February 10, 2026
The U.S. is trying to dominate the control global energy sector and to control the routes through which energy is delivered to global customer.
That accusation is made by Russia's Foreign Minister Lavrov in an interview to the TV BRICS media network. The interview also touches on other aspects. The excerpts from the interview posted below are only the ones which regard to energy issues (emphasis added):
Multiple centres of rapid economic growth, power, and financial and political influence have thus emerged. The world is being reshaped through competition. The West is reluctant to relinquish its formerly dominant positions.
Moreover, with the arrival of the Trump administration, this struggle to constrain competitors has become particularly obvious and explicit. Indeed, the Trump administration openly asserts its ambition to dominate in the energy sector and harness their competitors.
Blatantly unfair methods are being used against us: the operations of Russian oil companies such as Lukoil and Rosneft are being banned, and there are attempts to dictate and restrict Russia's trade, investment cooperation, and military-technical ties with our major strategic partners, including India as well as other BRICS states.
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All of these geopolitical confrontations, along with the attempts to derail the objective course of history, inevitably affect bilateral relations. I am not going to mention them all; those include sanctions, the so-called "shadow fleet" invented by the West, attempts to detain vessels by military force in the open sea in blatant violation of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, and much more. Tariffs imposed for purchasing oil or gas from certain suppliers have now become commonplace.
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They tell us that the Ukraine problem should be resolved. In Anchorage, we accepted the US proposal. If we regard it "as men," it means that they proposed it and we agreed, so the problem must be resolved....
So far, the reality is quite the opposite: new sanctions are imposed, a 'war' against tankers in the open sea is being waged in violation of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. They are trying to ban India and our other partners from buying cheap, affordable Russian energy resources (Europe has long been banned) and are forcing them to buy US LNG at exorbitant prices. This means that the Americans have set themselves the task of achieving economic domination.
Furthermore, while they ostensibly made a proposal regarding Ukraine and we were ready to accept it (now they are not), we do not see any bright future in the economic sphere either. The Americans want to take control of all the routes for providing the world's leading countries and all continents with energy resources. On the European continent, they are eyeing the Nord Streams, which were blown up three years ago, the Ukrainian gas transportation system and the TurkStream.
This illustrates that the US objective - to dominate the world economy - is being realised using a fairly large number of coercive measures that are incompatible with fair competition. Tariffs, sanctions, direct prohibitions, forbidding some from engaging with others - we have to take all of this into account.
A NY Times piece published today on Trump's oil grab in Venezuela makes, in part, a similar point ( archived): The Psychology of Mone... Check Amazon for Pricing.
In China, a foreign ministry spokeswoman said last month that Mr. Trump was "bullying" Venezuela to give up its oil. Spain joined with five Latin American countries, including Mexico and Brazil, in denouncing "the external appropriation" of Venezuela's natural resources as illegal.
Mr. Trump has sought to turn the tables, charging that Venezuela "took our oil away from us" and "stole our assets" in 2007 when it increased state control over its oil industry and forced two of the three U.S. companies operating in the country to abandon their projects at considerable expense.
Whether that is Mr. Trump's true motivation is unclear. He has asserted a U.S. right to "take the oil" from other countries, from Iraq to Syria to Libya, although he has not previously done so.
That is a sharp break from decades of precedent,...
A high gambit strategy to control global energy does not fall from the sky:
- Where is the policy paper that has laid out the plans for doing this?
- Who has written it?
- Who is the point person in the White House that is driving this strategy?
Please point to answers for these questions.
Reprinted with permission from Moon of Alabama.