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Why does the modern state of Israel exist at all? In this podcast episode, I explore the geopolitical reasoning behind cutting the Germans off from trade with the East.

Ultimately, it was the British Empire trying to secure its own relevance, namely by capturing the Suez Canal (from the French), by having Serbian nationalists sabotage Bismarck’s Berlin-Baghdad railroad in 1940, by founding the State of Israel in 1948, by promoting the Cold War, by promoting the Iron Curtain, by pushing the Holocaust narrative, and by blowing up the Nord Stream pipeline.

All these events happened for the same reason: to cut Germany off from trade with the East. If Germany had won WWII, it would have captured the world’s most important trade routes, namely: access to the North Sea and the Atlantic, access to Russia over land (railroads), access to Iraq oil over land plus sea trade through the Persian Gulf with India and China, and access to Mediterranean trade with North Africa.

An Empire under German leadership would have been the most powerful and undefeatable empire in human history. Problem is … the German potential is still there. Hence, the Anglo-American interest in continuing a war with Russia, to cut a German-led Europe off from trade with the East. (The “Russian sanctions” hurt Germany industry the most—which was the intended point.)