domingo, 19 de abril de 2026

Blockading the blockade



When you can’t open a door, board it up and call it strategy

Arleigh Burke was an American admiral in World War 2. Decorated, brilliant, the kind of naval officer they name things after. They named an entire class of destroyer after him – the DDG-51. It’s the workhorse of the US Navy, the ship that does the actual work while aircraft carriers pose for photographs. There are currently about 15 of them within striking distance of the Strait of Hormuz.

I want you to remember that name, because before this blockade is over, an Arleigh Burke might be the most important ship in the world.

Or the most famous wreck.

Two blockades now sit on top of each other in the same 33-kilometre waterway. Iran has been running one since the start of the war. The US just stacked a second one on top, targeting Iranian ports specifically, as of 10 AM Eastern on Monday. The president wants you to believe this is checkmate. The Foundation for Defence of Democracies wants you to believe Iran folds in 13 days.

I’ve been covering this war daily since it started. The Bretton Whoops, Straight to Brrrr, and 20-something wrap-ups.

I’ve watched every escalation get framed as the move that finally ends it.

This one is no different in that respect.

But it is different in another, and it took me a while to put my finger on why: this is the first time the US has voluntarily made the problem worse in order to claim it’s making it better.

Trump posted on Truth Social that the US Navy would blockade “any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz”. CENTCOM, as it does, translated the president’s rhetoric into something operationally coherent: the blockade applies to ships entering or exiting Iranian ports, not the entire strait. Ships heading to Dubai, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar – those are technically unaffected.

The gap between the presidential post and the military order is an ocean.

Literally.

Iran’s blockade was never total either. Chinese tankers have been transiting since day 1. Indian vessels negotiated passage. Pakistan escorted its own ships through with Chinese-built frigates. Malaysia got a waiver. Spain got through. Turkey got through. The strait wasn’t closed. It was a members-only club, and the membership criteria was not being allied with the people who started the war.

So now the US is running its own members-only club on top of Iran’s members-only club.

Two bouncers, same door, opposite guest lists.

 

The bullish case for this comes primarily from one man: Miad Maleki, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defence of Democracies and former US Treasury sanctions official. Boris Schlossberg walked through Maleki’s numbers on Twitter, and I want to give the analysis its due before I take it apart, because the mechanics are genuinely sharp.

90% of Iran’s $109.7 billion in annual seaborne trade passes through the Persian Gulf. Oil and gas account for 80% of export earnings. Iran was exporting roughly 1.5 million barrels per day at wartime prices, pulling in about $139 million daily. A blockade zeroes that out overnight. Add petrochemical exports at $54 million a day. Non-oil exports at $88 million. Total damage: approximately $435 million per day.

$13 billion a month.

Then the storage clock. Iran has roughly 50-55 million barrels of onshore capacity, about 60% full. Spare room for maybe 20 million barrels. At 1.5 million barrels per day that can no longer leave the country, storage fills in approximately 13 days. After that, Iran has to shut wells down.

This is where Schlossberg got excited, and I understand why. Shutting a mature oil well isn’t like turning off a tap. Reservoir pressure drops. Water intrusion begins. The geological structures that hold crude in place start to degrade. Maleki estimates forced shut-ins could permanently destroy 300,000 to 500,000 barrels per day of capacity. Not sanctioned or frozen. Destroyed. $9-15 billion per year in revenue, gone forever, because the rocks just do rocky stuff.

Add a rial, already in freefall – even before the war, with capital control limits of $20 per day. Maleki projects here a further 50% decline, pushing annual inflation past 120%. Lenin gets quoted. Currency debauched, economy destroyed, civil unrest, regime change. All in 13 days. Because we didn’t think of that the last 44.

Clean. Elegant. And damn persuasive.

This think tank has been advocating this exact policy for longer than most of its current analysts have had LinkedIn accounts. They wanted this blockade. Argued for it. Provided the numbers that made it sound surgical and inevitable. When the people who designed the policy also produce the analysis saying it will work, I reach for the salt.

Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe the spreadsheet is right and Iran buckles in 2 weeks. But I’ve been watching this war for some time now, and the spreadsheets have been wrong every single time.

The US does not have the ships to enforce this blockade. Not the ships, not the aircraft, and not the bodies. The area is too large, the coast too dangerous, the targets too dispersed, and the one country buying 90% of the oil is a nuclear power the US cannot afford to confront.

So here’s my take on what I think will actually happen.

I see 6 scenarios for the next few weeks. They’re not mutually exclusive – several can and probably will overlap, cascade, or combine in ways that make all of them worse. Think of them less as predictions and more as the lanes this thing can drift into. I’ve also assigned rough probability scores for each.

Scenario 1: the FDD dream. ~5%.

Everything works. The 13-day clock ticks, the wells shut, the rial collapses, the IRGC fractures internally, Iran returns to the table with real concessions. Hormuz reopens on American terms. Oil drops. Trump declares victory before the midterms. In CAPS. And likely bolded.

This requires the dark fleet to fail, China to stand down, every NATO ally to suddenly reverse their refusal to participate, and the IRGC to behave differently than it has for 45 years. It requires Iran – a country that has survived revolution, war with Iraq, mass uprisings to fold in 2 weeks because a spreadsheet says so.

I have it at 5% because I can’t quite bring myself to write zero.

Scenario 2: the forever war. ~30%.

Nobody folds. The blockade becomes a new layer of friction on top of all the existing frictions. Oil stays above $100 for months. The dark fleet keeps running. De-dollarisation accelerates one tanker at a time. Europe enters recession. Asia scrambles.

Netanyahu gets his real prize: the war itself.

His corruption trial stays frozen under the wartime emergency framework. The Lebanon ground operation proceeds under cover of “wartime necessity”. Hezbollah is degraded. The process is the product. The only other winners are Russia, whose oil revenues skyrockets, and the US shale producers, who cannot believe their luck.

This is the default. The thing that happens when none of the more dramatic scenarios trigger. It’s the most likely single outcome, and it is the one nobody planned for and nobody except Netanyahu actually benefits from.

I keep thinking about that. The most probable result of American foreign policy is an outcome that primarily serves a man under indictment in his own country, whose trial cannot resume while the war continues, who personally called Trump 12 times during the Islamabad negotiations. Vance spoke to Netanyahu at least once during peace talks with Iran.

I’m not editorialising.

That actually happened.

Scenario 3: the rope-a-dope. ~15%.

Iran absorbs the hit.

The dark fleet delivers. China keeps buying. Iran has 174 million barrels sitting in floating storage right now – 158 million crude, the rest products – and over 90% of it is bound for China via tankers with their AIS transponders switched off, sailing under opaque ownership, already at sea and beyond the reach of any port blockade. A port blockade cannot reach oil that already left the port. I feel like this should be obvious, but apparently it needs saying.

The Jask terminal on the Gulf of Oman – Iran’s only export facility that bypasses the strait entirely – has a pipeline capacity of 1 million barrels per day. In practice it moves about 81,000. It is not good enough. But it doesn’t need to be. Iran’s war aim was never about exporting at pre-war volumes. Iran’s war aim is survival plus a toll system. Survival plus yuan-denominated maritime commerce as precedent. Survival plus the narrative that writes itself: “they came at us with the full spectrum of American military power and we’re still here”.

Iran has been doing this for 45 years. The rial has collapsed before. Inflation has hit triple digits before. The regime survived. I find it genuinely difficult to explain why 2 weeks of a naval blockade accomplishes what decades of sanctions, a revolution, and mass uprisings could not.

Maybe it does. I don’t see how. But maybe.

Scenario 4: the burning destroyer. ~20%.

Remember the Arleigh Burke.

The USS Abraham Lincoln learned in March what happens when you get close to Iran. The carrier strike group pushed to within 210 miles of the coast and was forced to retreat to roughly 700 miles after Iranian missiles and drones came visiting. It is currently sheltering near Salalah, Oman, tucked behind coastal mountain ranges.

Then the Ford had a “laundry fire” in the Red Sea.

Requiring three weeks of repairs. On a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier designed to survive direct hits. A laundry fire. I don’t know what kind of laundry the US Navy is doing on that ship, but they should probably switch detergent. Maybe one that doesn’t leave blast patterns.

Larry Johnson, former CIA, counts exactly 7 US ships in theatre capable of launching helicopters for boarding operations. Seven ships covering an area the size of Western Europe, operating 700 miles from a coast they can’t approach because the last ship that tried is now sitting more than 1,000 km away.

Will Schryver: Admiral Stavridis himself – CNN’s favourite retired admiral – says enforcing this blockade properly requires 2 carrier groups, 20+ destroyers, frigates, Arab naval participation, both Marine Expeditionary Units, the 82nd Airborne, and most of America’s special operations forces.

The US has about half of that.
I’m being generous.

And what’s waiting for them? Iran spent 25 years building the answer to this exact question. Hundreds of fast attack boats with anti-ship missiles. Hundreds of unmanned surface drones. Thousands of ballistic missiles. Stealthy mini-submarines. MANPADs. Homemade, Chinese and Russian. Remote-controlled mines sitting on the sea floor waiting for a signal. Real-time satellite intelligence fed by China. Their entire coastal defence architecture was designed for exactly this scenario: the world’s most powerful navy trying to operate within range of land-based systems in a narrow waterway.

Iran wants this fight. I cannot stress this enough. This is not a contingency they’re scrambling to respond to. This is the exam they’ve been studying for since 1997.

Now add the boarding problem, which I haven’t seen anyone discuss. Every tanker leaving an Iranian port from now on could have 50 soldiers aboard. Sounds like a lot until you do the maths: 25,000 people across 500 tankers. On a million-strong military, that’s a rounding error. Add a few MANPADs and suddenly every helicopter approach is a potential shootdown. When the tankers clear the theatre, soldiers swap back to returning vessels and cycle home.

Rinse, repeat. Iran just turned every oil tanker into a floating garrison at effectively zero strategic cost. The US has to treat each one as a potential combat engagement. Iran has to pack a bag and ride a boat.

So picture it. A drone or anti-ship missile hits a heli, boarding craft or even a destroyer during a boarding attempt. Footage goes global within minutes. 92% of Americans already want this war over. America’s tolerance for visible losses is essentially zero. The political cost would become unbearable overnight.

This doesn’t end the war cleanly. It ends the blockade, and cascades into scenario 3 or 5.

Scenario 5: the China test. ~15%.

This might be the most important one. It’s also, perversely, the cheapest move anyone on the board can make.

A US destroyer orders a COSCO VLCC to heave to. COSCO is a Chinese state-owned enterprise, one of the largest shipping conglomerates on earth. The Cospearl Lake and Yuan Hua Hu transited the strait this week, heading east toward Zhoushan.

China has almost no reason not to test this. Think about the asymmetry. The cost of sending one VLCC through the blockade zone is approximately one VLCC. The return is either: the US boards a Chinese state-owned vessel, and China gets to play the aggrieved defender of international commerce on every screen in the Global South, one month before a presidential visit to Beijing. Or the US doesn’t board it.

And the blockade dies on day 1.

China doesn’t need to escalate. Doesn’t need to send warships. Doesn’t need to threaten. They just need to drive through and see what happens. It’s possibly the cheapest geopolitical power projection available to anyone in the world right now. One tanker, one transit, and either America blinks or America starts a second war with an actual nuclear power while their current war is already not going particularly well.

Then there’s the toll verification problem Trump hinted at – which is so absurd I had to read it twice. He posted that the Navy will “seek and interdict every vessel in International Waters that has paid a toll to Iran”. Those tolls are paid in Bitcoin, yuan, or USDT on the Tron blockchain. 3-second settlement. No SWIFT record. No paper trail. No invoice. The IRGC is running a maritime toll system with better payment infrastructure than most European governments, and the US Navy is going to… check receipts? Ask the captain to please open his crypto wallet?

The Elpis – a Comoros-flagged tanker already sanctioned in 2025 for handling Iranian petroleum – appears to be testing the blockade as I write this. Shadow fleet vessels have nothing to lose. They’re already sanctioned, already uninsured, already outside every Western compliance framework. You cannot threaten someone with consequences they’re already living under. “We’ll sanction you!” Great. They’re sanctioned. “We’ll seize your cargo!” It’s bound for China. Good luck with that phone call.

 


There’s another theory floating around – Jiang Xueqin in conversation with Glenn Diesen – that the Hormuz blockade isn’t even the real play. That the real play is the Strait of Malacca. Blockade Malacca, force Asia to buy North American energy, write off West Asia and Europe.

I’m not sure I buy it.

The US doesn’t have the fleet for Hormuz, let alone Hormuz and Malacca.

But the fact that serious people are hunting for a logic to this that doesn’t reduce to “they ran out of options” tells you something about the quality of the options.

Scenario 6: the Houthi wildcard. ~15%.

CNBC International@CNBCi

There needs to be ‘real peace’ — not just a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war, said Trita Parsi of think tank the Quincy Institute

8:00 AM · Nov 24, 2023 · 971 Views

Trita Parsi at the Quincy Institute laid this out on CNBC.

If the blockade hardens and Iran is visibly suffering, the Houthis could reactivate Red Sea operations in solidarity. Bab al-Mandeb closes alongside Hormuz.

That is 20% of global oil flow plus 12%. Simultaneously offline.

Oil at $200. Global recession isn’t a risk at that point. It’s simple arithmetic. The fertiliser crisis becomes a true famine. Senator Mark Warner asked CBS: “How is that going to ever bring down gas prices?”

Gas is at around $4.25 nationally. Diesel at $5.64. Trucking at $2.97 per mile. March CPI energy component was up 10.9% in a single month. Gasoline CPI printed +25% month-on-month, the first time that’s happened in 59 years.

The midterms are in November.

Add the probabilities up and you notice something. The scenario USrael planned for – the one where Iran folds in 13 days and everyone goes home – sits at about 5%. The scenarios they didn’t plan for, or chose not to think about, or assumed wouldn’t happen because the spreadsheet said 13 days, make up the other 95%.

And the single most likely outcome, the forever war at 30%, is one that primarily benefits a man whose corruption trial cannot resume while the war continues.

I keep coming back to that. The architecture of this conflict increasingly looks like it was not designed to be won. It was designed to not end.

The blockade is not genius. Genius would have been not starting this war in the first place, when the strait was open and oil was $70.

But it’s not pure desperation either. It is something more familiar.

It’s the thing America does when it has exhausted every option except the one that requires admitting the original plan failed.

Go big – and not go home.

So you blockade the blockade, and you pray to the spreadsheet god.

 

Source: https://www.theburningplatform.com/2026/04/15/blockading-the-blockade-2/ 

The insider trading suspicions looming over Trump's presidency



Nick Marsh
April 20th

Throughout US President Donald Trump's second term in office, traders have been betting millions of dollars just before he makes major announcements.

The BBC has examined trade volume data on several financial markets and matched them to some of the president's most significant market-moving statements.

It found a consistent pattern of spikes just hours, or sometimes minutes, before a social media post or media interview was made public.

Some analysts say it bears the hallmarks of illegal insider trading, whereby bets are made by people based on information that is not available to the general public.

Others say the picture is more complicated and that some traders have become more adept at anticipating the president's interventions.

Here are five of the most significant examples.

9 March 2026: 'The war is very complete, pretty much'

Some of the biggest movements have been in oil trades on the futures market.

Nine days into the US-Israel war with Iran, Trump told CBS News in a phone interview that the conflict was "very complete, pretty much".

 

 

  • 18:29 GMT: Oil bets surge

  • 19:16 GMT: Trump says war is nearly complete

  • 19:17 GMT: Oil drops by 25%

The first time the public would have known about the interview was at 15:16 Eastern Time (19:16 GMT) when the reporter posted about it on X.

Oil traders reacted to this news that the conflict could end much sooner than expected by selling oil, with the price plunging by around 25%.

However, market data shows a huge surge of bets were placed on the price of oil falling at 18:29 GMT - a full 47 minutes before the reporter's post.

The traders who placed those bets will have made millions of dollars from the movement in oil prices.

23 March 2026: 'Complete and total resolution to hostilities'

On 23 March, just two days after threatening to "obliterate" Iran's power plants, Trump posted on Truth Social that Washington had held "VERY GOOD AND PRODUCTIVE CONVERSATIONS" with Tehran over a "COMPLETE AND TOTAL RESOLUTION" to hostilities.

It was a major surprise to diplomatic observers and to traders.

 


  • 10:48-10:50 GMT: Oil bets surge

  • 11:04 GMT: Trump posts about "total resolution" to hostilities

  • 11:05 GMT: Oil drops by 11%

Immediately, stocks rose and the US benchmark price of oil - which had been climbing - fell sharply.

As the BBC reported at the time, 14 minutes before the president's post there were an unusually high number of bets on the US oil price.

The same pattern was seen in traders buying contracts for Brent crude, the other major oil benchmark.

The trades appeared "abnormal, for sure," one oil analyst told the BBC at the time.

9 April 2025: 'Liberation Day' pause

Away from the war in the Middle East, there are other examples of trading activity that have raised eyebrows.

On 2 April last year, Trump announced what he called Liberation Day - a sweeping set of tariffs on goods from practically every country in the world.

Stock markets around the globe plunged.

But a week later when Trump announced a 90-day "pause" on the levies for all countries, except China, stock markets soared.

The benchmark S&P 500 index jumped by 9.5% - one of its largest single-day gains since the Second World War.

  • 18:00 BST: Traders start making big bets on stock market going up

  • 18:18 BST: Trump announces tariffs pause

  • 18:19 BST: Stock market begins historic surge

Again, a pattern of unusual trading preceded these events with an unusually high number of bets ahead of the announcement on one fund that tracks the S&P 500.

The number of contracts traded jumped to over 10,000 per minute just after 18:00 BST. Earlier in the day the number had been in the hundreds.

Some traders bet over $2m on the stock market increasing that day, even though it had gone through seven days in a row of losses. The huge surge could have generated them a profit of almost $20m.

Later that week, several senior Democrats in the US Senate wrote to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) urging the financial regulator to investigate whether the president's announcements "enriched administration insiders and friends at the expense of the American public".

When asked by the BBC whether it had looked into these allegations, a spokesman for the SEC declined to comment.

The White House, meanwhile, did not respond to a BBC request for comment on any of the unusual trading activities analysed in this report.

3 Jan 2026: Maduro seized

 
One user won $436,000 betting on Nicolás Maduro being out of office by the end of January
 

  •  Dec 2025: Burdensome-Mix account created

  • 2 Jan 2026: Account puts $32,000 on Maduro being ousted

  • 3 Jan 2026: Maduro is seized and Burdensome-Mix wins $436,000

The recent growth of online predictions markets has also drawn scrutiny from observers.

Blockchain-powered platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi offer users the chance to speculate on anything from the weather to baseball to US foreign policy.

President Trump's son, Donald Trump Jr, is an investor in Polymarket and sits on its advisory board. He also acts as a strategic advisor to Kalshi and has been contacted by the BBC for comment.

In December 2025, one user created an account on Polymarket called Burdensome-Mix. On 30 December, it placed its first bet on Venezuela's President Nicolás Maduro being out of office by the end of January 2026.

Between 30 December and 2 January Burdensome-Mix placed a total of $32,500 on the position.

When Maduro was seized by US special forces and ousted the following day, Burdensome-Mix won $436,000.

Shortly afterwards, the account changed its username and has not placed any bets since.

28 Feb 2026: Strikes on Iran

  • Feb 2026: Six accounts created on Polymarket

  • 28 Feb: Accounts win $1.2m between them

According to the blockchain analysis website Bubblemaps, six accounts were created on Polymarket in February.

All placed wagers on a US strike on Iran happening by 28 February. When the attacks were confirmed by President Trump in the early hours of that day, the accounts earned $1.2m between them.

Five of those six users have placed no more bets since, but one of the account's recent activity, external shows it has subsequently made $163,000 by correctly betting on a US-Iran ceasefire by 7 April, which was announced by Washington and Tehran on that day.

Polymarket told the BBC it "sets, maintains, and enforces the highest standards of market integrity", adding that it "proactively" works with regulators and law enforcement to do so.

In March this year, both Polymarket and Kalshi outlined new rules to crack down on insider trading.

Predictions markets come under the jurisdiction of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

The CFTC did not respond to a BBC request for comment, but its chair recently told a Congressional committee that his organisation had "zero tolerance" for fraud and insider trading.

It has also surfaced that the White House sent an internal email to staff last month, warning them not to use insider information to place bets on predictions markets.

Spokesman Davis Ingle told the BBC at the time that "any implication that Administration officials are engaged in such activity without evidence is baseless and irresponsible reporting".

Hard to prove

Insider trading has been illegal for most Americans since the Securities Act was passed in 1933.

It was extended to cover US government officials in 2012, although to date no-one has been prosecuted under the law.

Paul Oudin, a professor who specialises in financial regulation law at the ESSEC Business School, says the rules are difficult to enforce.

"The financial authorities will not carry out a prosecution if they can't figure out who the source of information is," says Oudin.

None of the US financial authorities contacted by the BBC acknowledged any of the allegations of insider trading.

"You can have massive trades on a financial instrument that clearly show that someone was privy to what Donald Trump was about to declare," says Oudin.

"Yet there is a strong chance that no-one will be prosecuted," he adds.

 

 Trump and his billionaire friends use Iran war for insider trading:  

 

Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cge0grppe3po?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-gb 

An unprecedented consensus against Israel is now emerging in the West


 

Frank Wright
Thu Apr 16, 2026

In a further sign of how the Iran war is remaking the world, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni announced on Tuesday she was suspending Italy’s 20-year-old defense agreement with Israel “in light of the current situation.”

The agreement, first launched in 2005 and automatically renewed every five years, was designed to promote trade deals between Italy and Israel, particularly in the defense sector.

Reports from Italian news agency Ansa and national newspaper Corriere della Sera confirmed details of the move, which followed the Italian government’s summoning of the Israeli ambassador in Rome to explain how Italian United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) forces had been fired upon by Israel in Lebanon.

Meloni’s suspension of cooperation with Israel was announced a day after the Israelis responded to remarks by the Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani, who condemned Israel’s “unacceptable attacks” on civilians during the Israeli invasion of Lebanon.

The Italian ambassador to Israel was summoned on Monday in protest at Italian condemnation of Israel’s assault, which has seen civilian housing and infrastructure heavily bombed in the capital Beirut and in the Crusader city of Tyre. Graphic video shows bodies flying through the air after one impact, during a ten-minute period in which Israel launched over 100 strikes on Lebanon.

Israel has repeatedly invaded Lebanon, with some counts saying this is its seventh invasion. Israel’s initial objective in this latest campaign scaled back from the intended occupation of all of Lebanon south of the Litani River, with the chief of the IDF declaring all of Southern Lebanon a “killzone” two weeks ago.

Houses, churches, graveyards and entire towns and villages have been leveled, with Israeli aircraft spraying glyphosphate biocides on agricultural land. Israelis have declared their intention to settle Southern Lebanon permanently. On March 24 Israeli minister Bezalel Smotrich said the Litani River would be the new northern border, a step towards realizing his stated vision of a “Greater Israel.”

Italy under Meloni had formerly been a reliable ally of Israel and had resisted, until now, growing public outrage at Italy’s continued support of a state which has killed over 70,000 in its Gaza campaign, recognized outside the Israeli sphere of influence as a genocide. A BBC report from April 14 notes that public opinion is likely a factor in Meloni’s decision, with popular resentment of Israel and its partner the United States further aggravated by President Trump’s attacks on Pope Leo XIV representing electoral pressure for the Fratelli d’Italia leader.

France, seen as the guarantor of Lebanese democracy, has seen calls from political leaders to intervene military to defend Lebanon from destruction. The French have been excluded at Israel’s demand from talks towards a Lebanese ceasefire, with the Israelis describing the French as “unhelpful.” France proposed its own strategy for peace in Lebanon, providing military and financial aid. This is seen by the Israelis as an unwelcome intrusion on their goal of regional dominance.

Trump responds

The crisis sparked by this war is reshaping global alignments.

In an interview with Fox News reported by Ansa on April 15, U.S. President Donald Trump announced that former ties with states who “refused their help” to Trump’s war would not continue.

“Whoever refused their help in managing the situation with Iran, we no longer have the same relationship with that country,” he said, before explaining, “Just so you know: Italy receives large quantities of oil from the Strait.”

Trump’s decisive revision of the relationship with Italy follows his March 3 statement that the U.S. will “cut off all ties with Spain,” after the Spanish government announced on March 2 that it will not permit the U.S. to use its military bases to launch attacks on Iran.

European leaders have signaled they must pursue an independent defense architecture from America, as Trump’s outrage at European refusals to enter his war have also seen him threaten to withdraw the United States from NATO.

This geopolitical rift emerges alongside British and European efforts to resolve the Iranian crisis and resume trade outside of the U.S. framework.

Changing the regime

Italy’s decision marks a shift in the political position in Europe on Israel, permissioned in the main by its patronage and protection afforded by the United States. The British government has insisted it will not join the war on Iran, which the United States admitted on March 2 was launched due to pressure from the Israelis. Further, contrary to the American position, the conditions for peace must include a ceasefire in Lebanon, as the British, French, Italian, German, Canadian, Danish, Dutch, Spanish and EU leadership insist.

The White House first acknowledged then refused the inclusion of a Lebanon ceasefire as a condition for talks with the Iranians. The reason Lebanon was excluded after the fact by the Trump administration is reported to be the result of a phone call made by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Following communication to the U.S. of the 10-point ceasefire framework which stipulated a ceasefire in Lebanon as a precondition for talks, Netanyahu made a televised address in which he stated there would be no ceasefire in Lebanon. The White House Press Secretary added that Iran’s 10-point plan had been “thrown in the garbage.”

The move by Meloni marks a further fracturing of the Atlanticist relationship which saw Europe and the U.S. coordinate international diplomacy, trade and partnerships. It is a sign of how increasing tensions produced by the war on Iran are reshaping the world by force and policy and public opinion no longer confined by formerly effective political narratives.

The reason for this is the war presents an existential threat to global supply chains, whose effects already include actual and inevitable further shortages in food, fuel, medicine and fertilizer supplies.

This explains why a formerly forbidden consensus against Israel appears to be emerging. The war launched for Israeli interests by the United States has now produced a deadlock whose lack of resolution could undermine the global economy. It is this emergency, whose limits are not yet defined, formerly disparate political powers are uniting in a single message of condemnation of Israeli actions. Recognition is growing that if Israel is not restrained, the damage to the global economy and the dollar itself may be fatal.

A new consensus against Israel?

The socialist government of Spain, the post-fascist government of Italy, the neo-liberal globalists of Britain, France and Germany, and the Communist regime of China are aligned against the Israelis and accordingly against their sponsor, the United States.

The war has broken down old bonds of allegiance secured by a security architecture which has produced insecurity, instability, economic crisis and the routine commission of war crimes.

This includes the destruction by U.S. missiles of a school in Iran’s Minab – killing 168 (mainly young girls) in a “double tap” strike by American Tomahawk missiles. With Iran’s military production and firepower mainly deep underground, U.S. and Israeli airstrikes have targeted many civilian sites, following the stated policy of the Israeli “Dahiya Doctrine” being applied to Iran and to Lebanon.

This doctrine, first developed in Israel’s 2008 invasion of Lebanon, orders the deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure such as water, food, and fuel supplies, along with schools, hospitals, housing and transport routes. Its aim is to make civilian life impossible, producing social collapse and a refugee crisis towards “regime change.” This violence is permissioned by demonizing the enemy, a technique known as “hasbara,” and was adopted by Donald Trump exactly mirroring false atrocity claims made by the Israelis after October 7.

When asked on March 7 whether U.S. and Israeli strikes had deliberately targeted civilian water desalination plants in a dangerous escalation for a water-scarce Gulf, Trump replied the “Iranians are among the most horrible people ever,” before adding: “They cut babies’ heads off … cut women in half.”

So far, the Iranian regime seems impervious to change, despite the assassinations, the repeated rounds of destruction, and failed diplomatic efforts to rally a Western coalition to join the war.

The war has reshaped the words and now the actions of European leaders. The adoption of Israeli media propaganda and military strategy has transfigured the U.S. The regime this war has changed is not that in Iran. It is already changing our regime in the West, but into what?

This is the bottom line. It will be decided by whether restraint or escalation makes the headlines in the days to come.

 

Source: https://www.lifesitenews.com/analysis/an-unprecedented-consensus-against-israel-is-now-emerging-in-the-west/?utm_source=latest_news&utm_campaign=usa 

CDC Reports Significant Drop In US Fertility Since 2021



Nicolas Hulscher, MPH on . 

A newly released CDC report confirms that the U.S. fertility rate has declined to the lowest level ever recorded in modern American history.

In 2025, the general fertility rate fell to just 53.1 births per 1,000 women aged 15–44, marking yet another historic low.

At the same time, total U.S. births declined to only 3.61 million nationwide in 2025.

U.S. fertility has now fallen approximately 23 percent since 2007. Even more concerning, fertility has dropped an additional 5.7 percent since 2021 alone.

 


While falling birth rates can be attributed to economic hardship, delayed marriage, cultural shifts, and changing lifestyle preferences, the scale and persistence of this decline suggest biological impairment driven by exposure to environmental toxins such as PFAS (“forever chemicals”), phthalates, BPA/plastics, pesticides, EMFs, heavy metals, air pollution, and most recently, mRNA injections.

Since 2021, 80 percent of Americans were injected with COVID-19 gene-transfer shots that damage the reproductive system. In animal models, they destroy over 60 percent of female’s non-renewable egg supply.

In human data (n=1.3 million), vaccinated women have ~33 percent fewer successful pregnancies.

A new study demonstrated that “vaccine” mRNA and spike protein invade the human placenta and fetal cells. 37 percent of placentas from vaccinated mothers contained spike protein.

The implications of this collapse are profound and far-reaching. America is no longer reproducing at replacement levels needed to sustain its population.

If these trends continue unchecked, the nation will face severe economic, demographic, and societal consequences in the decades ahead.

See more here thefocalpoints.com

Source: https://principia-scientific.com/cdc-reports-significant-drop-in-us-fertility-since-2021/ 

Mexico’s Central Bank, BIS, and BlackRock Discuss Phasing Out Cash and Future of Digital Money



Derrick Broze
March 20, 2026

As the 89th Banking Convention wraps up in Cancún today, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau share the stage with Visa, Mastercard, BlackRock, and the BIS—amid a focus on ending cash that ties perfectly into Mexico’s ongoing biometric ID rollout.

On Wednesday, the 89th Banking Convention began in Cancún, Mexico, as representatives from the Mexican government and banking sector met to discuss the future of digital payments and the phasing out of cash in a country where more than three-fourths of the population depends on it.

The annual meeting brought together leaders from Mexico’s financial sector, including heads of banking, government economic authorities, and CEOs of major corporations. The convention is organized by the Association of Banks of Mexico (ABM) under the theme “Innovating Banking, Building the Future.”

On Thursday night, Mexican President Dr. Claudia Sheinbaum spoke on increasing productivity of small- and medium-sized businesses in Mexico. Former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is scheduled to give the closing presentation on Friday evening titled “Global Leadership and Transformation.”

Other speakers include representatives of Banorte, BBVA, Scotiabank, Santander, and HSBC. Also in attendance are Ryan McInerney, CEO of Visa, and Tim Murphy, Vice Chair of Mastercard.

International Banksters Seek to Control Mexico

One sign that the meeting is of vast importance to the international banking sector—and the overall push towards Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) and stablecoins—is the presence of representatives of Mexico’s Central Bank, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), and BlackRock.

For example, on Wednesday, Fabrizio López Gallo, Director General of Financial Stability for Mexico’s Central Bank, participated in a panel titled “Sustainable Financing: Risks and Opportunities,” while Sergio Mendez, the Director of BlackRock Mexico, spoke on a panel called “Infrastructure Investment as a Catalyst for Growth.”

Multiple panels underscore the push to digitize money in Mexico, including “The Future of Money: What’s Next for Mexico and the World,” featuring BIS’s Alexandre Tombini, and “The Role of Artificial Intelligence in the Future of Digital Payments” with McInerney and HSBC Mexico’s Jorge Arce Gama.

Several statements by Emilio Romano, the head of the ABM, make it clear that the Mexican Central Bank and the international bankers are working diligently to shift Mexico away from cash and towards a track-and-trace society where dissidents have their financial resources turned off.

In an interview with Bloomberg, Romano stated, “The central bank is preparing to publish protocols to drive the adoption of payments sent by mobile phones.”

He noted, “Authorities are studying separate measures that could include eliminating cash payments for some services and products, such as gas stations and toll roads.” [emphasis added]

Romano also emphasized that these changes are being made because in Mexico, “roughly 85% of small transactions are done in cash,” largely due to Mexicans not trusting their government and seeking to avoid taxation. “Easing concerns about how the government assesses income will help,” he said.

President Sheinbaum reiterated the plan to end cash payments for gas stations and toll roads in her speech on Thursday night, stating, “Our goal is that this year we make it mandatory to pay for gasoline and toll booths digitally. This will allow us to promote accessible digital payments that allow us to advance the digitization of the country through many other schemes.”

Additionally, the day before the convention began, Juan Pablo de Botton, the Secretary of Administration and Finance of Mexico City, published an opinion piece with similar themes.

“The banking sector is anxiously awaiting these rules to be published again so that we can advance in optimizing the digital-payments ecosystem,” Botton wrote. [emphasis added] He also reiterated the focus on digitizing Mexico’s economy and building trust among the population.

“And at the same time we must continue to advance on a key issue for our city: the digitization of payments and financial services. This transition also requires confidence. Government and financial sector must promote cybersecurity training so that people have greater certainty in their transactions and can calmly adopt the tools of the digital world.”

Digital Money and Biometric ID

The recurring theme of digitizing financial transactions in Mexico aligns with the Sheinbaum administration’s efforts to require a biometric ID for phone and internet service, as well as other areas like healthcare, banking, and school enrollment.

In July 2025, several new laws took effect in Mexico that coerce the population into registering for a biometric program required to access many services. Known as the Biometric CURP (for Clave Única de Registro de Población or Unique Population Registry Code), the new laws require users to submit a photograph and scan a QR code that embeds biometric data, including fingerprint and iris scans.

The Mexican government claims these new laws aim to combat organized crime, drug trafficking, and aid with the search for missing people. The government has also argued that controversial changes to the nation’s telecommunications laws are designed to bridge the so-called “digital divide,” referring to the limited access to internet and cellular service in rural areas compared to urban environments.

However, critics worry that the biometric CURP system will increase opportunities for government surveillance.

In September 2025, José Flores, director of the local digital rights group Red en Defensa de los Derechos Digitales (Network in Defense of Digital Rights) (R3D), released a “concept note” about the laws and the dangers they pose. The organization has filed lawsuits against the package of laws.

“This unprecedented system of surveillance and social control is also an indirect restriction on freedom of expression and the right to association, as it implies the possibility of civil and military authorities accessing sensitive data, including the places where people are, who they meet or talk with, and all their daily activities, creating a hostile environment for the expression of political criticism and dissent,” the group writes.

Many questions remain about whether the biometric CURP will actually be mandatory for daily life. President Claudia Sheinbaum has repeatedly stated that it is voluntary, and some media reports have claimed the same. However, Mexicans and expats living in Mexico have already begun receiving notices from cellphone providers reminding them of the June 30 deadline. Users are told that their service will be ended if they fail to register their phone with their biometric CURP.



On Wednesday, Mexican journalist Ignacio Gómez Villaseñor stated that less than ten percent of Mexican phone lines have been registered. “It’s completely unfeasible for companies to cancel numbers not associated with CURP,” he posted. “They would be left without customers! The issue has escalated to the point where they’re analyzing campaigns to try to discredit the real concerns of experts.”

He concluded, “I insist: don’t register. We’re beating the government.”

When combined with the digitization of all financial payments and the elimination of cash, it’s not difficult to imagine how the Mexican government could utilize these technologies to limit the freedom of movement and economic exchange for the Mexican population.

The Year Ahead in Technocracy:  

Source: https://www.thelastamericanvagabond.com/bis-blackrock-digital-mexico/