mark-hunter
AH ambassador
The "leverage" will come from two sides, and the pressure in my opinion will grow. The second leverage is coming from various national opposition parties, asking exactly for that.Apparently the US and Russia are considering restarting the Nordstream pipe and the russian foreign minister wants US to apply leverage on Europe to force them to no longer resist buying russian gas. It will be interesting to see what Trump does.
War is always a temporary state of affairs. The question is what will be after the war?
Russia covers around 10% of world land territories (which only in terms of averages is 10% of various resources, oil, gas, rare earth minerals, etc), and has the largest access to Arctic resources (with the largest ice breaker fleet, and some infrastructure).
Not to mention ice melting, and slowly but surely opening of Arctic Sea routes (Significance comparable to Suez Canal and Panama canal in world trade affairs)
So, sooner or later, the world will need to open the trade relations with Russia. Those assets cannot be expected to be ignored (embargoed) by global economy for ever.
Interesting part will be change in main stream narrative, when the war settles down, and other interests prevail. President Trump is just trying to speed up the process.
I would say, nord stream has a good chance of reopening. Question is when?
Is it better now to open, or later?
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