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Anonymous ID: lQVyWrgpGermany /pol/510530022#510531141
7/16/2025, 2:26:44 PM
>>510530022
>look at how much threatening, scary islam controlls!

Why are you rightoids always the ones to fall hardest for saudi propaganda?
They release maps, showing north africa and everything west of greece in a nice uniform muslim-green color, while completely omitting that vast territories of that are completely empty, or part of muslim branches and sects that HATE the Saudis much more than you do.

Here is a much more accurate map of ismalic confessions - notice how little of it follows the flavor practiced by the illiterate horse raiders in ryad!
Anonymous ID: o6nEHASbGermany /pol/509644764#509654729
7/6/2025, 3:19:49 PM
>>509653303
> they'll export terrorism instead of oil to stay in power.
These are aristocracies less than a century old, installed by the British from clans that were, until recently, illiterate horse raiders. Their claims to legitimacy rest on little more than invented tradition and a vague sense of divine right.
That makes them extremely paranoid. Their ultimate goal isn’t to build prosperous Gulf states—it’s simply to stay in power. If that means ruling over rubble, they’ll do it.
They would rather burn it all down than lose power and return to the desert.

>idk man, the chinx will not allow that to happen as they neo-colonize the MidEast instead
To do what? I’m not convinced China will step in to stabilize the Gulf if it collapses. To do so, they’d need to project force far beyond the Pacific—across the Indian Ocean, through waters controlled or monitored by India, the U.S., and other potentially hostile countries.
Just a few well-placed naval mines in the Strait of Malacca would cripple Chinese sea lanes. And what would they get in return? The Gulf monarchies offer diminishing strategic value in a post-oil world.
If China wants to secure energy and influence, they’ll likely look northwest instead: toward post-collapse Russia. A fractured Russia would be a ripe target for client-state conversion, especially in Siberia and the Russian Far East.
Before the Treaty of Aigun (1858) and the Treaty of Peking (1860), China held sway over much of this territory—land it lost during its “Century of Humiliation.”
When the Russian state begins to fall apart, Beijing won’t need to invade—they’ll buy, bribe, and build their way into a position of dominance.