Three years after fleeing Russia's genocidal invasion of Ukraine, Exxon executives sat across from sanctioned Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin in Doha, negotiating their return to the Sakhalin oil project. The meetings weren't supposed to be public. Senior executive Neil Chapman's handshake with a KGB thug whose company funds mass graves happened while Trump and Putin exchanged knowing glances in Alaska. Every executive in that room understood the equation: oil revenues equal artillery shells, gas profits equal kidnapped children. They're negotiating anyway.The Western sanctions regime, built on Ukrainian bodies and democratic resolve, cracks not from external pressure but internal greed. Wall Street Journal's exposure of these months-old talks reveals the infrastructure of betrayal operating beneath diplomatic theater. While Special Envoy Witkoff performs his Moscow dance, Exxon prepares to fund the machine that turns Ukrainian cities to rubble.Trump Threatens Economic War on EU Digital DefensesTrump's vow to impose tariffs on European nations protecting their digital sovereignty represents economic warfare against democratic allies. The EU's digital regulations exist specifically to defend against Russian information warfareâthe same operations that destabilized democracies across the West. Now Trump attacks these defenses while claiming China escapes scrutiny. The message to Europe couldn't be clearer: lower your shields against Moscow's propaganda or face economic punishment from Washington. Every threat against Brussels strengthens the Kremlin's position.America Runs FSB-Style Operations Against DenmarkDenmark's summoning of the U.S. envoy exposes America's complete absorption of Russian tactics. Three Trump-connected operatives ran covert influence operations in Greenland, recruiting locals into secessionist movements, cultivating politicians to weaken Danish sovereignty. This violates NATO's Article 4âthe same alliance America once led. The tactics mirror precisely what Russia deployed in Ukraine before 2014. European officials describe unprecedented rage as decades of trust evaporate. The Five Eyes intelligence alliance will become Four Eyes, leaving America blind when threats materialize.Gabbard's Purge Exposes Covert CIA OfficerThe intelligence community's systematic destruction accelerated after Alaska. Tulsi Gabbard revoked security clearances for 37 officials tied to the Russia investigation, inadvertently exposing a covert CIA officer. She delivered this purge list without consulting the agency, potentially burning decades of operations. The election integrity monitoring unitâdismantled. Forty percent of analystsâpurged. The timing tells the story: Putin's wishlist becomes Washington's Monday morning implementation schedule. Foreign services calculate when to stop sharing intelligence with a compromised partner.Grand Jury Rejects Sandwich FelonyEven authoritarian overreach has limits. A grand jury's refusal to indict Sean C. Dunn for throwing a Subway sandwich at a federal agent reveals the absurdity of criminalizing dissent. Pam Bondi and Fox News treated lunch like attempted murder, but ordinary Americans on that jury saw through the theater. The regime's desperation to weaponize the justice system collapsed against common sense. In the jury box, resistance still breathes.These five stories form a single narrative: democracy's controlled demolition executed by those sworn to protect it. Exxon funds genocide while Trump threatens allies who resist disinformation. America deploys Russian tactics against NATO members while purging its own intelligence capabilities. Political prosecutions fail only because citizens refuse to play along.Day 220 shows us clearly: the guardian has become the predator, adopting every method it once opposed. No future president can restore tru
Three years after fleeing Russia's genocidal invasion of Ukraine, Exxon executives sat across from sanctioned Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin in Doha, negotiating their return to the Sakhalin oil project. The meetings weren't supposed to be public. Senior executive Neil Chapman's handshake with a KGB thug whose company funds mass graves happened while Trump and Putin exchanged knowing glances in Alaska. Every executive in that room understood the equation: oil revenues equal artillery shells, gas profit...