If you ever feel like your job sucks, just remember—David Axe gets paid to write this nonsense.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
🇺🇲🇺🇦🇷🇺 The concept of the USA pulling out of the peace negotiations before we get GTA 6...
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Forwarded from Russian MFA 🇷🇺
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
🇺🇦 Imagine being this stupid—ignoring all the red flags even the Ukrainian media is raising about this.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
DD Geopolitics
🇺🇦 Imagine being this stupid—ignoring all the red flags even the Ukrainian media is raising about this. 🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
🇺🇦 An Iraqi Scenario? What the U.S.-Ukraine Natural Resources Deal Really Looks Like
As Ukraine prepares to ratify a major natural resources agreement with the United States, it's worth revisiting a historical parallel: the so-called Development Fund for Iraq (DFI)—a U.S.-created financial structure established alongside the interim Iraqi government following the 2003 invasion.
The concept behind the DFI closely mirrors what’s being proposed in Ukraine today. In Iraq’s case, oil revenues and foreign-seized assets belonging to Saddam Hussein and his government were pooled into the fund. The money was then distributed to foreign contractors, mostly American, tasked with carrying out post-war reconstruction projects.
The fund operated from 2003 to 2010. At the end of its lifespan, the U.S. handed it over to the Iraqi government, which promptly shut it down. By then, around $150 billion had flowed through the DFI—an enormous sum for a country with an annual GDP of only about $50 billion at the time.
A large portion of the money went to public sector salaries, but a significant amount also funded infrastructure projects. Most of these contracts were awarded to American firms—without open tenders.
For example:
- Kellogg Brown & Root received roughly $3.5 billion.
- Bechtel Corporation earned around $2.5 billion for work on water and power systems.
- DynCorp International received $1.5 billion to train Iraqi police and supply equipment.
- Parsons Corporation was paid half a billion for schools and hospitals.
The original plans were ambitious: rebuild power plants in Baghdad and Basra, upgrade sewage systems in cities like Mosul and Najaf, construct a refinery in Baiji, and renovate Baghdad International Airport.
But on-the-ground results told a different story. Many projects were delayed, scaled back, or simply never completed. The Mosul power station was left half-finished, a water plant in Sab al-Bor abandoned, and hospitals and refineries remained shells.
Audits later revealed systemic abuse and mismanagement. The U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority, headed by Paul Bremer, handed out contracts with no competitive bidding. Prices were often grossly inflated—Kellogg Brown & Root, for example, bought fuel in Kuwait for $1.18 per gallon and sold it to the U.S. administration for $2.64. Ernst & Young found dozens of “ghost projects,” mostly schools, that never existed beyond paperwork.
The U.S. Government Accountability Office concluded that $18 billion simply vanished.
No one was held accountable. American courts declined to prosecute, arguing that the DFI funds were not U.S. taxpayer dollars and thus outside their jurisdiction. Meanwhile, the head of the interim administration, Paul Bremer, was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his “exceptional contributions to U.S. national interests.”
Now, Ukraine appears poised to repeat this model—one where the profits flow West, the oversight is minimal, and the burden is left to the host country.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
As Ukraine prepares to ratify a major natural resources agreement with the United States, it's worth revisiting a historical parallel: the so-called Development Fund for Iraq (DFI)—a U.S.-created financial structure established alongside the interim Iraqi government following the 2003 invasion.
The concept behind the DFI closely mirrors what’s being proposed in Ukraine today. In Iraq’s case, oil revenues and foreign-seized assets belonging to Saddam Hussein and his government were pooled into the fund. The money was then distributed to foreign contractors, mostly American, tasked with carrying out post-war reconstruction projects.
The fund operated from 2003 to 2010. At the end of its lifespan, the U.S. handed it over to the Iraqi government, which promptly shut it down. By then, around $150 billion had flowed through the DFI—an enormous sum for a country with an annual GDP of only about $50 billion at the time.
A large portion of the money went to public sector salaries, but a significant amount also funded infrastructure projects. Most of these contracts were awarded to American firms—without open tenders.
For example:
- Kellogg Brown & Root received roughly $3.5 billion.
- Bechtel Corporation earned around $2.5 billion for work on water and power systems.
- DynCorp International received $1.5 billion to train Iraqi police and supply equipment.
- Parsons Corporation was paid half a billion for schools and hospitals.
The original plans were ambitious: rebuild power plants in Baghdad and Basra, upgrade sewage systems in cities like Mosul and Najaf, construct a refinery in Baiji, and renovate Baghdad International Airport.
But on-the-ground results told a different story. Many projects were delayed, scaled back, or simply never completed. The Mosul power station was left half-finished, a water plant in Sab al-Bor abandoned, and hospitals and refineries remained shells.
Audits later revealed systemic abuse and mismanagement. The U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority, headed by Paul Bremer, handed out contracts with no competitive bidding. Prices were often grossly inflated—Kellogg Brown & Root, for example, bought fuel in Kuwait for $1.18 per gallon and sold it to the U.S. administration for $2.64. Ernst & Young found dozens of “ghost projects,” mostly schools, that never existed beyond paperwork.
The U.S. Government Accountability Office concluded that $18 billion simply vanished.
No one was held accountable. American courts declined to prosecute, arguing that the DFI funds were not U.S. taxpayer dollars and thus outside their jurisdiction. Meanwhile, the head of the interim administration, Paul Bremer, was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his “exceptional contributions to U.S. national interests.”
Now, Ukraine appears poised to repeat this model—one where the profits flow West, the oversight is minimal, and the burden is left to the host country.
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
DD Geopolitics
🇺🇦 Zelensky has imposed sanctions on Oleksiy Arestovych, former adviser to the Office of the President. Once a prominent spokesperson during the early stages of the conflict, Arestovych later became a vocal critic of the government’s policies and narrative.…
🇺🇦 Former Zelensky advisor Arestovych responds to sanctions imposed on him by the Kiev regime.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Forwarded from Rybar in English
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Americans are distancing themselves from negotiations on the so-called Ukraine
Today, State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce announced the end of US mediation efforts in resolving the conflict in the so-called Ukraine. Now the organization of meetings between delegations will fall on the shoulders of others who are willing, while the US itself will not engage in this.
#Russia #USA #Ukraine
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
🇺🇸💰Trump has asked Congress to increase the defense budget for the next fiscal year to $1.01 trillion, the White House has officially announced.
This is a record figure, 13% higher than defense spending this year.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
This is a record figure, 13% higher than defense spending this year.
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
🇷🇺🐴 A bit of wholesome content: a horse that his owner had sold returned to him after a year.
The touching story happened in Ingushetia - a horse named Major ran away from his new owners and walked back 10 km to his old home.
Islam raised the horse from the age of one and a half and loved him very much, but they had to part due to financial difficulties . And then, a year later, Major suddenly appeared at the man's doorstep.
The story got a happy ending: Islam managed to collect 300 thousand rubles and bought his pet back.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
The touching story happened in Ingushetia - a horse named Major ran away from his new owners and walked back 10 km to his old home.
Islam raised the horse from the age of one and a half and loved him very much, but they had to part due to financial difficulties . And then, a year later, Major suddenly appeared at the man's doorstep.
The story got a happy ending: Islam managed to collect 300 thousand rubles and bought his pet back.
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
🇷🇺 Monument "Mariupol - City of Military Glory" more than 17 meters high was revealed on the eve of Victory Day.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
DD Geopolitics
🇩🇪 Germany's domestic intelligence agency has formally declared the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) political party to be an "extremist group". While this new declaration does not mean that the AfD will be banned, it will, however, legally permit…
🇺🇸💬 🇩🇪 Rubio advises Germany to reverse their course on the AfD
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Forwarded from Rybar in English
The tragedy that largely contributed to the decision to launch the special military operation, which continues to this day.
Today, we must remember why the SMO began and what goal our leadership was pursuing. We must remember the values we carry and why it is so important not to allow the rewriting of history.
The killings at the Trade Unions House showed the "new Ukraine", while the old one ceased to exist. There emerged only that terrorist state, which is now being actively fought against.
Odesa is a Russian city, and it will remain so forever, although the Ukrainian regime is very actively trying to change this.
High-resolution artwork
#art
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
🇪🇺 Under the European Union's planned Migration Pact, EU member states which refuse to take in illegal migrants will be fined €20,000 per rejected migrant.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM