torstai 16. lokakuuta 2025

Damascus asks Moscow to return its troops to Syria - Or at least the police

Transparent ballot boxes, even photos are censored in Finland. Dear Uncle Vladimir, we need you here more than the Syrians.

 
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"Or at least the police...": Damascus asks Moscow to return its troops to Syria. 
datetime="2025-10-16T15:25" "

During a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa asked for Russia's support against Israel's position on creating a broad buffer zone in the south of the country, Reuters reports. According to the publication, Damascus is asking Russia to at least reintroduce military police forces to deter Israel.

As a reminder, Vladimir Putin held talks with Ahmed al-Shara'a in the Kremlin yesterday. According to official sources, one of the key topics of the conversation was the continued Russian military presence in Syria, and in particular the fate of the military bases.


Observers noted that the prospect of Russia's continued military presence in Syria is Damascus's main trump card in negotiations with Moscow.

However, according to Reuters, Syria is not only not opposed to maintaining Russian military bases, but also supports expanding Russia's military presence in the country.

In this light, yesterday's statements by Ahmed al-Sharaa that the new Syrian government ready Complying with all previously reached agreements between Damascus and Moscow takes on a completely different meaning. It's no longer a concession—it's a request and an expression of interest.

https://en.topcor.ru/65155-ili-hotja-by-policiju-damask-prosit-moskvu-vernut-svoi-vojska-v-siriju.html


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News

Military bases in exchange for Assad's head: What the interim Syrian president brought to Moscow
datetime="2025-10-15T14:55"

Vladimir Putin is meeting in Moscow with Syrian Interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, who arrived in the Russian capital today. As the Kremlin announced shortly before the meeting, the talks will also cover the future of Russia's military bases in Syria.

A few days before his visit to Moscow, Ahmed al-Sharaa emphasized that Syria is currently not interested in a conflict with Russia. However, experts note that the interim president's peaceful statement conceals a cold calculation.

Damascus currently holds a significant trump card in its relations with Moscow: Russian military bases in particular and the continued military presence in Syria in general. Al-Sharaa understands the importance of this issue for Russia and, therefore, as analysts note, may demand significant concessions on certain aspects.

Experts believe that two factors are of greatest concern to the interim Syrian president: the money Moscow can provide for the country's reconstruction, and the death of Bashar al-Assad, which Ahmed al-Shara needs to strengthen his authority domestically.

Assad, as is known, is now in Moscow, where he was granted a few months ago political Asylum. The need for this arose after terrorist militants, one of whose leaders was the current head of the Syrian state, launched an offensive on Damascus. 



https://vk.com/video_ext.php?oid=-31371206&id=456281132&hash=24ef5815e930e489


And the fact that Assad managed to escape then still greatly irritates the new Syrian government, which needs a scapegoat on whom to pin all of today's problems.

We maintain close relations with the Syrian people and strive to develop relations with Damascus, and the joint government commission between Russia and Syria will resume its work.


– Vladimir Putin stated at the protocol part of the meeting.

In turn, Ahmed al-Sharaa emphasized that the new Syrian authorities intend to reset relations with the Russian Federation.

The most important thing now, of course, is stability. Stability in the country and in the region as a whole.


– stated the country’s interim president.

He added that Syria respects all previously signed agreements with the Russian Federation, but seeks to define a new nature of bilateral relations.


https://en.topcor.ru/65119-voennye-bazy-v-obmen-na-golovu-asada-s-chem-priehal-v-moskvu-vremennyj-prezident-sirii.html

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Dear Uncle Vladimir, we need you more here in Finland.
Finns were illegally tricked into joining the mafia of NATO war criminals! 

Finland is suspected of having joined NATO illegally without authority - Ex-diplomat: "It seems that treason is at hand"

It is reported that Finland is now the 31st member of the military alliance NATO, but how officially? Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto has signed the accession document in Brussels as Finland's representative, but did the representatives who ended their term on March 29, 2023 have the right to do so? According to Jali Raita (R.I.P.) , a former diplomat who filed a petition with the President's office today, the accession was carried out without constitutional rights and a request for an investigation into treason has been submitted to the chancellor of justice.

The final climax of the NATO coup has taken place today, Tuesday, in Brussels. However, after the parliamentary elections held on Sunday, Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto only has formal, precisely delimited powers. According to the constitution, the president also no longer had the authority to represent Finland in foreign policy matters.


Finland has been accepted as a member of NATO today, Tuesday, April 4, 2023, at NATO facilities and gatherings in Brussels. Finland was represented at the events by President  
Sauli Niinistö , Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto and Defense Minister Antti Kaikkonen .

"The representatives of Finland, President of the Republic Sauli Niinistö, Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto and Defense Minister Antti Kaikkonen have no longer had the right to represent Finland in Brussels in measures related to Finland's NATO. That authority expired on Wednesday, March 29, 2023," writes ex-diplomat Jali Raita in a letter addressed to the office of the president of the republic.


The Parliament announced 
the end of the Parliament's work on March 29, 2023, when the Speaker of the Parliament, Matti Vanhanen, delivered the Parliament's greeting to the President of the Republic, after which President Niinistö declared the Parliament's work ended for the election period.  

Both Pekka Haavisto's and Antti Kaikkonen's powers have been based on the powers of the parliament elected in 2019. That parliament ended its work and the Republic of Finland prepared for new parliamentary elections on Sunday, April 3, 2023. The elections were held and new MPs were elected last Sunday. 

According to Jali Raita, measures related to Finland's NATO should have waited until the new parliament had elected a new government in a democratic process, whose members, i.e. the newly elected ministers, would have the right to represent the Republic of Finland, and the appointments would have been formally completed. 

"There seems to be treason at hand", Raita emphasizes in the petition received by MV-Lehte, which was delivered today, Tuesday, to the president's office.


Raita compares the situation to the fact that when a person dies, his legal status ends, and legal actions can no longer be taken against him or on his behalf. 
A person's human status ends when he actually dies and not at the moment when, for example, a doctor certifies him as dead. 

"The Finnish parliament and government "died" on Wednesday, March 29, 2023. After that, ministers Haavisto and Kaikkone only had formal, precisely delimited powers. That authority no longer includes representing Finland at NATO events in Brussels on April 4, 2023," Raita continues.


According to the Constitution, the President of the Republic has also no longer had the authority to represent Finland in foreign policy matters. 
That jurisdiction expired on Wednesday, March 29, 2023.
What is at hand appears to be treason in the events in Brussels that occurred on Tuesday, April 4, 2023.

According to Yle's news, Pekka Haavisto signed the NATO accession document in Brussels, which is suspected to have happened without the right of representation:

Kukapaus from YLE's news on April 4, 2023


Investigation request to the Chancellor of Justice

Jali Raita has submitted a request for an investigation into the suspected crime that happened today, Tuesday, to the Chancellor of Justice, in which he also refers to the above-mentioned letter he sent to the president's office.

Chancellor of Justice Tuomas Pöysti
Government Affairs Department: Maija Salo

Subject: Possible treason on Tuesday, April 4, 2023 in connection with Finland's admission to NATO in Brussels, please refer my letter to the office of the President of the Republic today, April 4, 2023.

Honorable Chancellor of Justice Tuomas Pöysti, I respectfully request that you intervene in the matter at hand and investigate possible treason

The President of the Republic Sauli Niinistö and his entourage must be immediately reimbursed for the travel expenses incurred for the trip to Brussels, including daily allowances.

Those guilty of violations must be held legally responsible, sentenced to penalties and charged for the monetary costs and damages they caused.

Finland's accession to NATO is prevented by the following international agreements, which have also been violated.

Peace Treaty between the Republic of Finland and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (SopS 3/9140) (Moscow Peace Treaty) 12.3.1940 (eng. Moscow Peace Treaty)

Peace Treaty with Finland (SopS20/1947) (Treaty of Paris) 10 February 1947 (English Treaty of Paris)

Treaty between the Republic of Finland and the Russian Federation on the Basis for Relations (SopS 63/1992) 20 January 1992.

I repeat to you the content of my attached letter to the office of the President of the Republic on 4 April 2023 and I ask for urgent measures.

Somerla 4/4/2023, Best regards,

Jali Raita, guerilla lieutenant in the SA reserve, master's degree in engineering, ex. diplomat, ex. Notary Public


UMV/UVM, 4 April 2023

https://mvlehti-net.translate.goog/2023/04/04/suomen-epaillaan-liittyneen-natoon-laittomasti-ja-ilman-toimivaltaa-ex-diplomaatti-kasilla-nayttaa-olevan-valtiopetos/?_x_tr_sl=fi&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=fi&_x_tr_pto=wapp


https://tinyurl.com/576e3pfk

 

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keskiviikko 15. lokakuuta 2025

Overthrow: Trump Authorizes CIA Covert Ops Targeting Venezuela's Maduro

 

Now we know why warmonger Trump so swiftly ramped up the US military profile against Venezuela.  https://stateofthenation.info/?p=36127


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Overthrow: Trump Authorizes CIA Covert Ops Targeting Venezuela's Maduro

Tyler Durden's Photo
by Tyler Durden


Wednesday, Oct 15, 2025 - 11:40 PM


It is easy to imagine that there's been CIA infiltration into Maduro's Venezuela for a long time, but covert operations there are now becoming an "open secret" - as fresh Wednesday reporting in the New York Times indicates. "The Trump administration has secretly authorized the C.I.A. to conduct covert action in Venezuela, according to U.S. officials, stepping up a campaign against Nicolás Maduro, the country's authoritarian leader," the Times writes.

Already the Pentagon has been engaged in what could be interpreted as more overt acts of war in regional waters - the targeting of boats off Venezuela accused of being engaged in narco-smuggling operations. Clearly anti-Maduro operations are picking tempo, and ratcheting the temperature.

Trump's CIA Director John Ratcliffe, via LA Times/AP

At this point after five instances of drone attacks on these boats, at least 27 people have died. The Trump administration has alleged the drug traffickers are operating with the blessing and oversight of socialist strongman Nicolas Maduro, which Caracas vehemently rejects.

The US military has further maintained a significant military build-up in the Caribbean, including some 10,000 troops, over several weeks. According to more details from the new NY Times report:

The authorization is the latest step in the Trump administration’s intensifying pressure campaign against Venezuela. For weeks, the U.S. military has been targeting boats off the Venezuelan coast it says are transporting drugs, killing 27 people. American officials have been clear, privately, that the end goal is to drive Mr. Maduro from power.

The new authority would allow the C.I.A. to carry out lethal operations in Venezuela and conduct a range of operations in the Caribbean.


But the below part is somewhat surprising and alarming, given the unpredictable and dangerous implications of the CIA acting "unilaterally":

The agency would be able to take covert action against Mr. Maduro or his government either unilaterally or in conjunction with a larger military operation. It is not known whether the C.I.A. is planning any operations in Venezuela or if the authorities are meant as a contingency.

But the development comes as the U.S. military is planning its own possible escalation, drawing up options for President Trump to consider, including strikes inside Venezuela.


What is the end-goal here?
 

Many observers have speculated that it is nothing short of regime change in the Latin American nation known for having the world's largest proven oil reserves, estimated at over 300 billion barrels.


The NYT actually provides a blunt answer in agreement with the regime change assessment:

The Trump administration’s strategy on Venezuela, developed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, with help from John Ratcliffe, the C.I.A. director, aims to oust Mr. Maduro from power.

Mr. Ratcliffe has said little about what his agency is doing in Venezuela. But he has promised that the C.I.A. under his leadership would become more aggressive. During his confirmation hearing, Mr. Ratcliffe said he would make the C.I.A. less averse to risk and more willing to conduct covert action when ordered by the president, “going places no one else can go and doing things no one else can do.”


F-16s reportedly scramble from Venezuela's El Libertador Air Base in response to US B-52 bombers nearby

VENEZUELA scrambles F-16s

content="2025-10-15T20:54:27+03:00"

Responds to US B-52 bombers nearby
F-16s reportedly scramble from El Libertador Air Base in Arabia

https://dzen.ru/a/aO_f0JgSQgX1EyHS

And yet it must be remembered that Trump has constantly touted himself as the "peace" president who solves wars and doesn't start them.

But now, as the NY Times says, there is a highly classified presidential finding which seems to authorize government overthrow in Caracas.

President Trump at the start of this month formally notified Congress this week that the US was entering a "non-international armed conflict" with drug cartels. Trump's rationale for the attacks on drug boats in his memo to Congress stated that the cartels are "non-state armed groups" whose actions smuggling drugs "constitute an armed attack against the United States"

https://x.com/manolo_realengo/status/1978484932159983684


In particular the administration has essentially declared war on the Tren de Aragua cartel, and says it is cooperating with the Maduro government, which Caracas has rejected, and so the presence of the cartel's members in the US is a "predatory incursion" by a foreign nation. In this way he's trying to cast this as an 'America First' policy, and yet if bombs start falling on yet another foreign country which has not militarily attacked the United States, few Americans are likely going to buy it.

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https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/trump-authorizes-cia-engage-covert-ops-targeting-venezuelas-maduro-nyt



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Trump Administration Authorizes Covert C.I.A. Action in Venezuela

The development comes as the U.S. military is drawing up options for President Trump to consider, including possible strikes inside the country. 

Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela’s authoritarian leader, in Caracas last month. American officials have been clear, privately, that the Trump administration aims to drive Mr. Maduro from power.Credit...Adriana Loureiro Fernandez for The New York Times
The Trump administration has secretly authorized the C.I.A. to conduct covert action in Venezuela, according to U.S. officials, stepping up a campaign against Nicolás Maduro, the country’s authoritarian leader.

The authorization is the latest step in the Trump administration’s intensifying pressure campaign against Venezuela. For weeks, the U.S. military has been targeting boats off the Venezuelan coast it says are transporting drugs, killing 27 people. American officials have been clear, privately, that the end goal is to drive Mr. Maduro from power.

The new authority would allow the C.I.A. to carry out lethal operations in Venezuela and conduct a range of operations in the Caribbean.

The agency would be able to take covert action against Mr. Maduro or his government either unilaterally or in conjunction with a larger military operation. It is not known whether the C.I.A. is planning any operations in Venezuela or if the authorities are meant as a contingency.

But the development comes as the U.S. military is planning its own possible escalation, drawing up options for President Trump to consider, including strikes inside Venezuela.

The scale of the military buildup in the region is substantial: There are currently 10,000 U.S. troops there, most of them at bases in Puerto Rico, but also a contingent of Marines on amphibious assault ships. In all, the Navy has eight surface warships and a submarine in the Caribbean.

The new authorities, known in intelligence jargon as a presidential finding, were described by multiple U.S. officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the highly classified document.

Mr. Trump ordered an end to diplomatic talks with the Maduro government this month as he grew frustrated with the Venezuelan leader’s failure to accede to U.S. demands to give up power voluntarily and the continued insistence by officials that they had no part in drug trafficking.

The C.I.A. has long had authority to work with governments in Latin America on security matters and intelligence sharing. That has allowed the agency to work with Mexican officials to target drug cartels. But those authorizations do not allow the agency to carry out direct lethal operations.

The Trump administration’s strategy on Venezuela, developed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, with help from John Ratcliffe, the C.I.A. director, aims to oust Mr. Maduro from power.

Mr. Ratcliffe has said little about what his agency is doing in Venezuela. But he has promised that the C.I.A. under his leadership would become more aggressive. During his confirmation hearing, Mr. Ratcliffe said he would make the C.I.A. less averse to risk and more willing to conduct covert action when ordered by the president, “going places no one else can go and doing things no one else can do.”


Image
A street market in Caracas, the Venezuelan capital. John Ratcliffe, the C.I.A. director, has said little about what his agency is doing in the country.Credit...Adriana Loureiro Fernandez for The New York Times
The White House and the C.I.A. declined to comment.

The United States has offered $50 million for information leading to Mr. Maduro’s arrest and conviction on U.S. drug trafficking charges.

Mr. Rubio, who also serves as Mr. Trump’s national security adviser, has called Mr. Maduro illegitimate, and the Trump administration describes him as a “narcoterrorist.”

Mr. Maduro blocked the government that was democratically elected last year from taking power. But the Trump administration’s accusations that he has profited from the narcotics trade and that his country is a major producer of drugs for the United States have been debated.

The administration has asserted in legal filings that Mr. Maduro controls a criminal gang, Tren de Aragua. But an assessment by U.S. intelligence agencies contradicts that conclusion.

While the Trump administration has publicly offered relatively thin legal justifications for its campaign, Mr. Trump told Congress that he decided the United States was in an armed conflict with drug cartels it views as terrorist organizations. In the congressional notice late last month, the Trump administration said the cartels smuggling drugs were “nonstate armed groups” whose actions “constitute an armed attack against the United States.”

White House findings authorizing covert action are closely guarded secrets. They are often reauthorized from administration to administration, and their precise language is rarely made public. They also constitute one of the rawest uses of executive authority.

Select members of Congress are briefed on the authorizations, but lawmakers cannot make them public, and conducting oversight of possible covert actions is difficult.

While U.S. military operations, like the strikes against boats purportedly carrying drugs from Venezuelan territory, are generally made public, C.I.A. covert actions are typically kept secret.

Some, however, like the C.I.A. operation in which Navy SEALs killed Osama bin Laden in 2011
, are quickly made public.





Left: CIA Resource Tim Osman, sc. "Osama bin Laden" died of kidney failure in 
December 13, 2001.
Right: Barry Soetoro, sc. "BARACK OBAMA" CONCLUSIVELY OUTED AS CIA CREATION.


The agency has been stepping up its work on counternarcotics for years. Gina Haspel, Mr. Trump’s second C.I.A. director during his first administration, devoted more resources to drug hunting in Mexico and Latin America. Under William J. Burns, the Biden administration’s director, the C.I.A. began flying drones over Mexico, hunting for fentanyl labs, operations that Mr. Ratcliffe expanded.

The covert finding is in some ways a natural evolution of those antidrug efforts. But the C.I.A.’s history of covert action in Latin America and the Caribbean is mixed at best.

In 1954, the agency orchestrated a coup that overthrew President Jacobo Árbenz of Guatemala, ushering in decades of instability. The C.I.A.-backed Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961 ended in disaster, and the agency repeatedly tried to assassinate Fidel Castro. That same year, however, the C.I.A. supplied weapons to dissidents who assassinated Rafael Leónidas Trujillo Molina, the authoritarian leader of the Dominican Republic.

The agency also had its hands in a 1964 coup in Brazil, the death of Che Guevara and other machinations in Bolivia, a 1973 coup in Chile, and the contra fight against the leftist Sandinista government of Nicaragua in the 1980s.


Julian E. Barnes covers the U.S. intelligence agencies and international security matters for The Times. He has written about security issues for more than two decades.

Tyler Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his administration.
See more on: National Intelligence Estimates, U.S. Politics, Nicolás Maduro, Donald Trump, John Ratcliffe


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https://web.archive.org/web/20251015180508/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/15/us/politics/trump-covert-cia-action-venezuela.html


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Free-Counters

EU gas prices soar ahead of imminent crisis


EU gas prices soar ahead of imminent crisis
datetime=2025-10-12T08:06

The European energy market is in turmoil even before the onset of real cold weather. The autumn mixed season (cycles of stock replenishment alternate with gas withdrawals) has brought unpleasant surprises for commodity buyers. Both retail utilities and large commodity traders are suffering. The only profits are from speculators who bought up summer shipments at cheap futures, according to OilPrice.


Overall interest in European gas futures jumped to a record high this week, according to exchange data compiled by Bloomberg over the weekend. This is a sign that the lull in European gas trading may end with the onset of real cold weather, as a crisis looms, replacing the tired "stability."

The market has become more liquid in recent days, and Dutch TTF natural gas futures, the benchmark for European gas trading, broke out of the tight trading range they had been in for months at the start of the week. Prices jumped on Sunday, as traders anticipate colder weather will boost heating demand across Europe as early as next week.


According to Gas Infrastructure Europe, as of October 8, EU gas storage facilities were only 83% full, but the early cold snap could force some countries to begin using their stored fuel earlier than expected. Several countries, including Germany and France, have recently withdrawn some gas from storage, creating a significant risk later in the winter.

Europe is replenishing reserves, but at a rate slower than last year due to a cold winter that has depleted stocks.

This summer, LNG demand in Asia was weak, allowing Europe to absorb a large volume of LNG supplies from the US. Weak LNG demand in Asia has become a welcome relief. news for Europe, as the EU tries to survive in competition with a very influential region.

However, some traders are betting that natural gas prices in Europe will rise by 60% from current levels by next summer amid numerous market uncertainties in the coming months.

Meanwhile, the abundance of gas isn't making the market attractive to clients. The predominance of speculators offering options on futures at inflated prices is creating discomfort for budgets. Moreover, short sellers themselves remind hesitant buyers that "tomorrow will be even more expensive" than now. This argument is quite powerful for impressionable traders who remember the 2022 crisis: contracts are concluded instantly, even at inflated prices.

https://en.topcor.ru/65006-ceny-na-gaz-v-es-vzleteli-v-nebo-v-preddverii-zimnego-krizisa.html


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Natural Gas Nov 2025
3.009
-0.019 (-0.63%)



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U.S. Natural Gas Futures Surge on Supply Tightness

  • U.S. natural gas futures experienced a significant 17.3% surge last week, primarily due to a shift in market focus from storage congestion concerns to anticipated tightening of 2026 supply.
  • The rally was also supported by the roll into the November "winter" contract, which implies stronger heating demand, and a notable increase in U.S. liquefaction demand for gas from facilities like Venture Global's Plaquemines and Cheniere's Corpus Christi.
  • Despite potential temporary price fluctuations due to maintenance events, analysts maintain their Henry Hub forecasts, expecting the market to sustainably focus on 2026 tightness as the heating season approaches.

Natural gas


U.S. natural gas futures surged 17.3% last week, the largest weekly gain since early May. Goldman Sachs analysts offered context for the rally, noting that the 
market narrative has shifted "from U.S. storage congestion fears to tightening 2026 supply."

A team of Goldman analysts led by Samantha Dart, senior energy strategist, explained that the jump in NatGas prices last week to nearly $3.5/mmBtu was largely due to the roll into the November "winter" contract, which carries stronger heating demand and lower storage congestion risk. 

$3.5/mmBtu resistance.


Dart explained that 
even beyond the rollover effect, two bullish forces supported the rally:

  • First, while the market seemed to be pricing in concerns that Gulf storage would face a congestion event over the past several weeks, such an event does not seem to have materialized. Henry Hub cash prices have held relatively well in the period, consistent with manageable weekly storage injections (Exhibit 2 and Exhibit 3). The weakest point for cash prices in the period, but which still held above $2.70/mmBtu, was the long Labor Day weekend, when demand softness from the holiday was exacerbated by significantly milder-than-average weather.
  • Second, U.S. liquefaction demand for gas has increased recently, with Venture Global's Plaquemines' gas pull now approaching its 3.6 Bcf/d capacity, while gas demand at Cheniere's Corpus Christi expansion appears to have also stepped up (Exhibit 4). This has taken total U.S. gas demand for LNG exports to over 16.5 Bcf/d this week, the highest level since early August, and likely to rise sustainably above 17 Bcf/d by mid-Oct, when we expect Cove Point to return from maintenance.
  • On net, salt storage, which are the highest deliverability facilities in the U.S., has remained at a manageable level, including an atypical withdrawal last week reported today by the EIA. We note this may be offset next week by a combination of increasing production and reduced pipeline exit flows from the Gulf (largely driven by maintenance events), which could temporarily weigh on U.S. gas prices from current levels. However, we believe we are quickly approaching a period when the market's focus will more sustainably shift towards 2026 tightness concerns. This is illustrated by the Cal26 strip settling this week above $4/mmBtu for the first time in two months. We maintain our $4.00/$4.60/mmBtu Nov-Dec25/Cal26 Henry Hub forecasts.


Dart's chartpack:

Separately, the heating season is just around the corner, with about 42% of U.S. households (the top source, especially in the Midwest and Northeast)using NatGas for heating. 


Here comes the heating season. 

By Zerohedge.com 

More Top Reads From Oilprice.co


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#US strategic #OilReserves (#SPR):
- Less than 17 days left!

#US #Crude #Oil in the #StrategicPetroleumReserve Stocks (I:USCOSPRE) 351.27M bbl for Wk of Oct 20 2023 
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The #US #oil, #financial, #dollar and #banking crises led the #Zionists to a desperate #gamble. 
#Rothschild/#KhazariaMafia made a #miscalculation, thinking they could #cripple #Russia's military and #steal its #EnergyReserves. 

https://x.com/GraviolaDOTfi/status/1704621208359072054  
#UkraineWar 
_

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"WAIT DON'T JUMP, YET!" -We are winning the #UkraineWar and seizing the #Russian #Banks, #Gold, #Oil and #Gas, just like the #RAND Co planned.#Russian #Ruble relaunched linked to #Gold and #Commodities | 1 Apr, 2022
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https://x.com/GraviolaDOTfi/status/1866301093682028966

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Funny video about winter 2023 in Europe.
Never before have Russian men been so popular with European lad. 


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