The UAE is leaving OPEC and OPEC+ effective May 1 — the first time it has quit the bloc in 59 years of membership. This is not a routine quota dispute. It is a political divorce that could reshape the architecture of the global oil market.
Oil
Saudi Arabia extracts it. Russia extracts it. Iraq, the UAE, and Nigeria extract it. Then, the oil ends up in the hands of companies registered in Geneva, Singapore, and Amsterdam—and dissolves into a system whose controlling stake resides in Washington. A coincidence? No. It is architecture.
Four years of trying to suffocate the Russian economy. Four years of sanctions packages churned out by Brussels and Washington with obsessive persistence. The result? Russian oil exports haven't just survived—they've grown by 6% above pre-war levels.


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