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US Senate Votes to Cripple Iran Oil Exports

Iran should kick all those ambassadors whose countries are sanctioning Iran's central bank just like they kicked British ambassador out:


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this is sparta becoming this is tehran => i love this one. :partay:
 
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Good stuff, the Pariah state needs to be starved.

I just hope Obama does not veto this. I think the economic impact on the west will be minimal. Anyway, better to pay a bit more for oil than allow the IslamoNazis to have nukes.

Iran is a danger to every country in the world.
 
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Good stuff, the Pariah state needs to be starved.

I just hope Obama does not veto this. I think the economic impact on the west will be minimal. Anyway, better to pay a bit more for oil than allow the IslamoNazis to have nukes.

Iran is a danger to every country in the world.

Iran provides for its food, medicine, automobiles and fuel all internally and does not import much except for some cheap Chinese consumer goods. So Iran will be safe if anything the increased oil price will bring benefit for them since the world is always short of oil and energy. On the other hand you have to go and beg Chinese for more loans to import your food, medicine, automobiles and fuel. So it is your loss. Iran will go nuclear eventually if it has not already secretly.

---------- Post added at 08:45 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:43 PM ----------

this is sparta becoming this is tehran => i love this one. :partay:

Yeah, Iran finally took its revenge for the fictional movie "300". Literally.
 
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Can someone explain why India would buy Iranian oil and give them life? Really??
 
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Can someone explain why India would buy Iranian oil and give them life? Really??

Beacuse India looks for its own statergic intrest and it goes by what it feels good for India...India does not have best of best statergic relationship with Iran but again India does not have any kind of fascination to bash Iran too...so in a nutsell India and Iran relationship in kind of neutral to little bit of +ve note...In that context India will go ahead with its bussiness to procure oil from Iran with finding out alternative method of payment that will avoid the sanction.....
 
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Can someone explain why India would buy Iranian oil and give them life? Really??

Because Indians or for that matter world does not have much choice. There are only a limited number of oil suppliers in the world and oil is a finite resource. So if a country stops buying Iranian oil, it has to go and buy oil from another supplier. The other supplier has to cut its supply to another consumer in order to satisfy the new demand. The other consumer has naturally go to Iran to get its needed oil as there is no replacement for it. The problem is bad since there is not much new oil being discovered and there is very little reserve capacity in production. With high oil prices it becomes very difficult to find replacement in oil markets. India tried to get itself away from Iranian oil and it failed miserably. China is in similar situation as is South Korea and Japan.
 
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Good stuff, the Pariah state needs to be starved.

I just hope Obama does not veto this. I think the economic impact on the west will be minimal. Anyway, better to pay a bit more for oil than allow the IslamoNazis to have nukes.

Iran is a danger to every country in the world.
lol
let's all laugh at this guy

note: IMF and World Bank updated their 2009 calculations and increased the growth rate to 3.2 percent so even a bigger lol. In 2011 we will have a 4 percent growth rate. This means almost 20 years of NO RECESSIONARY PERIODS. lmao so much for starving
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Good stuff, the Pariah state needs to be starved.

LOL. :lol:

As the Western economies try to leave Iran, that just leaves more room for China and Russia. Already China is the largest consumer of Iranian oil. Thanks for that. :D

And how can you starve Iran? They have everything they need, and they can always import the rest from us.
 
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What U.S. will do if China continue to buy oil from Iran??? China indeed has $$ and she can pay Iran government through her own banks without using European or U.S. banks.

As long as China and Russia buy oils from Iran, what will that sanction do exactly???



U.S. Senate Backs Sanctions Intended to Cripple Iran Oil Exports

December 01, 2011, 9:31 PM EST

By Indira A.R. Lakshmanan and Asjylyn Loder

Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Senate today unanimously approved a measure to sanction foreign financial institutions that do business with the Central Bank of Iran, a move aimed at reducing the number of countries able to buy Iranian crude oil.

The measure, if enacted into law, would make it more difficult for Iran to get paid for oil sold to foreign buyers. It gives the Obama administration power to bar foreign financial institutions that do business with the Central Bank of Iran from having correspondent accounts in the U.S.

The amendment to the 2012 defense authorization bill, which sets Pentagon policy and spending targets for the fiscal year that started Oct. 1, was sponsored by Senators Mark Kirk, an Illinois Republican, and Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat. It passed by a vote of 100-0.

The Obama administration opposes the amendment on the grounds that, by threatening oil supplies for key Asian and European partners, the move may fracture the international coalition behind coordinated sanctions on Iran and send the price of oil soaring.

“There’s absolutely a risk that, in fact, the price of oil would go up, which would mean that Iran would, in fact, have more money to fuel its nuclear ambitions, not less,” Undersecretary of State Wendy Sherman told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The full Senate is expected to vote on the defense bill later today. The House and Senate will need to negotiate a final bill that would go to President Barack Obama for his signature.

Pressure on Nuclear Program

The aim of the sanctions measure is to deprive Iran of its main source of revenue and thereby force the regime to abandon nuclear weapons work. On Nov. 8, a United Nations atomic inspectors report cited examples of clandestine weapons work, which Iran denied.

The Central Bank of Iran is a vital intermediary for purchasers of Iranian crude because existing sanctions against the Persian Gulf country have so constrained Iran’s ability to use the international financial sector to settle oil trades, said Mark Dubowitz, director of the Iran Energy Project at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington.

Oil is Iran’s main source of income, supplying over 50 percent of the national budget, according to International Monetary Fund figures. Oil provided the Islamic state $56 billion in the first seven months of 2011, according to the U.S. Energy Department. Oil prices have increased 9.7 percent this year to close at $100.20 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

U.S. Undersecretary of Treasury David Cohen testified before the same panel that taking unilateral U.S. action against the central bank is likely to undermine sanctions support that the U.S. has garnered from international partners over the last three years.

EU Action

The European Union today added 180 Iranian officials and companies to a blacklist and debated further measures. On Nov. 21, the U.K., Canada and the U.S. announced new measures, including Britain’s sanctioning of Iran’s financial system.

The top refiners of Iranian oil are China, Japan, India, Italy and South Korea, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

While China has supported four rounds of UN sanctions, leaders in Beijing as well as a number of U.S. allies in Asia and Europe who buy Iranian oil have resisted targeting Iran’s energy products.

“Greece has a certain number of reservations” about an oil cutoff, French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe told reporters at an EU foreign ministers’ meeting in Brussels today. “We have to take account of them and work with the different partners so that the interruption of Iranian deliveries can be offset by higher production in other countries,” he said.

International Coalition

Coordinated action with allies and partners is better than unilateral U.S. action, Cohen suggested. “It is imperative that we act in a way that does not threaten to fracture the international coalition” and “does not inadvertently redound to Iran’s economic benefit,” Cohen testified.

Iran pumped 3.6 million barrels a day last month, a Bloomberg survey showed, and exported an average 2.58 million barrels a day in 2010, according to Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries statistics.

The Senate measure would go into effect July 1 if included in final legislation signed by Obama. The measure would permit the president to waive sanctions for national security reasons or because of insufficient oil supply to replace Iran’s crude.

The timing would allow the market to adapt while rising production from Libya and Iraq helps European refiners offset the loss of Iranian crude, Kirk said in a telephone interview today.

Adjustment Period

“We intentionally put a delay in the language so markets could adjust,” he said.

Iran is the second-largest oil producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries after Saudi Arabia. About 15.5 million barrels of oil a day, about a sixth of global consumption, flows through the Strait of Hormuz between Iran and Oman, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

The Obama administration has imposed numerous restrictions on Iran aimed at cutting off financing, shipping and insurance for Iranian banks and enterprises it accuses of illicit activities.

U.S. Senate Backs Sanctions Intended to Cripple Iran Oil Exports - Businessweek
 
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What U.S. will do if China continue to buy oil from Iran??? China indeed has $$ and she can pay Iran government through her own banks without using European or U.S. banks.

As long as China and Russia buy oils from Iran, what will that sanction do exactly???

Hahaha, finally you say something that makes sense. :tup:

That's right, no one can stop China from buying Iranian oil, and providing technology to them.
 
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Just mind your own business. I write my own opinion and it need no approval from you at all.

Hahaha, finally you say something that makes sense. :tup:

That's right, no one can stop China from buying Iranian oil, and providing technology to them.
 
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Good stuff, the Pariah state needs to be starved.

I just hope Obama does not veto this. I think the economic impact on the west will be minimal. Anyway, better to pay a bit more for oil than allow the IslamoNazis to have nukes.

Iran is a danger to every country in the world.

Jews are safer in Iran than they are in Israel.
 
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hope china provides all the technology for iran to grow.
both civilian and military tech.

china can provide alot of the tech the western world has.
only in certain areas are china still behind western tech.

china is catching up very quick technologically.

once that western monopoly on technologically is ended, the western influence falls.

for example, huawei provides iran with many advanced technology that siemens and cisco used to provide iran.
 
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Iran is one of the most progressive, liberal and modern Muslim nations in the world, on a level with Malaysia and Indonesia, and far from the Arab monarchies.

The Arab monarchies look shiny because they have like 1 citizen for every 50000 South Asians that they trick and enslave. This is a crime against humanity, done to India and Pakistan, by these ruthless dictatorships. Of course they look shiny and beautiful - that's for their royal family and the whites to enjoy. The people who actually built these societies, of course, live in metal shacks.
 
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