Monday, March 30, 2026

Things To Come?


One more month of this will have dramatic consequences


Starting a big war in the Middle East is much easier than stopping it. This is the lesson President Trump is now learning.

After one month of dropping bombs and launching missiles at Iran, Trump has called for a time out. A proposed one-month ceasefire. He even put a 15-point peace plan on the table. It was delivered via intermediaries in Pakistan.

The proposal included a comprehensive off-ramp to address everything from nuclear disarmament and missile limits to reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Tehran quickly put a match to it and countered with five conditions of its own – including demands for reparations.

It was but one month ago when Operation Epic Fury kicked off. What was intended to be a brief operation of destruction rained down on Iran, turned into something much greater.

The initial shock and awe adeptly targeted high-level leadership and missile infrastructure. But the operation quickly spiraled into a larger war of attrition that physically severed the world’s most vital energy artery – the Strait of Hormuz.

The initial success was overshadowed by a grim, structural reality. Market volatility is one thing. Physical depletion of global resource reserves, which puts a big squeeze on every major economy, is entirely another.

Perhaps some limited shipping will be allowed to traverse the Strait as the war rages on. One can only hope. Because if it remains closed for another 30 days, the emergency oil and gas reserves held by nations like Japan and Germany will stop flowing. In fact, hundreds of gas stations have alreadyrun dry across Australia.

One more month of this will have dramatic consequences. Namely, it will result in the forced deindustrialization of energy-dependent economies as critical links in the world’s just-in-time supply chain breakdown.

When shipping containers stack up in idle ports and fertilizer plants go dark, the survival of economies across the globe are at risk.

Physical Shortages

Month one, by and large, was nothing. The impacts to the average person were mainly limited to sticker shock at the gas pump. Brent crude briefly spiked above $120 a barrel, and everyone’s 401(k) took a modest nosedive.

Month two, however, is when things really start to get serious. That’s when higher prices are met with physical shortages. The next 30 days are the real make or break moment for the global economy.

In March, the world survived on oil and gas that was already in the pipes and the tanks. The U.S. and its allies tapped into strategic reserves to help buffer the price spikes. But those reserves are a very short-term solution.

Around 20 percent of the world’s Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) is currently trapped behind the Strait. QatarEnergy, the world’s LNG heavyweight, has had to declare force majeure on exports.

Most major industrial centers in Europe and Asia keep about 30 to 45 days of gas in easily accessible storage. If the Strait doesn’t open by mid-April, we aren’t just talking about higher gas prices and heating bills. We’re talking about mandatory industrial shutdowns. If you can’t power the factory, you can’t make the product.

Similarly, if you can’t supply fertilizer, you can’t grow food. In addition to being one of the world’s top suppliers of oil and gas, the Persian Gulf is also one of the world’s top suppliers of agricultural fertilizers. What’s more, fertilizer shortages couldn’t have come at a worse time.

It’s spring planting season in the northern hemisphere. Farmers in the U.S. Midwest, Brazil, and India are looking at prices of nitrogen fertilizers that are 30 percent to 50 percent more expensive than they were four weeks ago. And that’s if they can find them at all.

If supply constraints persist through April, farmers will simply plant less or conserve fertilizer. That means lower crop yields this fall. Moreover, it means there will be a global food security emergency that will peak in about six months.

Energy Holidays and Empty Shelves

You may have also heard of looming helium shortages. Most of the world’s helium, which is essential for cooling the machines that make high-end AI chips, comes from Qatar.

High-end semiconductor fabricators in Taiwan and Arizona have about a three-month buffer of these specialty gases. One month’s supply is already gone. If we lose another, there could be a shortage of chips that power everything from your phone to the newest AI models.

If the Keep Out signs stay up at the Strait through April, there could be several disagreeable consequences. For example, there will be energy holidays (i.e., forced rationing) in energy-hungry nations. Factories that make cars, plastics, and chemicals will go dark to conserve power for hospitals and homes.

Shipping companies will also avoid the Persian Gulf. This will add an additional 15-day detour around Africa for goods being shipped from Asia to Europe. The additional transport time will add costs to imported goods.

Many economies were already stalling out before the attacks on Iran. But now, if 20 percent of the world’s oil remains offline through May, it’s a near certainty that major economies like Germany, Japan, and China – and the USA – will slip into a recession.

In short, month one was merely a siren. Month two is the start of the actual physical impact. Specifically, the global economy will move from higher costs to shortages.

A world where shortages of everything from medical instruments to basic consumer electronics and manufacturing components, and essentials like gasoline and fresh fruits and vegetables, could soon be the reality.

The buffer period provided by global strategic reserves is disappearing with each passing day. While the first 30 days stimulated a chaotic news cycle and wild market swings. The next 30 days will stimulate a structural shift in how people live.

So, without reservation, hard times are coming to a town near you.

The just-in-time world was not built for a sustained severance of its primary jugular. When the oil and gas stops flowing, the helium stops cooling the fabrication machines in Taiwan, and the nitrogen stops hitting the soil in the Midwest, the convenience and abundance of modern life break down. So, too, does the debt and the credit edifice that sustains it.


More...


Pope Leo XIV Picks a Top Rothschild Executive To Head the Vatican Bank





Just a few days ago, the top exorcists in the Catholic Church met with Pope Leo XIV to ask of him to reinforce the ranks of priests and bishops trained to deal with the surge in occult and satanic practices.

This is fact, not a rumor or unverified report (check at the bottom of the post).

But today, Leo appointed François Pauly as next president of the Vatican Bank.

Before we can even evaluate whether this is a good choice or not, a thick fog has risen with wild conspiracy claims that an ancient secret society is taking direct control of the Catholic Church’s finances.

Pauly is the new president of the supervisory board for the ‘Institute for the Works of Religion’, managing the church’s money, properties and charitable works.

The problem is where he comes from.

Daily Mail reported:

“Conspiracy theorists immediately seized on Pauly’s ties to the powerful Rothschild group – one of the most famous international banking families in history that has been alleged to be part of the secret society known as the Illuminati.”

While no one needs to believe in the Illuminati, the notion that elite bankers, politicians, Freemasons and powerful families worldwide act to manipulate governments and world events is hardly controversial anymore.

“Pauly, who is set to take over as the Vatican Bank’s board president on April 28, previously served as general manager of the Edmond de Rothschild group, a private banking arm of the Rothschild family in Switzerland.

The Paris headquarters of Edmond de Rothschild was raided by police on March 20 as part of an investigation into a former employee’s links to Jeffrey Epstein. Files released in February show Epstein exchanged several emails with the bank, but was never in contact with Pauly.”

Epstein boasted of his ties with the bankers of the super elites, as you can read in Billionaire Les Wexner Under Oath Tells Lawmakers Jeffrey Epstein Was a Financial Adviser for The Rothschild Family (VIDEO).

And, of course we must never forget that Ghislaine Maxwell Says Lady Rothschild Introduced Prince Andrew to Jeffrey Epstein – Philanthropist Also Introduced Disgraced Financier to Alan Dershowitz and Bill Clinton.

And, of course we must never forget that Ghislaine Maxwell Says Lady Rothschild Introduced Prince Andrew to Jeffrey Epstein – Philanthropist Also Introduced Disgraced Financier to Alan Dershowitz and Bill Clinton.

This means that even if we do not subscribe to the most extreme allegations against the banking family, there is still pkenty of reasons to be wary of this association with the Holy Father.

“Still, conspiracy theorists, authors and even Hollywood movies have alleged that a hidden cabal continues to control human society to this very day, with Pauly’s selection serving as evidence for some that the Vatican is now directly tied to the group.”

Former Rothschild director François Pauly has just been appointed head of the Vatican Bank. A top executive straight from the Edmond de Rothschild banking empire is now running the finances of the Catholic Church. This is absolutely wild. The global elite money power and the Vatican aren’t even pretending to be separate anymore, it’s all out in the open.



Sunday, March 29, 2026

'Incredibly Problematic' - Iran Destroys US AWACS Jet At Saudi Airbase


'Incredibly Problematic' - Iran Destroys US AWACS Jet At Saudi Airbase
TYLER DURDEN


In a major feat that comes weeks after the White House claimed that Iran's ballistic missile capability had been "functionally destroyed," Iran has laid waste to one of only 16 American E-3 Sentry Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) aircraft in the world, sending $500 million worth of technology up in smoke and crimping the US military's ability to maintain situational awareness. The same attack also "damaged" several aerial refueling tankersand added a dozen service members to the tally of more than 300 who've been wounded in the month-long US-Israeli war on Iran. Thirteen have been killed. 

In recent days, foreign satellite images showed what appeared to be major damage at Prince Sultan Air Base, a U.S. military base located in Al Kharj, Saudi Arabia.

The images show damage on the base's main apron, which holds high-value aircraft.

While high-resolution commercial satellite imagery of the region from U.S.-based geospatial companies will be delayed for days, if not weeks, new ground-level photos apparently show the aftermath of Iranian drone and missile strikes.

Images have emerged revealing that the Wall Street Journal's initial report that the half-billion-dollar aircraft was merely "damaged" was an enormous understatement. Rather, a large portion of the fuselage has been obliterated, along with the distinctive 30-foot-diameter, 6-foot-thick rotating radar dome that's mounted atop AWACS aircraft.

The images of the destroyed E-3 Sentry were first posted on the Air Force amn/nco/snco Facebook page:

According to military aviation aficionados, the identifier "OK 81-0005" -- visible on the severed tail -- confirms this particular aircraft was an E-3G named "Captain Planet," which deployed to the Middle East theater from Oklahoma's Tinker Air Force Base. It's not clear if any of the recently-wounded service members were associated with the aircraft, which was destroyed in a missile-and-drone attack on PSAB. 

"The loss of this E-3 is incredibly problematic, given how crucial these battle managers are to everything from airspace deconfliction, aircraft deconfliction, targeting, and providing other lethal effects that the entire force needs for the battle space," Heather Penney, a former F-16 pilot and director of studies and research at AFA's Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies, told Air & Space Forces Magazine

The destroyed E-3 was one of six stationed at the Saudi base and only 16 active craft in the entire Pentagon inventory -- and all of them can't even be counted on, on any given day:

The E-3 is aging, and its capabilities are falling behind those of some major adversaries. The Air Force’s E-3 fleet has dwindled down to 16 as the service retires less-capable planes. In fiscal 2024, E-3s had a mission-capable rate of about 56 percent, meaning a little more than half were able to fly and carry out their missions at any given time. -- Air & Space Forces 

Despite its B-list status, earlier Iranian successes have elevated the E-3 Sentry's importanceIran reportedly damaged a $1.1 billion AN/FPS-132 radar at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar -- one of just six in the world -- and blew up a nearly $500 million AN/TPY-2 THAAD radar at Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan. There's reason to believe other radars suffered similar fates, thwarting US detection and response to incoming fire. The radars take years to replace. In the ultimate example of financially-asymmetric warfare, Iran may have used drones that cost between $10,000 to $30,000 each to inflict some or all of that damage. 


Iran demands immunity for Hezbollah, Houthis as Saudi Arabia pushes ‘ironclad guarantees’


Iran demands immunity for Hezbollah, Houthis as Saudi Arabia pushes ‘ironclad guarantees’


Talks between the United States and Iran have yet to begin, amid accusations in Tehran that Washington’s proposal for negotiations is a trap ahead of a possible ground invasion. Still, diplomatic efforts to end the war are intensifying.

Foreign ministers from Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt met Sunday in Islamabad as part of mediation efforts. Officials familiar with the discussions told Reuters the talks focused on ways to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic waterway through which about one-fifth of global oil and gas supply passes and which Iran has effectively choked during the war.

Pakistan has emerged in recent days as a key intermediary in indirect contacts between Washington and Tehran, leveraging its ties with both sides. It was Pakistan that delivered the Trump administration’s 15-point plan to Iran, which includes demands Tehran considers unacceptable, such as banning uranium enrichment, limiting its missile program and ending support for terrorist organizations and militias across the Middle East.

Iranian officials have expressed suspicion that the proposal is a deception, pointing to a parallel U.S. military buildup in the region and reports of potential ground operations, including a possible move to seize Kharg Island, Iran’s main oil export hub, to force Tehran to reopen the strait.

Hormuz proposals and regional concerns

According to five officials familiar with the talks, proposals discussed in Islamabad included plans submitted to Washington on reopening the Strait of Hormuz. A Pakistani official said Egypt had floated ideas allowing Iran to collect transit fees from ships, similar to the Suez Canal model.
Iran has in recent days insisted that postwar arrangements in Hormuz should not return to the status quo, seeking the right to charge tankers and vessels passing through the strait. Saudi Arabia has strongly opposed such proposals, fearing they would cement long-term Iranian dominance over the waterway.
Other proposals discussed included the creation of a regional consortium, potentially involving Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, to manage oil traffic through the strait. Pakistani officials said the idea had been raised with both Washington and Tehran.

Deep divide over war terms

But the core disagreements remain stark.
According to officials cited by The Wall Street Journal, Saudi Arabia stressed that any agreement must include “ironclad guarantees” restricting Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities and ending its support for terrorist groups and militias in the region.
Iran, however, has rejected any negotiations over its missile program. More significantly, Iranian officials have demanded that any agreement include guarantees that its regional proxies, including Hezbollah and the Houthis, will not be targeted by the United States or Israel.
Mediators expressed pessimism about the chances of reaching a ceasefire, saying prospects remain low as long as both sides maintain demands the other considers unacceptable.


The diplomatic efforts are unfolding under a deadline set by President Donald Trump, who has threatened to strike Iranian energy infrastructure if Tehran does not reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The ultimatum, already extended twice to allow negotiations, is now set to expire on April 6.
For now, there are no signs from Tehran of a willingness to compromise or even to enter formal talks.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf issued a defiant warning Sunday, claiming that while the United States speaks publicly about negotiations, it is secretly preparing a ground attack.
Iranian forces, he said, are “waiting for American troops to arrive on the ground in order to set them ablaze and punish their regional partners forever.”


IDF says it’s striking Iranian regime targets in Tehran - Blackouts In Karaj And Tehran


Iranian minister confirms blackouts in parts of Tehran and in Karaj after strikes hit power grid

Electricity has been cut in parts of the Iranian capital Tehran and in Alborz province after attacks on the area’s infrastructure, Iran’s state media cites the country’s ministry of energy as saying.

Shrapnel hit a part of the electricity grid in Alborz province, causing power to be cut in several areas of Tehran and the city of Karaj. Authorities are working on reinstating it, state media adds.

IDF says it’s striking Iranian regime targets in Tehran

The Israeli Air Force is carrying out a wave of strikes in Tehran, the IDF says.

The military says it is striking Iranian regime sites, without providing further details.

The IDF’s announcement comes shortly after Iranian media reported that some areas of Tehran are experiencing electricity blackouts following airstrikes in the area.

IDF says its strikes in Tehran this morning targeted missile, weapons sites with over 120 bombs

During a wave of airstrikes in Tehran this morning, the Israeli Air Force bombed more Iranian weapon production sites, the military says.

The military says dozens of IAF fighter jets dropped over 120 bombs on the targets.

The IDF says the targets included a site where “essential” components for ballistic missiles were developed; a complex belonging to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, used for research and development of ballistic missiles and satellite launchers; and a weapons research, development, and production site of the Iranian army.

Also, as part of the wave of strikes, the IAF struck ballistic missile storage and launch sites, and air defense systems, the military adds.