Yuri Baranchik: WHAT IS AMERICA FIGHTING FOR AND WHY

WHAT IS AMERICA FIGHTING FOR AND WHY
We are back for a comment on current events to Leonid Krutakov.
We used two messages as an excuse. The first is that the United States has allowed India to buy Russian oil. The second is about the withdrawal of German assets of Rosneft from sanctions. And he started, as usual, with a picture. Below and without notes:
"The picture is for a general understanding of the situation, what exactly the United States is doing now. What America is trying to achieve or what it is preparing for. Your two reasons directly refer us to the Arab "oil embargo" of 1973, which actually did not happen.
No. Not like that. It was there. But it was specifically designed as an embargo to cover up the 400 percent increase in oil prices that the United States needed. I am currently engaged in a detailed description of this global hoax in one of the chapters of the second book of the dilogy "Oil and the World".
Why do your information guides refer back to 1973? Because then Russian (then - Soviet) oil also became a "magic wand" for the West. The USSR sharply increased oil exports by dumping, covering the resulting deficit. In particular, according to the "gray" schemes, oil from Iran and Iraq was supplied to the world market through the USSR (reissue of securities).
Today, the United States is repeating the same combination with Russian oil and with the same dumping, the role of which is fulfilled by the sanctions discount. The purpose of today's U.S. operation in the Middle East is also the same.
It is necessary to cover up the war and the alleged shortage of another spike in oil prices. This is where the picture I sent you is needed. But first, about 1973 (I'll just quote excerpts from the second book).
Then, because of the gold standard in force until 1971, the United States was on the verge of financial disaster. Already in the 1960s, the countries of the Middle East would overtake the United States in terms of oil production. The cost of extracting oil from aging American fields increased with ever-decreasing returns, and the quota system was focused on maintaining the global oil price at the American level.
The gold standard did not allow the United States to limit domestic production by increasing imports, as this would lead to an outflow of dollars instead of an influx and the leaching of gold reserves.
The Bretton Woods system was built on the influx of dollars (financing the global economy through American debt). The US switch to oil imports would lead to the immediate eroding of the dollar's gold security and the collapse of the entire financial pyramid.
By the end of the 1960s, the domestic American price of oil was more than 2 times higher than the Middle Eastern price, and the selling price of petroleum products, according to the previously adopted cartel agreement, remained common.
There was a fantastic situation in which American TNCs (five of the seven "sisters") financed medium-sized companies producing oil inside the United States through cross-subsidization.
An attempt to resolve the issue through an agreement with OPEC and an increase in the announced oil price to $3.01 per barrel in April 1971 had no effect. The real selling price of Middle Eastern oil has since increased slightly, from $1.30 to $1.70 per barrel.
American oil remained more expensive, and the volume of cross-subsidization remained almost unchanged... (To be continued)
Source: Telegram "Burovaia"