
**EXCLUSIVE: The Saudi Oil Giant That Runs The World – And The Secret Deal That Sold America’s Soul**
They told you it was about energy independence. They told you the “drill, baby, drill” mantra was the solution to high gas prices. But what if the real story—the one the mainstream media refuses to touch—is that the largest oil company on Earth, Saudi Aramco, isn’t just a foreign corporation? It’s the silent partner in a shadow government that has been bleeding the United States dry for decades.
Wake up, America. You’ve been sold a myth.
Aramco isn’t just a company. It’s the beating heart of the Saudi royal family’s power, a cash cow that produces more oil than ExxonMobil, Chevron, and Shell combined. But here’s where the rabbit hole gets deep: Aramco is the key that unlocks the entire global financial system, the petrodollar, and the reason your savings are evaporating while the elites in Davos sip champagne.
Let’s start with the obvious question the corporate media never asks: Why, after 9/11, after the Khashoggi murder, after the endless Yemen humanitarian crisis, is the U.S. still bending over backwards for the Saudi regime? The answer isn’t “oil.” That’s the cover story. The real answer is a secret, unspoken pact that happened in the 1970s, and it’s the reason your dollar is still the world’s reserve currency.
In 1974, then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Saudi Prince Fahd signed a deal that no one talks about anymore. The U.S. promised to protect the Saudi monarchy—militarily, diplomatically, even against internal revolts—in exchange for one simple thing: Saudi Arabia would price all its oil sales exclusively in U.S. dollars. This was the birth of the “petrodollar.” It meant every country on Earth that wanted to buy oil had to first acquire U.S. dollars. That demand created an artificial, eternal floor for the dollar’s value. It allowed America to print money like Monopoly while the rest of the world picked up the tab.
But here’s the part that will blow your mind: Aramco is the enforcer of that deal. Without Aramco’s massive production capacity and its willingness to play ball with the Federal Reserve, the house of cards collapses. Every time the Saudis hint at selling oil in yuan, euros, or a new digital currency—and they’ve done it—the White House scrambles behind closed doors. Why do you think Biden went to Saudi Arabia to fist-bump MBS after promising to make him a “pariah”? Because the petrodollar was at risk. Because Aramco holds a loaded gun to the head of the U.S. economy.
Now, fast forward to today. The so-called “energy transition” is a complete and utter farce. The same elites pushing electric cars and wind turbines are the ones who own billions of dollars in Aramco stock. Look at the investors: BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street. These are the same asset managers that run your 401(k). They are the same firms that sit on the Federal Reserve’s advisory boards. They profit from high oil prices AND from selling you the guilt-trip about climate change. It’s a perfect hedge. They win whether you’re paying $6 a gallon for gas or buying a Tesla.
And the timing? Suspicious. Right as the U.S. was supposed to be “transitioning” away from fossil fuels, Aramco announced in 2023 the largest corporate profit in human history—$161 billion. Where did that money go? Not to build schools in Riyadh. It went into a sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), that is now buying up everything in America: sports teams (LIV Golf, Newcastle United), tech startups, real estate, and even our entertainment industry. The PIF is essentially a slush fund for the Saudi crown prince to acquire soft power. And our government signed off on it.
But the deepest layer of the conspiracy—the one that will make the “stay woke” crowd sit up—is the connection to the so-called “Great Reset.” Think about it. The World Economic Forum (WEF) talks about “you will own nothing and be happy.” How do you make that happen? You collapse the middle class by inflating energy prices. You make it impossible for the average American to afford a home, a car, or a vacation. Then, you offer them a digital currency, a central bank digital currency (CBDC), as the “solution.” Who has the most to gain from a global CBDC? The same entities that control the oil supply chains: Aramco and its Western financial partners.
There’s even a more sinister angle. Why has the U.S. government been so quiet about the massive cyberattacks on energy infrastructure? Remember the Colonial Pipeline hack in 2021? That was a dress rehearsal. But look at the bigger picture: Aramco itself was hit by a devastating cyberattack in 2012 (Shamoon virus). The response? The U.S. and Saudi Arabia created a joint cybersecurity task force. The result? A global surveillance network that monitors all energy transaction data. They are using “cyber defense” as an excuse to track every barrel of oil, every payment, and every citizen’s energy consumption. It’s the ultimate control grid.
And the media’s role? Pure propaganda. When the Biden administration released oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve at a loss, the news called it a “price relief.” When Trump pressured OPEC+ to cut production, they called it “diplomacy.” But the truth is simpler and more terrifying: Both parties are bought and paid for. The real power isn’t in the White House. It’s in the boardroom of Aramco and the private jets of the investment banks that manage its $2 trillion valuation.
So, the next time you fill up your tank, don’t just blame the Saudis. Blame the system that made Aramco an untouchable, sovereign-backed monopoly. Blame the politicians who sold your national security for a steady
Final Thoughts
Having watched the energy sector for decades, it's clear that Aramco's strategic pivot—balancing its fossil fuel legacy with tentative steps into renewables and technology—is less about ideology and more about raw survival in a decarbonizing world. The real story here isn't just the billions in profit, but the quiet, calculated bet that the kingdom can still command the global energy conversation long after the last barrel is burned. Ultimately, Aramco remains a state within a state, and its future will be defined not by production quotas, but by whether it can successfully diversify before the world's appetite for oil truly wanes.