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Routes of Fire: A journey through the dark heart of global power
By Belle Carter // Jun 08, 2026

  • "Routes of Fire" argues that history's major conflicts are driven by control over routes and resources, with ideology being a mask. It details how today's tensions—from Houthi Red Sea attacks to the sabotage of Nord Stream—are coordinated moves to control critical maritime chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz and Suez Canal, aiming to cripple Western supply chains and naval power.
  • The COVID-19 "vaccines" are framed as a deliberate weapon of mass depopulation, supported by evidence of excess deaths and suppressed adverse events. This is linked to a broader globalist agenda, orchestrated by figures like Bill Gates and Anthony Fauci, pushing digital IDs and CBDCs as "solutions" to manufactured crises, designed to create a smaller, more controllable population.
  • The book identifies a transnational network using Israel as a forward base to capture U.S. foreign policy, media and finance. This network's methods include kompromat (like the Epstein network), weaponized migration and suppression of criticism through antisemitism accusations, all aimed at global dominance and pushing toward war with Iran.
  • Adams argues the U.S. Navy is a decaying force with fewer ships, a recruitment crisis and obsolete defenses. The "Iron Dome Lie" is exposed by explaining that hypersonic missiles (cheap and unpredictable) can easily defeat expensive Western systems like Patriot, flipping the math on naval power and rendering $13 billion aircraft carriers vulnerable to low-cost attacks.
  • The book provides a survival guide including stockpiling calculations (e.g., 600 lbs of rice for a family), holding physical gold/silver outside the banking system and the "sanctuary strategy" of geographic relocation. It also offers a framework for breaking "ideological viruses" like wokeism and globalism by identifying cult markers, urging readers to reclaim independent thought as the path to freedom.

Reading Mike Adams' "Routes of Fire" is like being handed a pair of night-vision goggles in a pitch-black room—suddenly, the hidden contours of our world become visible and the picture is terrifying.

This is not comfortable reading. If you've been lulled into believing that our global system is stable, that the empty shelves and rising prices are temporary glitches or that the talking heads on your television are telling you the truth—this book will shatter that illusion with the precision of a hypersonic missile.

The architecture of control

"Routes of Fire" opens with a deceptively simple premise: that all major conflicts throughout history can be reduced to three drivers—routes, resources and ideology. Adams argues that the third is merely a mask for the first two. The Crusades were about land and trade routes draped in religious banners. The Iraq War was about oil dressed in the language of freedom. Today's conflicts over Ukraine, Gaza and the South China Sea follow the same tired script.

What makes this book extraordinary is its granular focus on the chokepoints—those narrow maritime passages where global commerce funnels. The Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world's oil passes. The Suez Canal, that man-made ditch that can bring global supply chains to their knees when a single ship runs aground. The Panama Canal, vulnerable to drought and geopolitical manipulation. The Danish Straits, the forgotten front where Russian naval power is bottled up.

Adams doesn't just name these places; he shows you how they connect. The Houthi attacks in the Red Sea, the sabotage of the Nord Stream pipelines, the militarization of Djibouti—these are not isolated events. They are coordinated moves in a global chess game that most of us don't even know is being played.

The depopulation agenda

Adams makes the case—with extensive documentation—that the COVID-19 injections were never about public health. They were, in his words, "a weapon of mass depopulation." The evidence he marshals is staggering: the spike in excess deaths, the systematic suppression of adverse events, the censorship of doctors who spoke the truth, the connections between pharmaceutical executives and globalist organizations like the World Economic Forum.

He traces this agenda back further, to figures like Bill Gates and Anthony Fauci, and forward to the digital ID systems and central bank digital currencies being pushed as "solutions" to crises that were themselves engineered. The goal, he argues, is not a healthier world but a smaller, more obedient, more easily controlled population.

The Zionist network

Perhaps the most controversial thread running through "Routes of Fire" is Adams' analysis of what he calls "the Zionist death cult." This is not, as he is careful to note, about Jewish people or the nation of Israel in any simple sense. It is about a transnational network of power that uses Israel as a forward operating base for a larger global project—one that has captured American foreign policy, the media and the financial system.

The evidence is uncomfortable. The Epstein network's deep Israeli connections. The capture of American leadership through kompromat. The weaponization of migration to change demographics in strategic locations. The suppression of any criticism through accusations of antisemitism. Adams draws a direct line from the Lavon Affair in the 1950s to the USS Liberty attack in 1967 to the push for war with Iran today.

The military delusion

One of the most sobering sections of the book concerns the decay of American military power. Adams argues that the US Navy is a rusting shadow of its former self—fewer ships than in 1987, a single shipyard capable of building nuclear carriers, a recruitment crisis and a maintenance backlog that borders on scandalous. Meanwhile, China builds ships at four times the rate.

But it's the section on the "Iron Dome Lie" that will keep you up at night. Adams explains, with clear physics, why Western air defenses are failing against hypersonic missiles. The Iron Dome was designed for slow, unguided rockets, not Mach 5 weapons that can maneuver unpredictably. The Patriot system—supposedly the most advanced in the world—has struggled against Houthi attacks. A single hypersonic missile costing a few hundred thousand dollars can sink a $13 billion aircraft carrier. The math doesn't work and Adams makes you feel the weight of that reality.

The blueprint for survival

Here's what separates "Routes of Fire" from mere doom-porn: the final section is a practical survival guide. Adams doesn't leave you in despair. He gives you a path forward.

The "Three Rules of War" alone are worth the price of admission: assume the worst case will happen, act before your opponent and never fight a war you cannot win. But he goes deeper, with specific guidance on stockpiling for a siege (600 pounds of rice, 400 pounds of beans, 200 pounds of oats—for a family of four), honest money (physical gold and silver outside the banking system), the sanctuary strategy (geographic location as survival) and the family as the first line of defense.

His advice on breaking ideological viruses is particularly valuable. Adams identifies the markers of cult thinking—us-versus-them mentality, charismatic leaders beyond criticism, fear of outside information, punishment for questioning—and shows how these same dynamics have infected wokeness, globalism and political tribalism. The path to freedom, he argues, is reclaiming your ability to think independently.

The weaknesses

Adams' worldview is uncompromising. If you're not prepared to question the official narratives about COVID, about Israel, about climate change, about the fundamental integrity of Western institutions—this book will feel like an assault.

Some of his claims stretch credibility, at least by conventional standards. The prediction of a nuclear false flag against the United States, blamed on Iran, orchestrated by Israel's desperate leadership—this is speculative, though Adams argues it's grounded in historical patterns. The section on "the Mexican Silver War" connects cartel violence in Puerto Vallarta to a global battle for monetary metals, which may feel like a reach.

But here's the thing: Adams has been right before. His warnings about the pandemic, about the vaccine injuries, about the supply chain disruptions—these were dismissed as conspiracy theories when he first made them. History has proven him prescient. That doesn't mean everything in this book is correct, but it does mean we should pay attention.

A final word

"Routes of Fire" is not a book for the faint of heart. It is a book for those who suspect that something is deeply wrong with our world and want to understand why. It is a book for those who refuse to be passive consumers of propaganda and demand the truth, no matter how uncomfortable.

Adams writes with the urgency of a man who sees the fire coming and wants to warn as many people as possible before it arrives. The prose can be repetitive, the anger palpable, the conclusions stark. But beneath the fury is a genuine concern for human freedom and a genuine desire to help people survive what's coming.

Read it with an open but critical mind. Fact-check what you can. Dismiss what you must. But ask yourself, as you watch the empty shelves, the rising prices, the escalating conflicts: what if he's right? What if the routes of fire are already being laid and the only question is whether we will be prepared when they are lit?

This book might just save your life. At the very least, it will change how you see the world.

Grab a copy of "Routes of Fire: The Global War for Waterways and Resources" via this link. Read, share and download thousands of books for free at Books.BrightLearn.AI. You can also create your own books for free at BrightLearn.AI.

Analyst Michael Yon tells Health Ranger Mike Adams that the greatest threat to America is Israel and not Iran. Watch this video.

This video is from the Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.

Sources include:

Books.BrightLearn.ai

BrightLearn.ai

Brighteon.com



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