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US-Iran ties: Has the US kicked the hornet’s nest?

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US-Iran ties: Has the US kicked the hornet’s nest?
Global Village Space |


M. K. Bhadrakumar |

I have in my personal collection a riveting document relating to the great plunder of the state resources of post-Soviet Russia in the early nineties with the connivance of American advisors seconded to Boris Yeltsin’s government. It is in the nature of a testimony, given by Anne Williamson, a brave American journalist, before the Committee on Banking and Financial Services of the US House of Representatives in Washington DC, on September 21, 1999.

Anne Williamson’s widely read unpublished manuscript
The Pentagon version is that the Americans first alerted the Russians, using a special hotline, but Russians either couldn’t reach the Syrians or failed to convince them to turn around after which US jets carried out the airstrikes that destroyed the ground positions.

Williamson was an unusual American journalist at the Wall Street Journal – a Russophile – based in Russia in the early nineties. A major New York publisher signed her to a contract for a book on post-Soviet Russia in 1993. But when she finally delivered a manuscript in 1997, her scathing criticism of the Clinton Administration (and, especially of George Soros) made the manuscript radioactive. No publisher would take it. Williamson’s Contagion The Betrayal of Liberty: Russia and the United States in the 1990s probably holds the world record for an unpublished book most widely read in manuscript.

Anne Williamson just walked up from the attic of my mind while I was reading about the latest developments in Syria – the US air strike against a military convoy flying Syrian flags in the country’s southeast, near Al-Tanf town, on Friday. It marked the first time the US military targeted regime forces in Syria’s six-year civil war. The air strike comes on the heels of the US missile attack in Syria in April against a joint Syrian/ Russian air base near the city of Homs.

Read more: Has the US created another excuse to strike Syria?

The Americans claim that the Syrian convoy came too close to a US-British commando base training Syrian ‘rebels’ and failed to respond to multiple warnings. The Pentagon version is that the Americans first alerted the Russians, using a special hotline, but Russians either couldn’t reach the Syrians or failed to convince them to turn around after which US jets carried out the airstrikes that destroyed the ground positions.

There are no intestacy laws when nations die without any clear heirs. An ugly scramble ensues to appropriate the deceased nation’s property and assets, as Williamson recounted in her chilling story about post-Soviet Russia. The same sad thing happened to the Ottomans. But Syria’s fate may turn out to be greatly tragic because the predators might simply carve out the country nicely for themselves – like on Thanksgiving Day.

The struggles of external powers in Syria
The Atlantic magazine carries an essay dwelling on the grim struggle that lies ahead between the external powers to carve out their spheres of influence in Syria. It says, “As ISIS loses strength and territory in Syria, the endgame of the civil war is drawing nearer and the various powers engaged in that struggle are shedding a common enemy. The result is a race to carve out spheres of influence—and the United States under Trump appears to be getting in on the action.”

Read more: Fraying US-Turkey relations over US support of Syrian Kurds

The really fascinating thing to watch will be how Russia reacts to the US military moves to gain control of southern Syria in the region not far from the border with Israel and Jordan.

The perspective from Beirut, as a TASS report outlines, is that the struggle in Syria’s south-eastern border region is for control of the highway from Baghdad heading toward Damascus, which is an important artery for Iran to ferry supplies to Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon. The US seems to be choking the Iranian route. The Israelis have been demanding that the Iranians and Hezbollah should be kept at arm’s length from southern Syria. But another Russian commentary draws attention to the possibility that al-Tanf is situated on the approaches to the eastern Syrian city of Deir ez-Zor, which is an area rich in oil deposits and could be in the sights of the Americans. (Sputnik). Of course, the two interpretations are not really contradictory.

Read full article:

US-Iran ties: Has the US kicked the hornet’s nest?
 
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But another Russian commentary draws attention to the possibility that al-Tanf is situated on the approaches to the eastern Syrian city of Deir ez-Zor, which is an area rich in oil deposits and could be in the sights of the Americans. (
Sputnik). Of course, the two interpretations are not really contradictory.

Read full article:

US-Iran ties: Has the US kicked the hornet’s nest?

Your oil conspiracy doesn't fly with the real world facts. The US hasn't imported Iraqi oil in significant quantities and I'm sure we will never import significant Syrian oil. China was the country that benefited from Iraqi oil the most until they switched to Russia due to Ukraine sanctions.

Plus we all know oil is on the way out.
 
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Plus we all know oil is on the way out.

Its actually in !!

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ChinaOildCons-052511.gif

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Latest report: May 2017
 
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Not for long. China sucking up oil is only a temporary situation as they are aggresively moving to electric cars. Expect their oil imports to also start tanking.
What about industry and how will they generate electricity. Currently Solar or wind aren't very efficient. :bunny::yahoo:
 
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What about industry and how will they generate electricity. Currently Solar or wind aren't very efficient. :bunny::yahoo:

They have the ability to build as much power generation as they need. If they have to add 100 nuclear power plants and 1000 sq km of solar panels they will.
 
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Oil will remain relevant in the energy sector for years to come. There is no (complete) substitute for it.

Conversely, this GVS source seems to be a propaganda outlet of socialism. The tone of its articles imply as much.
 
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