Russia, Europe, and the economic ripple effects of sanctions and energy supply shocks
- Sanctions Backfire, Russia Thrives – Western sanctions failed to cripple Russia—instead, Moscow pivoted to Asia, deepened ties with BRICS, and achieved stronger GDP growth than many Western economies by diversifying trade and energy exports.
- Energy Sabotage Hurts Europe, Helps Russia – The destruction of Nord Stream pipelines (likely a U.S. operation) forced Europe into costly LNG dependence while Russia redirected gas exports to China, fueling its industrial and AI expansion.
- Russia’s Financial & Military Resilience – Russia built a sanctions-proof economy by ditching SWIFT, stockpiling gold, and boosting military production—now outpacing NATO’s combined output—while Europe faces deindustrialization and energy poverty.
- Dollar Collapse & BRICS Rise – Weaponizing the dollar (freezing Russian reserves) backfired, accelerating global abandonment of Western finance in favor of BRICS currencies, gold-backed trade, and alternative banking systems like SCO.
- Multipolar World Emerges as West Declines – The West’s economic aggression hastened the rise of a parallel financial and trade system led by Russia and China, leaving Europe in collapse and the U.S. struggling with debt and fading global influence.
The West’s economic war against Russia—through sanctions, energy sabotage, and financial weaponization—has spectacularly backfired. Instead of crippling Moscow, these measures have accelerated Russia’s pivot to Asia, strengthened its economic resilience, and triggered Europe’s industrial collapse. Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar’s dominance continues to erode as nations abandon Western financial systems in favor of alternatives like BRICS currencies and gold-backed trade settlements.
Sanctions Backfire: Russia’s Economic Resilience
When Western nations imposed sweeping sanctions on Russia following its military intervention in Ukraine, the expectation was that Moscow’s economy would collapse within weeks. Instead, Russia not only survived but thrived—diversifying trade away from Europe, deepening ties with China, India, and BRICS nations, and achieving GDP growth that outpaces many Western economies.
Key factors in Russia’s resilience include:
- Energy Reorientation: The sabotage of Nord Stream pipelines—widely suspected to be a U.S. operation—severed Europe’s access to cheap Russian gas. In response, Moscow redirected exports to China via new pipelines like Power of Siberia 2, fueling Beijing’s industrial and AI ambitions while leaving Europe scrambling for expensive LNG alternatives.
- Financial Decoupling: Russia built a sanctions-proof economy by reducing reliance on SWIFT, developing alternative payment systems, and stockpiling gold. The West’s seizure of $300 billion in Russian reserves only accelerated global distrust in dollar hegemony.
- Military-Industrial Surge: Russia’s defense sector now produces more artillery and missiles than all of NATO combined, sustaining its war effort while Western stockpiles dwindle.
Europe’s Self-Inflicted Collapse
Germany, once Europe’s industrial powerhouse, is now facing deindustrialization as energy-intensive factories flee to the U.S. or China. Factories that relied on affordable Russian gas now operate at a fraction of capacity, unable to compete globally. Meanwhile, European leaders—paralyzed by ideological rigidity—refuse to acknowledge reality, doubling down on sanctions despite their catastrophic economic consequences.
- Energy Crisis: Without Russian gas, Europe pays five times more for LNG imports, crippling manufacturing competitiveness.
- Political Delusion: Leaders like Germany’s Olaf Scholz and France’s Emmanuel Macron cling to the fantasy that Ukraine can still win the war, despite battlefield losses and dwindling Western military aid.
- Public Revolt: Citizens across Europe increasingly recognize that their governments—not Russia—are the primary threat to their prosperity, as seen in mass protests against energy poverty and economic mismanagement.
The Dollar’s Decline and the Rise of BRICS
The West’s financial warfare—freezing reserves, weaponizing SWIFT, and seizing assets—has triggered a global flight from the dollar. Nations now fear their own reserves could be next, accelerating moves toward:
- BRICS Settlement Systems: Trade in local currencies (rubles, yuan, rupees) bypasses dollar dependency.
- Gold-Backed Trade: Russia and China increasingly settle imbalances with gold, undermining fiat trust.
- Alternative Financial Architecture: Institutions like the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and BRICS Development Bank offer non-Western financial pathways.
Conclusion: A Multipolar World Emerges
The West’s miscalculations have accelerated the very multipolar order it sought to prevent. Russia, China, and their allies are building a parallel economic system—one where energy, trade, and finance operate outside Western control. Meanwhile, Europe’s industrial base crumbles, and the U.S. struggles with debt, inflation, and declining global influence.
The lesson is clear: economic aggression weakens the aggressor. As nations abandon the dollar and realign trade, the West faces a stark choice—adapt to the new reality or spiral further into self-inflicted decline.
For now, the only winners are those who saw this coming—and prepared accordingly.
Watch the full episode of the “Health Ranger Report” with Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, and Glenn Diesen as they warn Europe and NATO that it’s time to adjust to reality.
This video is from the Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.
More related stories:
Expect a NATO false flag attack to drag America into a global world war – If Europe wants world war III against Russia, let them be the ones to pay for it and fight it
Utah Sen. Mike Lee introduces 3 bills targeting NATO
Europe triggers “snapback” sanctions on Iran, igniting diplomatic firestorm
Sources include:
Brighteon.com
Read full article here