The nuclear winter theory Paul J. It was the result of an investigation published in 1982 by Crutzen and John Birks. According to this study, "nuclear explosions and subsequent fires would release large amounts of soot, dust and ash into the atmosphere, causing a notable planetary cooling, known as nuclear winter, that would spread over at least two decades."
However, the globalist establishment would design a plan for the next five-year period that would make it possible to regain the role of the United States as a global gendarme, greatly increasing the military interventions abroad of the United States, to regain Unipolarity in the global geopolitical frame, following the Wolfowitz Doctrine. This doctrine outlined "a unilateral policy" and "preventive military action against the threat of other nations and the rise of dictatorships to a level of superpower", which contemplated a torrential and simultaneous nuclear attack on China, Russia and North Korea.
According to a study published in the journal ‘Nature’, ‘a nuclear conflict between the United States and Russia would kill more than 5 billion people in the next two years of impact’
Thus, in an article published at the Quincy Institute entitled "Reflection on Nuclear War, Biden's new nuclear strategy and the superwick that activates it," Dr. Theodore Postol of MIT says: "The superheads that are carrying on the American missiles Trident II W-76 would be designed for the same time and the same nuclear beam against Russia, China and North Korea, in order to eliminate the retaliatory capacity and thus win the Third World War and then take control of the world," according to Zbigniew Brzezinski's doctrine.
Brzezinsky Between two ages: In his book The Role of the United States in the Technotronic Era (1971), he states that "the time has come to rebalance the power of the world, which must come into the hands of a new global political order based on the tripartite economic link between Japan, Europe and the United States". However, this attack cannot be definitive and may lead to global confusion of unforeseeable consequences for the human species and the future of the planet, as, according to a study published in Nature, "a nuclear conflict between the United States and Russia would kill the lives of more than 5 billion people in the next two years of impact and most of the victims would die as a result of subsequent nuclear winters."
Germán Gorraiz, analyst