I think weâll avoid a live nuclear war. But that doesnât mean weâre going to avoid war with Russia. Because the truth is weâre already at war with Russia. [Outsider Club Header]
Oct 14, 2022 By Jason Simpkins for the Outsider Club The Next Phase of the U.S.-Russia War On Thursday, NATO's senior body on nuclear matters made it clear that any nuclear attack by Russia would provoke serious retaliation. The consequences for Russia would be unprecedented, they said, and would almost certainly draw a military response. I believe thatâs true, and I think Vladimir Putin does too. And thatâs just [one of the many reasons]( I think weâll avoid a live nuclear war. But that doesnât mean weâre going to avoid war with Russia. Because the truth is weâre already at war with Russia. Thatâs not just my opinion, either. Itâs something thatâs now being acknowledged at the highest levels of our respective governments. âThe post-Cold War era is definitively over and a competition is underway between the major powers to shape what comes next,â the Biden administration declared in its official National Security Strategy brief. Meanwhile, with regard to Ukraine specifically, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says âthe Americans have been participating in this war for a long time.â âThis war is being controlled by the Anglo-Saxons,â he told Russiaâs state TV. Obviously, that last bit isnât true. Thatâs some Soviet-style propaganda. But the first part is indisputable. Since Russia invaded Ukraine in February, the United States has deployed $15 billion in aid. That includes some of the most fearsome and effective war-fighting technology we have to offer â [weapons that have turned the tide of the war](. Oilâs New Flash Point: $500 a Barrel Oil is about to hit a new inflection point... Only this time it will be far greater than anything we have ever witnessed before... All thanks to one major oil discovery worth [over $878 BILLION!]( And according to one 27-year investing legend, this new discovery is just the start... As one overlooked company is set to rake in massive gains from the coming oil boom. [Get the full story here.]( In fact, those weapons and the Ukrainians wielding them have been so effective that Russia has resorted to retaliating with non-conventional warfare. No, not nukes, but rather cyberwarfare. Indeed, NATO countries have been hit with an unprecedented volume of cyberattacks since the warâs outbreak. We witnessed this firsthand earlier this week when a Russian cyber unit known as Killnet conducted a series of cyberattacks on more than a dozen American airports. The group jammed up their websites with fake users, forcing them offline. It also attempted to infiltrate JPMorganâs network infrastructure and assailed websites of three U.S. states (Colorado, Kentucky, and Mississippi). Itâs not just us, either. Countries across Europe, including those that arenât on most Americansâ radar, have been slammed by Russian cyberattacks too. Montenegro, Estonia, Albania, and Finland have been among the hardest hit. Montenegro was targeted with ransomware attacks so sophisticated they had to call in the FBI to help out. And Albania suffered a cyberattack so great that it considered invoking Article Five of the NATO charter, necessitating a collective defense from the alliance. That attack was attributed not to Russia proper but rather to its ally Iran. They Call It âTriFuel-238,â and Itâs Oilâs Worst Nightmare [Tri Fuel]Renewable energy recently clashed with fossil fuels, and neither side won. Wind and solar just aren't ready yet. Oil and gas are dirty relics of the past. But âTriFuel-238â is here today. Itâs not technically renewable, and itâs nothing like fossil fuels. The Biden administration has already spent billions of dollars to develop this tech before it falls into the hands of a hostile country. Itâs the most powerful fuel the world has ever seen, hands down. Just a pound of it could power an entire neighborhood for a year. This material is practically extraterrestrial â and no other company has access to it. Thereâs still time to invest. [Donât wait a single second longer.]( âItâs like bombing a country,â said Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama. Of course, thatâs a bit of an exaggeration, but the notion that NATO should collectively respond to a cyberattack is gaining traction. "Hybrid and cyberattacks can trigger Article 5," NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg following the sabotage of the Nord Stream pipeline and Deutsche Bahn, Germanyâs national railway operator. Attacks like these, and (probably) not nuclear deployment, is what will bring NATO and Russia into direct conflict. Again, if heâs desperate enough, Putin could turn to nuclear weapons, but that would be crazy. And I donât think Putin is crazy â I think heâs an asshole. I think heâs someone who walks right up to the line and flirts with it. Nukes are a bright-red line. Cyberattacks and sabotage are murkier, but if they go far enough, the new cold war weâre clearly fighting could turn suddenly hot. Thatâs what we have to watch out for in the weeks and months ahead. In the meantime, Iâd continue to invest in defense contractors as a safeguard â especially in this environment. And a good place to start would be [my latest report]( on the company thatâs been tasked with countering the new superweapon thatâs been developed by Russia and China. You can [find out more about that here](. Fight on, [Jason Simpkins Signature] Jason Simpkins [follow basic]([@OCSimpkins on Twitter]( Jason Simpkins is Assistant Managing Editor of the Outsider Club and Investment Director of Wall Street's Proving Ground, a financial advisory focused on security companies and defense contractors. 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