Psychic who 'predicted 2026 war' warns of nine more disasters coming this year

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A psychic medium who claims to have previously predicted "trouble" in the Middle East has shared the chilling forecast that the world faces nine disasters. Angela Kuschel, a self-described "natural born" psychic and paranormal investigator, issued the alarming prediction while examining what the remainder of 2026 might hold for the globe.

Amongst her notable assertions was that she had foreseen "trouble in Israel last year", potentially alluding to the ongoing conflict in Gaza; 2025 was reported to be particularly deadly, with the Gaza City offensive occurring that year.

Speaking exclusively to us, Angela, owner of Angie's Spiritual Readings, was invited to focus her attention on the natural world and provide any predictions she might have concerning weather, climate and natural disasters.

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She said: "Three large near devastation fires (although I cannot pinpoint the location, other than it starts with a K); these are actually more like four to five months out.

"Six major rain events that cause flooding (two of these look like hurricanes or similar events); again, this is more like over the next five months."

Angela added: "As a side note, we are also setting up for more energetic influences; not sure if it's solar flares or cosmic shifts, but that energy does affect how we feel; we are moved to reflect and take action (at least in our communities) on what we don't like and feel needs to change."

Broadening her forecast to the global stage, Angela cautioned that the coming months would prove "unsettling", with the world confronting what she described as "what feels like big reactionary shifts", which "almost feel like energetic panic".

She clarified that such shifts are "actually smaller" than they appear, yet highlighted the areas of "money, power and frustration" and how they were "at an all-time tipping point".

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Angela, who hails from Jupiter, Florida, went on to say: "After October, that will shift; that is not to say that all of a sudden prices are going down and everything is back to 'livable'; what it does mean is that people will settle in differently.

"We get used to the new and make some adjustments, some prices will go down (fuel), and some will just balance. The real shift is in the lack of reaction from the collective. This lack of reaction takes the power away from the situation. It stops feeling hostile."

Her references to fuel prices most likely relate to the spiralling costs that followed US President Donald Trump's war with Iran. Last week, Americans were reported to have paid out $59 billion (£44bn) more on fuel since the start of the conflict.

It comes as the Trump administration continues efforts to broker a peace deal with Iran and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping lane that provides passage for about 20% of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas.