The same set of tricks in America has been played for 55 years, and some people still haven't seen through it? When the Middle East is in chaos, the whole world has to pay the price.


Just think about it and you'll realize: whenever the dollar faces a crisis, conflict in the Middle East is inevitable.
In 1971, the dollar detached from gold, and confidence collapsed. Two years later, the Middle East war broke out, and oil prices skyrocketed fourfold in three months. The U.S. took the opportunity to bind with Saudi Arabia, settling oil transactions in dollars, and along the way, reaping global profits.
In 1979, the dollar was under pressure again, and the Iran-Iraq war erupted, causing oil prices to soar.
In 2000, the dot-com bubble burst and the dollar plummeted, followed by the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, pushing oil prices to historic highs.
The script has never changed: dollar hegemony is challenged → Middle East conflicts escalate → oil prices surge → the world fights over the dollar → the U.S. completes its harvest, resolving the crisis.
Today, gold prices hit new highs, the Federal Reserve is about to cut interest rates, capital is restless, and how can the Middle East situation be easily calmed?
Only when oil prices stay high for a long time can the U.S. shift crises, stabilize the dollar, and support U.S. debt.
This is not a coincidence; it’s a fixed routine used for 55 years. Those who truly understand have already begun to lay out their plans.
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