
This simple division of the world helps to explain almost every decision made on the global stage in recent years and will be a good prediction of how nations will interact in the years to come. Ultimately, the global powers of the United States, Russia and China don’t want to go to war but neither is willing to cave to the influence of the other. It is this fear of global conflict that creates such tension points as North and South Korea, Israel and Iran and Pakistan and India. This setup creates an interesting situation whereby, at its most basic level, if any two nations from differing alliances go to war, it has the potential, through the domino effect, to bring war to every continent of the world. Both are military organizations with each member state promising to protect each others interests and come to aid in the event of war. The two major organizations at the center of this are NATO, and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) headed by Russia and China.

military agenda today in regards to policy against Russia and Syria.I have been working on this map, collecting news articles and documenting trends over the past couple years, and was surprised when it revealed that the world is deeply divided by two major spheres of influence that dominate and dictate global affairs. This is said to be the catalyst behind all the post-9/11 military action, not anti-terrorism efforts, and that these dollar-undermining decisions by foreign governments continue to shape the U.S. then tied the dollar to oil trade to keep its demand up, a system that remained in place at America’s convenience until the year 2000 – right before 9/11, mind you – when Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein declared he was shifting their oil trade from the dollar to the euro. Through various political arrangements, the filmmakers suggest that the U.S. To quell the fire, the Richard Nixon presidential administration took the dollar off the gold standard and made it a debt-based currency. was printing more money than it could cover, and inflation naturally ensued.

While the United States did have $13.2 billion in gold reserves, most of that was needed to cover domestic holdings and only $3.2 billion of it was available for foreign holdings. The filmmakers highlight that the International Monetary Fund reports that in 1966, foreign central banks and governments held 14 billion U.S. dollar was bound to the gold standard – or at least that is what the world operated under the belief of. dollar is a unique currency for many reasons, though the reasons that matter most are not necessarily widely known.

The Geopolitics of World War III By StormCloudsGathering
