Renowned economist Jeffrey Sachs exposes a shocking truth about the Deep State’s real agenda in Ukraine—revealing it’s not about democracy, but domination.
The American foreign policy establishment has been running the same playbook for decades.
But few people understand just how deep this pattern goes.
And JJeffrey Sachs exposed a jaw-dropping truth about the Deep State’s British ties that will leave you speechless.
The Deep State’s real target has nothing to do with Ukraine
Economist Jeffrey Sachs dropped a bombshell during a recent interview with Tucker Carlson about the true nature of America’s foreign policy establishment.
Sachs revealed that the current war in Ukraine has nothing to do with protecting Ukrainian democracy or stopping Russian aggression.
"This has been a project of the American deep state of the military-industrial complex dating back decades, and the target has nothing to do with Ukraine at all," Sachs explained.
"It’s destroying Ukraine. The target is to weaken Russia. This is the point."
The respected economist, who advised both Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and Russian President Boris Yeltsin during the collapse of the Soviet Union, has a unique perspective on U.S.-Russia relations.
He witnessed firsthand how American attitudes toward Russia remained hostile even after the communist system collapsed.
America opposes big powers simply because they’re big
Sachs revealed the uncomfortable truth about why America constantly finds itself in conflict with major powers around the world.
"We make up stories about why we oppose big powers, but the basic reason we oppose big powers is that they are big," Sachs stated.
"They are an affront to our desire for what political scientists—in a fancy word—call primacy, or hegemony, or full-spectrum dominance."
This explains why the United States has shifted from viewing China as a normal trading partner in the early 2000s to treating it as a major threat today.
It’s not because China suddenly became more aggressive or authoritarian.
It’s because China became more powerful and therefore represents a challenge to American global dominance.
Sachs noted that political scientist John Mearsheimer had predicted this collision course with China in his book "The Tragedy of Great Power Politics."
Mearsheimer wrote around 2000 that "Relations with China are quiet now, but when China gains power, we will go into conflict with China."
The Deep State is repeating a 180-year-old British playbook
What makes Sachs’ analysis truly stunning is his revelation about how closely American foreign policy mirrors 19th-century British imperial strategy.
Sachs explained that British hatred of Russia began around 1840, long before the Bolshevik Revolution or any ideological differences.
A historian named Gleeson studied this phenomenon in 1950 and reached a startling conclusion.
"He went through all the archives, all the speeches in the House of Commons, all the articles in intellectual magazines from 1850 onward, and posed the question: ‘We were allies of Russia in 1815 in defeating Napoleon—we were allies. Then, just 25 years later, we’re enemies. What happened?’" Sachs recounted.
"His conclusion: nothing happened. There was no reason except Russia was big and therefore an affront to the British Empire."
The British even invented a completely fictional threat to justify their hostility.
They claimed the Tsar was planning to invade British India through the Khyber Pass, an idea Sachs called "loony tunes."
"The thought never even crossed the minds of the czars—the idea to march across Afghanistan into India to fight the British Empire was loony tunes," Sachs explained.
This manufactured threat became known as "The Great Game" and provided the pretext for British aggression against Russia.
The Crimean War was a manufactured conflict
By 1853, British Foreign Secretary Lord Palmerston had completely fabricated a reason to go to war with Russia in what became known as the Crimean War.
The war began over a dispute regarding privileges France had been granted involving Russian troops in Wallachia at the mouth of the Danube, but when Russia retreated, Britain decided to fight anyway.
"In other words, the pretext was gone, but they wanted that war," Sachs noted.
The British goal was to "banish Russia from the Black Sea region" and "reduce Russia to a third-rate power."
This is exactly what the American Deep State is trying to accomplish today.
The pattern continues after the Cold War ended
Sachs was literally in the Kremlin in December 1991 when Boris Yeltsin announced the end of the Soviet Union.
"Gentlemen, I want to tell you the Soviet Union is over," Yeltsin told Sachs and his colleagues.
Sachs thought this historic moment would lead to better relations between the superpowers.
Instead, the American Deep State immediately shifted to a new goal: dismembering Russia itself.
"As soon as the Soviet Union ended, what did the deep state say? ‘Well, that’s great. Now we need to dismember Russia too,’" Sachs revealed.
The idea was to break Russia into three parts: Europe, Siberia, and the Far East.
One popular phrase in Washington was to "decolonize Russia" by breaking away regions like Chechnya.
The military-industrial complex drives endless conflict
Sachs identified the key players behind this aggressive foreign policy: "the CIA, the intelligence agencies, the Pentagon, Congress’s Armed Services Committees, the military contractors."
These groups had already conceived of "unchallenged U.S. primacy" by 1992, which became the foundation of neoconservative foreign policy.
Dick Cheney was Defense Secretary in 1992 with Paul Wolfowitz as his deputy, laying the groundwork for the disastrous wars that followed.
Their goal was "U.S. unipolarity, primacy, full spectrum dominance, hegemony" regardless of the cost in blood and treasure.
This explains why America has been involved in endless wars for decades, from Iraq and Afghanistan to Libya and Syria.
The Deep State needs conflict to justify its existence and maintain its power.
Jeffrey Sachs has pulled back the curtain on one of the most important truths about American foreign policy.
The endless wars and manufactured crises aren’t about protecting democracy or American values.
They’re about maintaining global dominance at any cost, even if it means destroying countries like Ukraine in the process.