks to an unspecified later date, given that he has repeatedly insisted that he will settle for nothing less than Tehran’s commitment to ending its nuclear activities.

The status of Iran’s enriched uranium has long been at the center of tensions. Tehran has 440 kilograms (970 pounds) of uranium enriched to 60 percent purity, a short, technical step from weapons-grade levels, with no peaceful application.

Israel, which has not been involved in the negotiations in Pakistan, has also insisted that the US must put an end to Tehran’s nuclear ambitions as part of any deal to end the fighting. Pakistan, itself a nuclear power, does not recognize Israel.

Meanwhile, Iran’s top diplomat landed in St. Petersburg on Monday for the final leg of his regional tour.

Iranian state media reported that Araghchi would meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials to discuss bilateral ties and regional issues, including the war.

Araghchi said the consultations in Pakistan over the weekend had reviewed conditions under which Iran-US talks could resume, stressing that Tehran would seek to secure its rights and national interests following weeks of conflict.

Oil prices rise as hope dims

But his attempts to muster support for resolving the crisis in the strait appeared to have little effect, as oil prices were up more than 1% on Monday, with benchmark Brent crude futures rising $1.35, or 1.3%, to $106.68 a barrel, retreating from early session gains of over $2 a barrel.