Dictators No Peace Trade List Jun 2026
They approached Vass with humility and hunger. Jorin spoke for the rebels; Sima carried the iron ledger with the List folded into its lining. The young commander, nasal and suspicious, fidgeted before the words on paper. The first offers went as expected: Vass demanded demobilization first, the rebels demanded troop withdrawal. Then Aurel’s mechanisms shaped the discussion. They proposed a Time-Locked Release of garrisons in exchange for immediate establishment of Witness Guilds and Lantern squares. Garrison withdrawal would occur in stages—fortresses emptied only after independent certifiers verified each village’s maintained lanterns and the reactivation of local wells.
He looked back at the Trade List. He had Weapons. He had Oil. He had Diamonds. But he had no Food.
Assad was added to the EU and U.S. lists in 2011–2012. Yet, unlike Gaddafi, Assad survived for over a decade. Why? The list failed to be universal. Russia and China vetoed comprehensive UN oil sanctions, and Iran continued shipping oil via tanker-to-tanker transfers off the Syrian coast. Trade simply re-routed through front companies in Lebanon, Iraq, and Dubai. The "no peace" list became a Swiss cheese map of evasion. Only after 2023 did the Arab League readmit Syria, effectively delisting him unilaterally. The lesson: dictators no peace trade list
with trading ports. Here is the definitive list of where to offload your cargo for maximum profit: Port (Market) Items They Buy for 100 Gold Gold, Ivory, Silver Cotton Yarn, Gunpowder Salt, Guns Wool, Perfume, Statues Horses, Ginger Rice, Silk Opium, Spices, Porcelain Carpet, Exotic Animals Honey, Wheat, Tea South Korea Bicycles, Cashews Middle East Liquor, Flowers Coffee Beans, Dye New Zealand Timber, Fish South Africa Paper, Jewelry Cows, Pigs Sheep, Olives, Olive Oil Key Tips for the Trade Run Ship Upgrades
Pepe scrolled down. The list was short.
Rodriguez stared at the screen. He had no weapons. He had no oil left (he bought Mbeki’s cheap oil and had nowhere to store it, so it evaporated into the digital ether). He had nothing but five thousand tons of grain and a very happy population.
Sanctions are often called "weapons of mass destruction by other means." In Iraq (1990s), U.N. sanctions led to half a million child deaths. In Venezuela, U.S. oil sanctions accelerated hyperinflation and mass migration. In all cases, dictators deflected blame abroad while consolidating internal security forces. The list punishes the people, not the despot—and peace becomes even more elusive. They approached Vass with humility and hunger
In response, the is updated with new “transshipment red flags” every 45 days by the EU’s 12th Sanctions Package and OFAC’s Alerts.
