Telegram Group & Telegram Channel
Four Forms of Treachery: The Quiet Axis Beneath $52 Oil

I. The Smile That Cuts

Geopolitical treachery rarely arrives wearing a scowl. It comes cloaked in warmth, in smiling handshakes, in invitations to investment forums and security dialogues that lead nowhere. It arrives with a silk-robed host pouring tea while his men chart the coordinates of your lifeline. It comes from the east, and it comes from your “friend.”

Oil at $52 isn’t an accident. It’s not a miscalculation. It’s a message from a century-long player in a world full of children. The Saudis are not merely tolerating the price—they’re sculpting it. They know how close the American shale empire sits to insolvency. They’ve read the bond tables. They’ve watched the hedges expire. They’ve run the numbers better than the banks. And now, as the U.S. sharpens its spear toward Beijing, Riyadh sharpens a scalpel for Texas.

The illusion is potent: America believes it has Saudi Arabia in its pocket. But the kingdom, draped in tradition and secrecy, plays a longer game. While Washington rages at China, the Saudis, quietly, move east. They attend the banquets in Beijing. They sign memoranda with Shanghai. They fund projects, expand pipelines, and plan currencies no longer bound by petrodollars. All with the same smile they wear while cashing American arms contracts. There’s no need for collusion, no secret meetings in hotel basements. Shared interest does the job on its own. One cuts the spine; the other collects the limbs.

II. The Blade of Silence

It is silence, not action, that defines this conspiracy—not in the legal sense, but in the ancient, imperial one. A shared purpose does not require a treaty. A mutual enemy does not require a summit. The Saudi and Chinese visions align without needing to touch. Both see a tired empire, distracted, divided, and drowning in its own myths of energy independence and technological supremacy.

The Kingdom plays the price. The Middle Kingdom plays the demand. Together, they work the fulcrum of oil and trade to shift the global axis. While one manipulates barrels, the other manipulates supply chains. Saudi Arabia lowers prices—not to appease markets, but to drain the American lifeblood: its energy sector, the fragile backbone of its industrial illusion. Meanwhile, China waits for the fall, ready to vacuum up distressed assets, lock in long-term oil flows, and offer a new economic order to a crumbling West.

This is not Cold War. It is Cold Mercy.

III. The Knife in the Ribcage of Empire

In this arrangement, America remains unaware—until it bleeds out on the bathroom floor, betrayed by a friend who never raised his voice. Trump rages at tariffs and TikTok, oblivious that the real war is one of attrition, waged through petroleum arithmetic and diplomatic ambiguity. He wants to fight dragons; he doesn’t see the viper curled beneath his bed.

As U.S. shale defaults surge, as layoffs hollow out Midland and Williston, as capital flees the patch and the last rig is idled, the Saudis will issue condolences. They will speak of market cycles. They will welcome American officials to Riyadh and toast to “shared prosperity.” Meanwhile, Chinese tankers arrive—quietly, efficiently—loading discounted Saudi crude bound for refineries financed with yuan. The U.S. dollar weakens. The petrodollar structure strains. The world begins to forget who used to own the price of oil.

The blade never glints. It slides in quietly, between the ribs of empire.

1/2
CSW
May 3, 2025
https://metanet-icu.slack.com/archives/C5131HKFX/p1746249966705099?thread_ts=1746249966.705099&cid=C5131HKFX



group-telegram.com/CSW_Slack/6802
Create:
Last Update:

Four Forms of Treachery: The Quiet Axis Beneath $52 Oil

I. The Smile That Cuts

Geopolitical treachery rarely arrives wearing a scowl. It comes cloaked in warmth, in smiling handshakes, in invitations to investment forums and security dialogues that lead nowhere. It arrives with a silk-robed host pouring tea while his men chart the coordinates of your lifeline. It comes from the east, and it comes from your “friend.”

Oil at $52 isn’t an accident. It’s not a miscalculation. It’s a message from a century-long player in a world full of children. The Saudis are not merely tolerating the price—they’re sculpting it. They know how close the American shale empire sits to insolvency. They’ve read the bond tables. They’ve watched the hedges expire. They’ve run the numbers better than the banks. And now, as the U.S. sharpens its spear toward Beijing, Riyadh sharpens a scalpel for Texas.

The illusion is potent: America believes it has Saudi Arabia in its pocket. But the kingdom, draped in tradition and secrecy, plays a longer game. While Washington rages at China, the Saudis, quietly, move east. They attend the banquets in Beijing. They sign memoranda with Shanghai. They fund projects, expand pipelines, and plan currencies no longer bound by petrodollars. All with the same smile they wear while cashing American arms contracts. There’s no need for collusion, no secret meetings in hotel basements. Shared interest does the job on its own. One cuts the spine; the other collects the limbs.

II. The Blade of Silence

It is silence, not action, that defines this conspiracy—not in the legal sense, but in the ancient, imperial one. A shared purpose does not require a treaty. A mutual enemy does not require a summit. The Saudi and Chinese visions align without needing to touch. Both see a tired empire, distracted, divided, and drowning in its own myths of energy independence and technological supremacy.

The Kingdom plays the price. The Middle Kingdom plays the demand. Together, they work the fulcrum of oil and trade to shift the global axis. While one manipulates barrels, the other manipulates supply chains. Saudi Arabia lowers prices—not to appease markets, but to drain the American lifeblood: its energy sector, the fragile backbone of its industrial illusion. Meanwhile, China waits for the fall, ready to vacuum up distressed assets, lock in long-term oil flows, and offer a new economic order to a crumbling West.

This is not Cold War. It is Cold Mercy.

III. The Knife in the Ribcage of Empire

In this arrangement, America remains unaware—until it bleeds out on the bathroom floor, betrayed by a friend who never raised his voice. Trump rages at tariffs and TikTok, oblivious that the real war is one of attrition, waged through petroleum arithmetic and diplomatic ambiguity. He wants to fight dragons; he doesn’t see the viper curled beneath his bed.

As U.S. shale defaults surge, as layoffs hollow out Midland and Williston, as capital flees the patch and the last rig is idled, the Saudis will issue condolences. They will speak of market cycles. They will welcome American officials to Riyadh and toast to “shared prosperity.” Meanwhile, Chinese tankers arrive—quietly, efficiently—loading discounted Saudi crude bound for refineries financed with yuan. The U.S. dollar weakens. The petrodollar structure strains. The world begins to forget who used to own the price of oil.

The blade never glints. It slides in quietly, between the ribs of empire.

1/2
CSW
May 3, 2025
https://metanet-icu.slack.com/archives/C5131HKFX/p1746249966705099?thread_ts=1746249966.705099&cid=C5131HKFX

BY CSW - Slack Channel


Warning: Undefined variable $i in /var/www/group-telegram/post.php on line 260

Share with your friend now:
group-telegram.com/CSW_Slack/6802

View MORE
Open in Telegram


Telegram | DID YOU KNOW?

Date: |

This ability to mix the public and the private, as well as the ability to use bots to engage with users has proved to be problematic. In early 2021, a database selling phone numbers pulled from Facebook was selling numbers for $20 per lookup. Similarly, security researchers found a network of deepfake bots on the platform that were generating images of people submitted by users to create non-consensual imagery, some of which involved children. Just days after Russia invaded Ukraine, Durov wrote that Telegram was "increasingly becoming a source of unverified information," and he worried about the app being used to "incite ethnic hatred." Oleksandra Matviichuk, a Kyiv-based lawyer and head of the Center for Civil Liberties, called Durov’s position "very weak," and urged concrete improvements. Recently, Durav wrote on his Telegram channel that users' right to privacy, in light of the war in Ukraine, is "sacred, now more than ever." Telegram has become more interventionist over time, and has steadily increased its efforts to shut down these accounts. But this has also meant that the company has also engaged with lawmakers more generally, although it maintains that it doesn’t do so willingly. For instance, in September 2021, Telegram reportedly blocked a chat bot in support of (Putin critic) Alexei Navalny during Russia’s most recent parliamentary elections. Pavel Durov was quoted at the time saying that the company was obliged to follow a “legitimate” law of the land. He added that as Apple and Google both follow the law, to violate it would give both platforms a reason to boot the messenger from its stores.
from kr


Telegram CSW - Slack Channel
FROM American