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Daily Mail
20-05-2025
- Politics
- Daily Mail
Living Nostradamus who foresaw Covid makes chilling prediction about 'silent nuclear crisis'
A psychic who successfully predicted dozens of global events in 2024 has warned the potential of 'a silent nuclear crisis' is just seconds away. Athos Salomé, 38, from Brazil, is often referred to as the 'Living Nostradamus' due to his numerous accurate predictions throughout the years, such as the coronavirus pandemic, Queen Elizabeth's death and the Microsoft global outage. Now, Salomé has issued a chilling warning about the current geopolitical scene and conflicts that are heating up around the world. The psychic predicted that the war in Ukraine will end but no one will declare victory, while he warned about an 'invisible war' that could blow up a nuclear reactor. Meanwhile Salomé revealed that the behaviour of the elite suggests they are already preparing for a disaster while portraying an 'illusion of stability' to the public. He also warned about the 'partial collapse' of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), also known as the Gulf Stream, as 'the key climatic event of 2025'. 'The invisible is on full display for those who know where to look. Time is no longer on our side - but knowledge may still be,' Salome told FEMAIL. 'Living Nostradamus' Athos Salomé, 38, from Brazil, has issued a chilling warning about the current geopolitical scene and conflicts that are heating up around the world The end of the unipolar world In Salomé's vision, 2025 marks the consolidation of the so-called 'Innovation Route', a technical-scientific alliance between China and India that bypasses the pillars of the Western financial system. He claims biotechnology, semiconductors and quantum energy are the main sectors of this new order. According to Salomé, 'a new technological-financial ecosystem is being born independent of Washington and Frankfurt', which will drastically alter the axes of global power. He said: 'The agreements between Beijing and New Delhi already operate outside SWIFT and the dollar.' Ukraine: The war doesn't it freezes What the global elite already know... and don't tell Salomé claimed the one percent of the world's elite are already living as if 2025 were the prelude to systemic collapse. Salomé revealed that the behaviour of the elite reveals more than public government speeches. He said: 'Physical gold and land in safe geopolitical zones (such as Uruguay and Alberta), private stockpiling of medicines, seeds and food, secret investments in autonomous AI and offline neurointerfaces. 'Acquiring passports in neutral countries such as Switzerland, the Emirates and Singapore. 'The phrase that is repeated in discreet meetings is clear: 'Diversify to survive. Protect yourself from the illusion of stability.' Advertisement !- - ad: - -> Salomé predicts an undeclared agreement, saying the conflict stabilises in 2025, with borders frozen and Ukraine effectively neutralised as a 'buffer state.' He claimed the real reason was to avoid a 'systemic financial collapse in the heart of Europe' 'The war doesn't end in victory, but in economic exhaustion,' warns Salomé. For him, what is happening is a silent reconfiguration of borders - not physical, but financial. The invisible war that could blow up a reactor 'There are wars that aren't televised, but they happen every day,' says Salomé. 'One of them is the underground conflict between Iran and Israel. Drones, industrial sabotage and cyber-attacks already make up a silent theatre of war. He revealed the greatest risk is the destruction of an Iranian nuclear reactor, which would have a global environmental and political impact. 'The world is just seconds away from a silent nuclear crisis,' he warned, saying that only three heads of state are aware of the real magnitude of this threat. The truth about the silent collapse of the AMOC In one of his more specific predictions, Salomé points to the partial collapse of the AMOC - the Gulf Stream - as the key climatic event of 2025. He said: 'Internal data from ESA and NOAA (not released to the press) point to a more than 70 per cent chance of critical weakening by December.' Immediate impacts include: Western Europe: severe summer drought, followed by unseasonal tropical storms (September-November) He said: 'Meanwhile there will be agricultural collapse in South Asia and the African Sahel, flash floods in cities such as New York, Mumbai and Lagos. 'Central banks are already recalculating their climate stress tests based on secret reports.'


Telegraph
07-05-2025
- Politics
- Telegraph
It's America's duty to mediate Asia's crisis
The line of control slices like a sword cut across the mountain ranges of Kashmir, the Himalayan territory bitterly disputed by India and Pakistan for almost 80 years. Time and again, the enemies have come to blows only for calm to be restored, often with American mediation. Do not assume that the pattern must always repeat itself. The latest crisis was triggered by a heinous terrorist attack on a tourist camp inside Indian-administered Kashmir last month, claiming 26 civilian lives. India retaliated on Tuesday by striking nine targets in Pakistani-administered Kashmir and elsewhere in its neighbour. As a spiral bloodshed threatens to take hold between two nuclear powers, who will mediate a resolution? We could once have assumed that America would step forward to lead a concerted effort to broker de-escalation. When India and Pakistan mobilised for war in 2002, Colin Powell, the late US secretary of state, engaged in shuttle diplomacy between New Delhi and Islamabad, joined by our then Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw. Will anything like this happen now? Donald Trump scorns the idea of an American obligation to resolve distant crises, even between nuclear-armed states. Today his only comment was: 'I just hope it ends very quickly.' But it may not end just by itself. The leaders of India and Pakistan surely understand the potentially catastrophic consequences of further escalation. Having skirmished along the line of control for decades, they are adept at managing their rivalry, signalling resolve to domestic audiences while also offering subtly conciliatory messages to decision-makers on the other side. Today's statement from the Indian defence ministry was a masterpiece of this genre, announcing 'focused strikes' on 'terrorist infrastructure' inside its neighbour, while also stressing that 'no Pakistani military facilities were hit, reflecting India's calibrated and non-escalatory approach'. Today, Pakistan's own retaliation seems both inevitable and imminent. If General Asim Munir, the Pakistani military chief, achieves a similar balance between robustness and restraint, this crisis could yet dissipate. But General Munir may have no wish to de-escalate. His proclaimed doctrine, after all, is to return a heavier blow than any that Pakistan receives. He also leads a morally bankrupt military establishment which has for decades armed and hosted terrorist groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba, whose sole purpose is to attack India. Whether Mr Trump wishes it or not, America is the only credible mediator in this crisis. The EU does not have the geopolitical weight. China, as Pakistan's closest ally, is mistrusted by India. It was, in retrospect, an unfortunate coincidence that Sir Keir Starmer should have concluded a free trade agreement with India on Tuesday only hours before the latter fired missiles at Pakistan. In any case, Britain can only have a credible role if America takes the lead. Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, will be fully aware of the risks of an uncontrolled crisis between two enemies with over 300 nuclear warheads between them. Unless calm returns soon, he should ask his boss for permission to begin a new round of shuttle diplomacy.