Sources confirm that a team of British scientists has issued a stark warning to Venezuela. The warning, leaked from a closed-door session at the Royal Society, suggests the country faces a 'devastating blow' if current political and economic trends continue. The scientists, whose names remain under wraps, have reportedly modelled the collapse of Venezuela's infrastructure, predicting a humanitarian catastrophe within months.
Documents obtained by this newsroom reveal the scientists' analysis focuses on three key areas: energy, healthcare, and food supply. 'Venezuela is on the brink of a systemic failure,' one source said. 'The data is clear. Without immediate international intervention, we will see a death toll that rivals the worst conflicts of this century.' The warning comes as uncertainty mounts over the fate of President Nicolás Maduro's government.
But this is not just a scientific assessment. It is a political bombshell. The timing is suspect. The British government has been increasingly vocal about Maduro's regime, and this report could be used as justification for further sanctions or even military action. I have seen this playbook before. Follow the science, but watch the money. Who funds these scientists? Who benefits from their warnings?
My sources indicate that the scientists involved have ties to oil companies that lost assets in Venezuela's nationalisation. One researcher, a geologist specialising in energy infrastructure, previously consulted for BP. Another, a public health expert, has worked with USAID. The connections are there, buried in grant applications and advisory boards.
The warning itself is vague. 'Devastating blow' could mean anything. But in the world of corporate media, vague implies the worst. The news cycle will amplify fear. Traders will react. Bond yields will spike. And someone, somewhere, will make a fortune betting against Venezuelan debt.
Meanwhile, on the ground in Caracas, people are already suffering. Hospitals lack medicine. Power outages are daily. The government blames US sanctions. The opposition blames Maduro. And now British scientists add their voice to the chaos.
This is not a scoop. This is a pattern. Every regime change operation starts with a report. A think tank. A university. A 'non-partisan' study. The language is careful, but the intent is clear. Destabilise. Sanction. Intervene.
I reached out to the Foreign Office for comment. No response. I called the Royal Society. The press officer said they 'do not comment on unpublished research.' Unpublished. Yet leaked. That is the game.
The question is: who leaked it? And why now? The answers, as always, are in the shadows.
Stay tuned. I will keep digging.







