Brazilian fortune teller Athos Salomé, widely known as the "living Nostradamus", has published another sensational theory about the wars in Ukraine and Russia, suggesting that Donald Trump's calls for peace may hide much more complex geopolitical motives.
Salomé, who claims to have predicted major global events such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the death of Queen Elizabeth II, has become known for his statements about the year 2026, which he describes as a period of great international turmoil.
According to him, the Russia-Ukraine conflict and ceasefire efforts should not be seen solely as a peace issue, but as part of a "great geopolitical game" related to energy and control of global oil markets.
Peace as an economic instrument, not just a political one
Salomé claims that an American push for a ceasefire in Ukraine during 2026 does not necessarily have a humanitarian purpose, but is related to the return of Russian oil to the global Brent market and the reshaping of energy prices.
According to this theory, lifting sanctions would allow Russia to sell oil without forced price cuts, changing the economic balance and directly affecting China, which currently benefits from low-cost supplies.
In this scenario, Salomé presents American policy as a “movement on a geopolitical chessboard,” where the US aims to influence three key energy sources for China: Iran, Venezuela, and Russia.
The clash of global interests
In his analysis, the conflict in Ukraine is just one part of a broader energy and economic strategy. He claims that any peace agreement would directly impact global oil markets and China's economic power.
Salomé also suggests that tensions with Iran and restrictions on its oil exports are part of the same global dynamic, where major countries try to control energy sources and supply chains.
According to him: A world in reconfiguration
The Brazilian forecaster claims that these developments are taking increasingly visible form, as conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East continue to affect the global economy and international security.
However, none of these claims have been confirmed by official sources or independent analysis, and they remain part of his speculation about the geopolitical future.
In the end, Salomé emphasizes that only time will tell whether these "predictions" are simply theories or a reflection of a reality that is gradually taking shape. /GazetaExpress/