13
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2024 04:51 pm
@Glennn,
Joe Biden.

https://www.whitehouse.gov › briefing-room › statements-releases › 2023 › 10 › 18 › u-s-announcement-of-humanitarian-assistance-to-the-palestinian-people
U.S. Announcement of Humanitarian Assistance to the Palestinian
Oct 18, 2023President Biden announced today that the United States is providing $100 million in humanitarian assistance for the Palestinian people in Gaza and the West Bank. This funding will help support...

https://www.bbc.com › news › world-middle-east-56665199
Biden administration to restore $235m in US aid to Palestinians - BBC
US President Joe Biden's administration plans to provide $235m (£171m) of aid to Palestinians, restoring part of the assistance cut by Donald Trump. Two-thirds will go to the UN's agency for...

https://www.usaid.gov › news-information › press-releases › dec-05-2023-united-states-announces-additional-humanitarian-assistance-palestinian-people
The United States Announces Additional Humanitarian Assistance for the ...
Dec 5, 2023Today in El-Arish, Egypt, Administrator Samantha Power announced that the United States, through USAID, will provide more than $21 million in additional humanitarian assistance for the people of Gaza and the West Bank affected by the ongoing conflict, which has left approximately 2.2 million people in need of humanitarian assistance. Today's announcement builds on the $100 million in U.S ...

https://www.whitehouse.gov › briefing-room › statements-releases › 2022 › 07 › 14 › fact-sheet-the-united-states-palestinian-relationship
FACT SHEET: The United States-Palestinian Relationship
Jul 15, 2022Reducing food insecurity; Fostering people-to-people dialogue to support peace. President Biden will also announce new contributions totaling $316 million to support the Palestinian people.

https://www.cnbc.com › 2021 › 04 › 07 › biden-restarts-us-aid-relief-programs-to-palestinians.html
Biden restarts U.S. aid relief programs to Palestinians - CNBC
Apr 7, 2021The aid package includes $75 million in economic and development assistance in the West Bank and Gaza, $10 million for peacebuilding programs through the U.S. Agency for International...


Maybe you'd like to point out any other country that's provided more aid???
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2024 04:58 pm
@Glennn,
Quote:
So, how might Congress influence the president's actions that go against his will to supply weapons galore to Israel for the continuation of war crimes against innocent human beings?


Reframe that question: How might Congress go along with with the peoples will on Ukraine so President Biden doesn't have to do their job for them?

One thing that happens regarding a President over riding Congress is that the House holds the purse strings. At some point that Republican House needs to start doing the people's will and get funding to Ukraine. That money Biden is sending comes out of the Defense Budget.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2024 05:09 pm
@Lash,
Why does the US, the largest oil exporting nation in the world, need anybody else's oil????? Why does the nation with the largest refining capabilities in the world need to have more oil. Why does the US, at a time it is capping off producing wells in the Gulf of Mexico, who is not pumping large proven reserves Alaska, stops producing from Texas wells when barrel prices get low enough, need anybody else's oil glut from their wells? Particularly since the US has had fields it searched for and proved in Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Libya, Venezuela and other places nationalized from underneath us???????
hightor
 
  2  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2024 05:18 pm
@Glennn,
So how would you like it if I posed a single question to you repeatedly and demanded that you answer it, yes or no, before further discussion could continue?

So, Comrade, did Hamas organize and dispatch armed fighters (I won't use the freighted term, "terrorists") to cross a nation's border, enter its territory, and massacre (I won't use the freighted term "butcher") over a thousand innocent Israeli civilians – including women, children, and the elderly – and kidnap well over a hundred hostages – including women, children, and the elderly – and imprison them in Gaza, hidden in undisclosed bases in urban areas densely populated with civilians?

You've refused to discuss, let alone condemn, the event which precipitated the conflict, which makes me think that you feel Hamas deserves some sort of impunity.

Is it a scary topic?

Answer yes or no and, depending on the quality of your response, I might decide to answer your question similarly, although I don't promise to participate in further discussion.
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2024 05:25 pm
@Glennn,
Why in the world does Israel need Gaza?

https://www.spglobal.com › ratings › en › research › articles › 231115-regional-gas-is-more-exposed-than-oil-to-war-in-the-middle-east-12914716
Regional Gas Is More Exposed Than Oil To War In The Middle East
Nov 15, 2023Israel produced about 22 billion cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas in 2022, about 1% of the global total. It exported a combined 9 bcm to Egypt and Jordan, according to S&P Global Commodity Insights data. Most of Israel's gas production comes from offshore fields in the


Got any idea how much gas Texas flairs off in the panhandle?

All regions
Safe search: moderate
Any time

https://grist.org › accountability › flaring-methane-texas-shell-exxon-oil-natural-gas
Texas oil companies are flaring natural gas, leaving regulators in the ...
In Texas alone, state regulators have permitted companies to burn more than a million cubic feet of gas every day since 2019. Combined, that would be enough natural gas to supply 15 million...


https://www.energy.gov › fecm › articles › find-data-natural-gas-flaring-and-venting-your-state
Find Data on Natural Gas Flaring and Venting in Your State
Jun 29, 2022Learn more about FECM's efforts to eliminate methane emissions from the oil and natural gas supply chain by 2030 on the Methane Mitigation Technologies program page, and learn more about DOE's research and development to reduce emissions from flaring and venting here.

https://www.forbes.com › sites › uhenergy › 2021 › 02 › 25 › texas-addiction-to-flaring-could-inflict-unexpected-economic-and-environmental-costs
Texas' Addiction To Flaring Could Inflict Unexpected ... - Forbes
Feb 25, 2021A trillion cubic feet of natural gas in the Permian Basin of West Texas has been flared since 2013, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration


https://today.tamu.edu › 2020 › 08 › 03 › the-problem-with-natural-gas-flaring
The Problem With Natural Gas Flaring - Texas A&M Today
A Texas A&M atmospheric scientist says routine flaring is wasteful, polluting and undermeasured. By Gunnar W. Schade for The ConversationAugust 3, 2020 Share Share165 Tweet 165 Shares Flared natural gas is burned off at Apache Corporations operations at the Deadwood natural gas plant in the Permian Basin on February 5, 2015 in Garden City, Texas.


https://www.nytimes.com › 2021 › 03 › 26 › climate › texas-blackout-flaring-natural-gas.html
Drillers Burned Off Gas at a Staggering Rate as Winter Storm Hit Texas ...
Mar 26, 2021The need to intentionally burn off, or flare, an estimated 1.6 billion cubic feet of gas in a single day — a fivefold increase from rates seen before the crisis, according to satellite...

https://insideclimatenews.org › news › 18102023 › texas-railroad-commission-approval-flaring
Texas Continues to Issue Thousands of Flaring Permits
Oct 18, 2023In Texas, State Rule 32 prohibits flaring, or burning off, natural gas at the wellhead except under a few specific conditions. Oil and gas companies are sometimes forced to flare gas...

https://www.rrc.texas.gov › news › 072821-flaring-trends
072821-Flaring Trends - Railroad Commission of Texas
As seen in the chart below, the most recent Railroad Commission production data shows that the percentage of natural gas flared compared to the natural gas produced from oil and gas wells in Texas dropped from a high of 2.29% in June 2019 to 0.65% in May 2021. During the same period, the volume of gas flared decreased by approximately 73%.

https://blogs.edf.org › energyexchange › 2021 › 09 › 15 › as-texas-fails-to-stop-flaring-epa-must-act
As Texas fails to stop flaring, EPA must act - Energy Exchange
Texas is behind the times, and the rest of the world is taking notice. Investors representing $14 trillion in assets under management have endorsed ending routine flaring in Texas or nearly eliminating flaring by 2025. Concerns about the "dirtiness" of Texas gas lost the state a $7 billion international gas deal.

https://www.bloomberg.com › news › articles › 2022-10-26 › environmentalists-warn-of-gas-flaring-in-texas-as-prices-plunge-below-zero
Environmentalists Warn of Gas Flaring in Texas as Prices Plunge Below ...
Oct 26, 2022Last year alone, energy producers flared 68 billion cubic feet of gas across Texas's share of the energy-rich Permian Basin, according to Colin Leyden at the Environmental Defense Fund. It's a...

https://www.reuters.com › article › us-natgas-pipelines-flaring-explainer-idUSKCN1RL2NL
Explainer: Why are U.S. natural gas prices in Texas below zero?
(Reuters) - In an unusual event, U.S. natural gas prices in West Texas have been trading in negative territory for more than two weeks, largely due to a lack of pipeline space, forcing some...

We flare off 100 times the gas Israel uses to keep up and gas has never been cheaper, except for spot markets where energy companies GOUGE US users during extremely cold or unseasonably cold weather and at a time when government - national, state and local - are mandating elimination of grills and gas stoves.

Stop looking for unsubstantiated conspiracy when the truth IS out there!
Lash
 
  0  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2024 06:52 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Will I find you suggesting that Bush went to war with Iraq for oil? I know most of the peanut gallery here did.
Lash
 
  0  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2024 07:03 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Better questions are:

Why has Israel being stealing land from Palestine since they arrived in 1948?

Why have IDF soldiers been sniping, beating, killing, and incarcerating children in Gaza for the last 70 years?

Why did Biden give Israel white phosphorous to drop on Palestinians?

Why did Biden override Congress to give Israel more weapons to kill Palestinians with?

Why did Biden direct our UN rep to place what was the only vote stopping a ceasefire?
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2024 10:41 pm
@Lash,
Obviously not. Bush was using Sept 11, to make political hay and get revenge for Saddam's attempt to off GHWB. They did not want Iraqi oil, they wanted to cut Iraqi oil production to support increased prices of oil as US production ramped up after fracking kicked in.

The obvious answer always trumps any conspiracy ****.
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2024 10:50 pm
@Lash,
Lash wrote:

Better questions are:

Why has Israel being stealing land from Palestine since they arrived in 1948?

Who doubts that? Even Zionists admit it.


Why have IDF soldiers been sniping, beating, killing, and incarcerating children in Gaza for the last 70 years?

Joe Biden has been in office for three years, there's 70 years of this **** oh HIS shoulders? What's your point?

Why did Biden give Israel white phosphorous to drop on Palestinians?

A weapon they've had for seventy years. Phophorous has been a weapon since WWI. Is this Joe Biden's fault, too.?

Why did Biden override Congress to give Israel more weapons to kill Palestinians with?

Are you crazy? The GOP wanted to vote for more support to Israel and cut off Ukraine.

Why did Biden direct our UN rep to place what was the only vote stopping a ceasefire?

The US has consistently has pushed for a ceasefire and prisoner releases from both sides. Where do you get your news????
Lash
 
  0  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 02:33 am
The US is funding and cheerleading the genocide of Palestinians.

https://amp.theguardian.com/world/2023/dec/12/united-nations-general-assembly-vote-ceasefire-israel-gaza-war

US increasingly alone in Israel support as 153 countries vote for ceasefire at UN
Vote highlights a stiffening consensus for a ceasefire in the war, which has killed more than 18,000 Palestinians
Ed Pilkington in New York
@edpilkington
Tue 12 Dec 2023 18.24 EST

The United States was looking increasingly isolated on the world stage on Tuesday after a resounding vote at the UN general assembly calling for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza.

Cheers and clapping echoed around the general assembly chamber in New York as the emergency vote was announced. A thumping 153 member states out of the 193 total membership backed the resolution, with only 10 including the US, Israel and Austria voting against, and 23 – including the UK and Germany – abstaining.

The Palestinians had been hoping for an emphatic result as a demonstration of the unequivocal global desire for an end to Israel’s bombardment of Gaza – and they got it. By contrast, the previous UN resolution calling for a “humanitarian truce” on 27 October attracted 120 votes in favor, 14 against, with 45 abstentions.
The vote highlighted the stiffening consensus around the world for the need for a stop to Israel’s relentless assault on Gaza which has left more than 18,000 Palestinians dead. Reports indicate that up to 70% of the fatalities have been women and children.
______________
Balance at link.
0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  0  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 02:36 am
Bob, you should check where you’re getting your news.
______________________
https://www.democracynow.org/2023/11/16/ccr_genocide

“Failure to Prevent Genocide”: Biden Sued as U.S. Provides Arms & Support for Israel’s Gaza Assault

As Israel rejects growing international calls for a ceasefire in Gaza, the Center for Constitutional Rights in the United States is suing President Biden for failing to prevent genocide. The center is seeking an emergency order to block Biden, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin from providing further military funding, arms and diplomatic support to Israel. Katherine Gallagher, a senior attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights on the case, argues the U.S. is complicit with Israel in the “crime of crimes” by “aiding and abetting genocide” with military aid, advisers and political support despite clear signs of intent to collectively punish the Palestinian population.

0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  0  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 02:45 am
I thought at least one more showing Biden as a globally denounced party to the genocide may help update you on what’s happening in the world, Bob.

https://theintercept.com/2023/10/19/israel-gaza-biden-genocide-war-crimes/

GOING ALL-IN FOR ISRAEL MAY MAKE BIDEN COMPLICIT IN GENOCIDE
Human rights lawyers warned Biden that his unconditional support for the war on Gaza may implicate the U.S. in Israel’s crimes.
Alice Speri

THE U.S. GOVERNMENT may be complicit under international law in Israel’s unfolding genocide of the Palestinian people, a group of legal scholars warned the Biden administration and the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court.

Lawyers at the Center for Constitutional Rights issued the dire warning to President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin in a 44-page emergency briefOpens in a new tab on Wednesday, on the heels of Biden’s trip to the Middle East. There, Biden reiterated his administration’s unwavering support for Israel — even as the Israeli government wages an unprecedented bombing campaign on the occupied Gaza Strip in retaliation for a horrific attack by Hamas that killed more than 1,400 Israeli citizens.

“Israel’s mass bombings and denial of food, water, and electricity are calculated to destroy the Palestinian population in Gaza,” Katherine Gallagher, senior attorney with CCR and a legal representative for victims in the pending ICC investigation in Palestine, told The Intercept. “U.S. officials can be held responsible for their failure to prevent Israel’s unfolding genocide, as well as for their complicity, by encouraging it and materially supporting it.”

“We recognize that we make serious charges in this document — but they are not unfounded,” she added. “There is a credible basis for these claims.”

A State Department spokesperson declined to comment, saying, “As a general matter, we don’t offer public evaluations of reports or briefs by outside groups.” The White House and Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment. On Wednesday, the U.S. vetoed a United Nations Security Council resolutionOpens in a new tab that condemned all violence against civilians and urged humanitarian aid to Palestinians in Gaza. The U.S. opposed the resolution because it did not reference Israel’s right to defend itself.

_________________

Balance at link.

Bob, where have you been getting your news?

izzythepush
 
  0  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 04:18 am
@blatham,
You know nothing about the trans community.

And dismissing your very real red flag as a "semantic irrelevance" shows you don't care about them at all.

If you really gave a **** you'd learn, but you don't.

We do not mean exactly the same thing at all.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  0  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 04:20 am
@blatham,
Unlike the Palestinian children.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 06:02 am
Quote:
Watchdog warns of 'unprecedented surge' in unauthorised Jewish settlements in occupied West Bank
While the world’s attention has been focused on war in Gaza, Jewish settlers have quietly carried out an “unprecedented surge” of unauthorised moves in the occupied West Bank, an Israeli watchdog group has warned.

A report by Peace Now found that settlers have established a record number of nine unauthorised settlement outposts since the start of the war in October. The group’s team said it had also documented the creation of more than a dozen new dirt paths and roads.

“The three months of war in Gaza are being exploited by settlers to establish facts on the ground,” the report said.

The group said that settlers were “disregarding the legal status of the land” by constructing outposts on private Palestinian lands and restricting Palestinian movement in the West Bank. The report continued:

The permissive military and political environment allow the reckless construction and land seizure almost unchecked, with minimal adherence to the law. The result is not only physical harm to Palestinians and their lands but also a significant political shift in the West Bank.

Most of the new outposts consist only of a few tents and an Israeli flag, the report said. But many such outposts have evolved into more permanent developments over the years.

Israel’s coalition government is dominated by supporters of the settler movement, including those who want to annex some or all of the West Bank. Most countries view all settlement construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem to be a violation of international law.


https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2024/jan/05/middle-east-crisis-live-updates-antony-blinken-israel-palestine-gaza-hamas
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 06:23 am
@bobsal u1553115,
bobsal u1553115 wrote:

They did not want Iraqi oil, they wanted to cut Iraqi oil production to support increased prices of oil as US production ramped up after fracking kicked in.



Quote:
Iraq invasion was about oil
Maximising Persian Gulf oil flows to avert a potential global energy crisis motivated Iraq War planners - not WMD or democracy

Yesterday was the 11th anniversary of the 2003 Iraq War - yet to this day, few media reflections on the conflict accurately explore the extent to which opening up Persian Gulf energy resources to the world economy was a prime driver behind the Anglo-American invasion.

The overwhelming narrative has been one of incompetence and failure in an otherwise noble, if ill-conceived and badly managed endeavour to free Iraqis from tyranny. To be sure, the conduct of the war was indeed replete with incompetence at a colossal scale - but this doesn't erase the very real mendacity of the cold, strategic logic that motivated the war's US and British planners in the first place.

According to the infamous Project for a New American Century (PNAC) document endorsed by senior Bush administration officials as far back as 1997, "While the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification" for the US "to play a more permanent role in Gulf regional security," "the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein."

So Saddam's WMD was not really the issue - and neither was Saddam himself.

The real issue is candidly described in a 2001 report on "energy security" - commissioned by then US Vice-President Dick Cheney - published by the Council on Foreign Relations and the James Baker Institute for Public Policy. It warned of an impending global energy crisis that would increase "US and global vulnerability to disruption", and leave the US facing "unprecedented energy price volatility."

The main source of disruption, the report observed, is "Middle East tension", in particular, the threat posed by Iraq. Critically, the documented illustrated that US officials had lost all faith in Saddam due his erratic and unpredictable energy export policies. In 2000, Iraq had "effectively become a swing producer, turning its taps on and off when it has felt such action was in its strategic interest to do so." There is a "possibility that Saddam Hussein may remove Iraqi oil from the market for an extended period of time" in order to damage prices:

"Iraq remains a destabilising influence to... the flow of oil to international markets from the Middle East. Saddam Hussein has also demonstrated a willingness to threaten to use the oil weapon and to use his own export programme to manipulate oil markets. This would display his personal power, enhance his image as a pan-Arab leader... and pressure others for a lifting of economic sanctions against his regime. The United States should conduct an immediate policy review toward Iraq including military, energy, economic and political/diplomatic assessments. The United States should then develop an integrated strategy with key allies in Europe and Asia, and with key countries in the Middle East, to restate goals with respect to Iraqi policy and to restore a cohesive coalition of key allies."

The Iraq War was only partly, however, about big profits for Anglo-American oil conglomerates - that would be a bonus (one which in the end has failed to materialise to the degree hoped for - not for want of trying though).

The real goal - as Greg Muttitt documented in his book Fuel on the Fire citing declassified Foreign Office files from 2003 onwards - was stabilising global energy supplies as a whole by ensuring the free flow of Iraqi oil to world markets - benefits to US and UK companies constituted an important but secondary goal:

"The most important strategic interest lay in expanding global energy supplies, through foreign investment, in some of the world's largest oil reserves – in particular Iraq. This meshed neatly with the secondary aim of securing contracts for their companies. Note that the strategy documents released here tend to refer to 'British and global energy supplies.' British energy security is to be obtained by there being ample global supplies – it is not about the specific flow."

To this end, as Whitehall documents obtained by the Independent show, the US and British sought to privatise Iraqi oil production with a view to allow foreign companies to takeover. Minutes of a meeting held on 12 May 2003 said:

"The future shape of the Iraqi industry will affect oil markets, and the functioning of Opec, in both of which we have a vital interest."

A "desirable" outcome for Iraqi's crippled oil industry, officials concluded, is:

"... an oil sector open and attractive to foreign investment, with appropriate arrangements for the exploitation of new fields."

The documents added that "foreign companies' involvement seems to be the only possible solution" to make Iraq a reliable oil exporter. This, however, would be "politically sensitive", and would "require careful handling to avoid the impression that we are trying to push the Iraqis down one particular path."

Media analyses claiming lazily that there was no planning for the aftermath of the Iraq War should look closer at the public record. The reality is that extensive plans for postwar reconstruction were pursued, but they did not consider humanitarian and societal issues of any significance, focusing instead on maintaining the authoritarian structures of Saddam's brutal regime after his removal, while upgrading Iraq's oil infrastructure to benefit foreign investors.

A series of news reports, for instance, confirmed how the State Department had set up 17 separate working groups to work out this post-war plan. Iraq would be "governed by a senior US military officer... with a civilian administrator", which would "initially impose martial law", while Iraqis would be relegated to the sidelines as "advisers" to the US administration. The US envisaged "a broad and protracted American role in managing the reconstruction of the country... with a continued role for thousands of US troops there for years to come", in "defence of the country's oil fields", which would eventually be "privatised" along with "other supporting industries."

The centrality of concerns about energy to Iraq War planning was most candidly confirmed eight years ago by a former senior British Army official in Iraq, James Ellery, currently director of British security firm and US defence contractor, Aegis.

Brigadier-General James Ellery CBE, the Foreign Office's Senior Adviser to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad since 2003, had confirmed the critical role of Iraqi oil reserves in alleviating a "world shortage" of conventional oil. The Iraq War has helped to head off what Ellery described as "the tide of Easternisation" – a shift in global political and economic power toward China and India, to whom goes "two thirds of the Middle East's oil." His remarks were made as part of a presentation at the School of Oriental & African Studies (SOAS), University of London, sponsored by the Iraqi Youth Foundation, on 22nd April 2008:

"The reason that oil reached $117 a barrel last week was less to do with security of supply… than World shortage."

He went on to emphasise the strategic significance of Iraqi petroleum fields in relation to the danger of production peaks being breached in major oil reserves around the world:

"Russia's production has peaked at 10 million barrels per day; Africa has proved slow to yield affordable extra supplies – from Sudan and Angola for example. Thus the only near-term potential increase will be from Iraq."

Whether Iraq began "favouring East or West" could therefore be "de-stabilising" not only "within the region but to nations far beyond which have an interest."

"Iraq holds the key to stability in the region", Ellery continued, due to its "relatively large, consuming population," its being home to "the second largest reserve of oil – under exploited", and finally its geostrategic location "on the routes between Asia, Europe, Arabia and North Africa - hence the Silk Road."

Despite escalating instability and internal terrorism, Iraq is now swiftly reclaiming its rank as one of the world's fastest-growing exporters, cushioning the impact of supply outages elsewhere and thus welcomed by OPEC. Back in 2008, Ellery had confirmed Allied ambitions to "raise Iraqi's oil production from 2.5 million bpd today to 3 million by next year and maybe ultimately 6 million barrels per day."

Thus, the primary motive of the war - mobilising Iraqi oil production to sustain global oil flows and moderate global oil prices - has, so far, been fairly successful according to the International Energy Agency.

Eleven years on, there should be no doubt that the 2003 Iraq War was among the first major resource wars of the 21st century. It is unlikely to be the last.


https://www.theguardian.com/environment/earth-insight/2014/mar/20/iraq-war-oil-resources-energy-peak-scarcity-economy

It's a bit like saying that Goldfinger wasn't interested in America's gold reserves when he tried to contaminate them with nuclear waste.

I know it's fiction, but is struck me as the best comparison.

The Iranian coup was about oil. Iran was about to nationalise the oil industry which is why MI5/CIA launched a coup.

One of the key players was Theodore Roosevelt's grandson.
izzythepush
 
  0  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 06:47 am
@bobsal u1553115,
bobsal u1553115 wrote:


Joe Biden has been in office for three years, there's 70 years of this **** oh HIS shoulders? What's your point?



I think Biden's crime, like most of his predecessors, was to kick this into the long grass and turn a blind eye to most Israeli crimes.

That changed after the terrorist attack by Hamas. Biden could have insisted upon a more proportionate response by threatening to withhold military aid and refusing to use the UN veto.

He did neither of those things, instead he pretty much gave Netanyahu carte blanche to do whatever he wanted.

I know there's been a bit of hand wringing from the administration over the past few weeks, but none of this appears to have had impact on how the IDF is carrying out its operations.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  2  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 07:03 am
@izzythepush,
huh?
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 07:06 am
@Lash,
From all of these:

https://able2know.org/topic/555216-733#post-7346290
hightor
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Jan, 2024 07:07 am
Quote:
Iraq invasion was about oil


But there's a bit of ambiguity built into that statement. Sure, it was "about" oil. Everything in the Mideast is influenced by the petroleum economy and its role in the world economy. Regional stability was the goal and, showing great hubris, the planners of the war actually thought that they could establish a secure base for western corporations to set up shop.

bobsal wrote:
They did not want Iraqi oil, they wanted to cut Iraqi oil production to support increased prices of oil as US production ramped up after fracking kicked in.

This is also true. The two statements are not mutually exclusive. It's not as if the US wanted to get its hands specifically on the oil produced in Iraq. It wanted more stability in the world supply and it wanted a stable market in which to sell its own petroleum at a steady profitable level.
 

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