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Notice!
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And all the sons of Congressmen!
And the two adorable 100 Proof Bush daughters! (Ginna and
Tonic)
“As democracy is perfected, the office of president
represents, more and more closely, the inner soul of the people, On
some great and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach
their heart’s desire at last and the White House will be adorned
by a downright moron.”
- H.L. Mencken
“That we are to stand by the president, right or wrong
is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to
the American public.”
-Theodore
Roosevelt
"Actions are held to be good or bad, not on their own merits, but
according to who does them. There is almost no kind of outrage
- - - -torture, imprisonment without trial, assassination, the
bombing of civilians - - - - which does not change its moral color
when it is committed by our side. The nationalist not only
does not disapprove of atrocities committed by his own side, he has
remarkable capacity for not even hearing about them."
-George Orwell
"Under
the Bush administration, openness and accountability have been
replaced by secrecy and evasion of responsibility. They abuse their
power, conceal their actions from the American people, and refuse to
hold officials accountable."
-Senator Edward M.
Kennedy
“George
W. Bush is deeply interested in Deep Space Exploration. His next
project will be to circle Uranus and search for Klingons…..”
-Dallas Herald
“Once a Republican, always a coprophile…:”
-Mother Theresa
“A
government official is a man who has risen from obscurity to
something worse.”
-Pat Robertson
"The
voters decide nothing. Those that count the votes decide
everything."
-J.V. Stalin
In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and
educational purposes.
America’s Enemies!
There are four entities who represent the most
dangerous enemies to American liberties since George III.
They are:
1.
The Neocons or Likudists who owe their personal allegiance to another
country and now completely control our foreign policy. They lied and
deceived us into the Iraq war and are demanding that more and more
American soldiers die to preserve their own country and ideals.
2.
The Christian Evangelical right who is trying to force the United States
into becoming a theocracy under their rule. They know in their
hearts that they alone can restructure a secular humanist America
into their idea of Heaven on Earth.
3.
An element of American society that call themselves Patriots and are
obsessively militaristic and great admirers of the corporate or
fascistic state. Many of these have been very minor members of the
American military and as a counterbalance to their reserve or rear
area tours of duty, are rabidly in favor of draconian military
action, the bloodier the better. Usually these drumbeaters are too
old, or too fat, to fight and have no sons of draft age.
4.
George W. Bush, who is the worst president in the history of the United
States and directly responsible for the huge death tolls in Iraq, is
determined to rule the United States until God puts a stop to him
and is even more determined to force the American people into
becoming obedient, Christian and self-sacrificing lemmings who
worship at his shrine and march in step.
Recommended reading
We gather information, on a daily
basis, from many websites. There are a number of publications that
are well worth viewing for their intelligent reporting of national
and international news. All of those sources, listed below, are
daily newspapers with the exception of the Asia Times. The latter is
a very well written site with in-depth articles
that are worth reading.
The
New York Times: www.nytimes.com
The Washington Post: www.washingtonpost.com
The Christian Science Monitor: www.csmonitor.com
The Guardian: www.guardian.co.uk
Seattle Post-Intelligencer: www.seattlepi.nwsource.com
Asia Times www.atimes.com
Note:
Very little of the information in this edition of TBR news has come
from the mainline American media. It is just not there. Most of it
has come from foreign sources and the Internet. Most of our sources
can be seen on the main page.
The Voice of the White House
November 11, 2005:
“Government offices are packed to the Plimsoll line with reams of
reports, memos, plans, suggestions and enough generally useless
papers to cover the State of California three times over. I have
been reading a very high-level report, never mind its source, that
sheds a very bright light on the past, present and the future of the
United States’ actions in the Middle East. This report runs to
about 150 pages and is filled with maps, charts, excerpts of
intelligence intercepts from England, Russia, Iran, China, Turkey
and Israel. It is one of the most revealing documents I have ever
read but if I printed it in toto, I would be down at
Gitmo in an orange jumpsuit being waterboarded by the beady-eyed
perverts from the CIA’s Torture Brigade. This is an excerpt with
only one lone map but I assure you that it is very important
reading.
It
shows, with great clarity, the role played by Vice President Dick
Cheney, his Halliburton group, allied American and British oil
companies, Israeli political and military entities and other such
creatures in shaping our military and foreign policy.
Read it and mourn for the escalation of the mindless economic
wars, for the damage to America’s world image and see it as a
monument to the colossal failure of the bankrupt Bush/Cheney
politico-economic policies.
If
you happened to have voted for Bush, perhaps you would be better off
sticking your head into the oven and turning on the gas (apologies
here to Abe Foxman).
Brian
Harring, who writes for TBR News, has had the following brief
comment published in the Washington Post. It makes an excellent précis:
The rationale behind the
obvious concept, and probably the planning, for a U.S. military
adventure into Syria is based entirely on economics, not military
need. There is a great deal of oil in northern Iraq. Northern Iraq
is Kurdish territory.
At the present time, there
is no practical way to use the current Iraqi pipeline system to ship
this oil out. This is due to the guerrilla activities against the
pipeline system. The postulation is that if Syria were occupied by
American troops, an oil pipeline could be built across that country
to Israel and their port city of Haifa on the Mediterranean.
In this way, much needed
oil can be accessed by both the United States and Israel, a
potential breeding ground for pan-Muslim activists can be
neutralized and the state of Israel will benefit, not only from oil
revenues but from the removal of an old enemy.
The simplest answer to a
complex problem is generally the correct one, bloggers not
withstanding.
Brian
Harring: Washington
Post, Nov 8, 2005
Excerpts (see links at the end of the study for further background information)
“The
rapid shrinking of international oil production has greatly alarmed
responsible U.S. officials, who realize that the United States has
become vulnerable to a serious diminution “ of vital
oil.resources. Vice President Dick Cheney as a “prominent
member of the government and a strong influence with both the office
of the President and Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld”……”has
long recognized this looming threat and has been in year-long
contact with important members of the American petroleum
industry.” “As a strong advocate of the U.S. seizure of Iraqi
oil fields with their immense untapped reserves…” Cheney was a
powerful and very effective advocate of the Iraqi war. “Now,
with the oppressive stalemate in Iraq and growing public disapproval
of the war,” Cheney has hit upon a plan, already suggested to
him by Israeli and industry spokespeople on his staff. This is to
secure defensible pipeline capacity from the friendly
Kurdish-controlled northern Iraqi oil fields, through Syria or
Jordan to the Mediterranean. “Jordan has been rejected because
Israeli interests have expressed, very strongly, that such a
pipeline should terminate at the Israeli port of Haifa.” The
fact that a U.S. alliance with the Kurdish section of Iraq will only
serve to severely antagonize Turkey,
who has a hostile attitude towards the Kurds, “it has been
jointly decided between the United States and Israel that Turkish
connections, while important, are not as important as removing Syria
as an enemy of Israel, providing a safe and easily controlled route
for friendly Iraqi oil and, more important, to allow the free and
unhindered passage of American military supplies and troops into
Iraq without subjecting them to a possible military attack from the
Iranians” who are armed with advanced Russian rocketry. The
damage these rockets “could inflict on American, and British
naval and civilian shipping in the Persian Gulf is considered as an
unacceptable risk.”
“Israel
is seriously considering restarting a strategically important oil
pipeline that once transferred oil from the Iraqi city of Mosul to
Israel's northern port of Haifa. Given the Israeli claim of a
positive US approach to the plan, the Israeli project provides
grounds for a theory that the ongoing war against Iraq is in part a
joint US, British and Israeli design for reshaping the Middle East
to serve their particular interests, including their oil
requirements.”
Note:
The following story appeared as this article was in preparation. Ed
U.S. checking
possibility of pumping oil from northern Iraq to Haifa, via Jordan
By
Amiram Cohen
November 11, 2005
Haaraz
The
United States has asked Israel to check the possibility of pumping
oil from Iraq to the oil refineries in Haifa. The request came in a
telegram last week from a senior Pentagon official to a top Foreign
Ministry official in Jerusalem.
The Prime Minister's Office, which views the
pipeline to Haifa as a "bonus" the U.S. could give to
Israel in return for its unequivocal support for the American-led
campaign in Iraq, had asked the Americans for the official telegram.
The new pipeline would take oil from the
Kirkuk area, where some 40 percent of Iraqi oil is produced, and
transport it via Mosul, and then across Jordan to Israel. The U.S.
telegram included a request for a cost estimate for repairing the
Mosul-Haifa pipeline that was in use prior to 1948. During the War
of Independence, the Iraqis stopped the flow of oil to Haifa and the
pipeline fell into disrepair over the years.
The National Infrastructure Ministry has
recently conducted research indicating that construction of a
42-inch diameter pipeline between Kirkuk and Haifa would cost about
$400,000 per kilometer. The old Mosul-Haifa pipeline was only 8
inches in diameter.
National Infrastructure Minister Yosef
Paritzky said yesterday that the port of Haifa is an attractive
destination for Iraqi oil and that he plans to discuss this matter
with the U.S. secretary of energy during his planned visit to
Washington next month. Paritzky added that the plan depends on
Jordan's consent and that Jordan would receive a transit fee for
allowing the oil to piped through its territory. The minister noted,
however, that "due to pan-Arab concerns, it will be hard for
the Jordanians to agree to the flow of Iraqi oil via Jordan and
Israel."
Sources in Jerusalem confirmed yesterday that
the Americans are looking into the possibility of laying a new
pipeline via Jordan and Israel. (There is also a pipeline running
via Syria that has not been used in some three decades.)
Iraqi oil is now being transported via Turkey
to a small Mediterranean port near the Syrian border. The transit
fee collected by Turkey is an important source of revenue for the
country. This line has been damaged by sabotage twice in recent
weeks and is presently out of service.
In response to rumors about the possible
Kirkuk-Mosul-Haifa pipeline, Turkey has warned Israel that it would
regard this development as a serious blow to Turkish-Israeli
relations.
Sources in Jerusalem suggest that the American
hints about the alternative pipeline are part of an attempt to apply
pressure on Turkey.
Iraq is one of the world's largest oil
producers, with the potential of reaching about 2.5 million barrels
a day. Oil exports were halted after the Gulf War in 1991 and then
were allowed again on a limited basis (1.5 million barrels per day)
to finance the import of food and medicines. Iraq is currently
exporting several hundred thousand barrels of oil per day.
During his visit to Washington in about two
weeks, Paritzky also plans to discuss the possibility of U.S. and
international assistance for joint Israeli-Palestinian projects in
the areas of energy and infrastructure, natural gas, desalination
and electricity
From the report:
“Israeli
National Infrastructure Minister Yosef Paritzky considers the
pipeline project as economically justifiable as it would reduce the
country's cost of oil imports. This is currently very high, as
Israel imports oil from Russia. There would also be a strategic
justification for the project, as importing oil from an oil supplier
in Israel's close proximity would increase its fuel security and
would address its major handicap, that is, its total dependence on
imported fuel from far-away suppliers.
Paritzky
has requested an assessment of the Mosul-Haifa pipeline's current
state, which ceased to operate in 1948. Presumably, the pipeline
will require major repair and/or upgrading, if not an overhaul, as
it has not been in use for more than half a century. However, its
full operation, including the required repair work, needs the
consent of Iraq, the would-be oil supplier, and Syria, a country
neighboring both Iraq and Israel, through which the pipeline passes.
Iraqi
consent would have been out of the question as long as the regime of
Saddam Hussein was in power. As acknowledged by the Israeli
minister, a prerequisite for the project is, therefore, a new regime
in Baghdad with friendly ties with Israel. However, such a regime”
“will still require Syria's consent to operationalize the
pipeline. Given the overall political environment in the Middle East
and Israel's continued occupation of Syria's Golan Heights, the
existing Syrian regime will never grant its consent as long as the
status quo prevails. As stated by the Iranian government, during the
Iran-Iraq war (1980-88) when Iraq enjoyed cordial and close
relations with Israel's mentor, the United States, Israel tried, but
failed, to resume the oil flow through the pipeline. Syria, a friend
of Iran and an enemy of Iraq, blocked the flow of Iraqi oil.”
“The
Caspian Sea region has become a central focus point for untapped oil
and natural gas resources from the southern portion of the former Soviet
Union. Beginning in May 2005, oil from the southern sections
of the Caspian Sea began pumping through
a new pipeline (built by a BP-led consortium) to the Turkish seaport
of Ceyhan. The 8-year effort of Western capital, technology, and
diplomacy had aimed to decrease reliance on Middle Eastern oil.
However, in recent years, new oil finds and production performance
in the Caspian region have not met levels that had been expected in
the 1990s. At any rate, the Caspian Sea's
production levels, even at their peak, will be much smaller than
OPEC countries' output. Production levels are expected to reach 4
million barrels per day (bbl/d) in 2015, compared to 45 million
bbl/d for the OPEC countries in that year”
“The Destabilization of areas
viewed as vital for the unimpeded flow of Mid-Eastern oil”
An overview:
“The
Caspian region contains tremendous untapped hydrocarbon reserves.
Just to give an idea of the scale, proven natural gas reserves equal
more than 236 trillion cubic feet. The region's total oil reserves
may well reach more than 60 billion barrels of oil. Some estimates
are as high as 200 billion barrels. In 1995, the region was
producing only 870,000 barrels per day. By 2010, western companies
could increase production to about 4.5 million barrels a day, an
increase of more than 500 percent in only 15 years. If this occurs,
the region would represent about 5 percent of the world's total oil
production.
One
major problem has yet to be resolved: how to get the region's vast
energy resources to the markets where they are needed. Central Asia
is isolated. Their natural resources are land locked, both
geographically and politically. Each of the countries in the
Caucasus and Central Asia faces difficult political challenges. Some
have unsettled wars or latent conflicts. Others have evolving
systems where the laws and even the courts are dynamic and changing.
In addition, a chief technical obstacle which we in the industry
face in transporting oil is the region's existing pipeline
infrastructure.
Because
the region's pipelines were constructed during the Moscow-centered
Soviet period, they tend to head north and west toward Russia. There
are no connections to the south and east. But Russia is currently
unlikely to absorb large new quantities of foreign oil. It's
unlikely to be a significant market for new energy in the next
decade. It lacks the capacity to deliver it to other markets.
Two
major infrastructure projects are seeking to meet the need for
additional export capacity. One, under the aegis of the Caspian
Pipeline Consortium, plans to build a pipeline west from the
northern Caspian to the Russian Black Sea port of Novorossiysk. Oil
would then go by tanker through the Bosporus to the Mediterranean
and world markets.
The
other project is sponsored by the Azerbaijan International
Operating Company, a consortium of 11 foreign oil companies,
including four American companies, Unocal, Amoco, Exxon and Pennzoil.
This consortium conceives of two possible routes, one line would
angle north and cross the north Caucasus to Novorossiysk. The other
route would cross Georgia to a shipping terminal on the Black Sea.
This second route could be extended west and south across Turkey to
the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan.
But
even if both pipelines were built, they would not have enough total
capacity to transport all the oil expected to flow from the region
in the future. Nor would they have the capability to move it to the
right markets. Other export pipelines must be built.
The
second option is to build a pipeline south from Central Asia to the
Indian Ocean. One obvious route south would cross Iran, but this is
foreclosed for American companies because of U.S. sanctions
legislation. The only other possible route is across Afghanistan,
which has of course its own unique challenges. The country has been
involved in bitter warfare for almost two decades, and is still
divided by civil war. From the outset, we have made it clear that construction of
the pipeline we have proposed across Afghanistan could not begin
until a recognized government is in place that has the confidence of
governments, lenders, and our company.”
“Destabilization
in: Iran- 1953:
Operation AJAX …..
Guatemala –1953: Operation PBSUCCESS
…
Indonesia- 1965….
Chile-
1973….
Georgia-2003….
Ukraine- 2005…..
Uzbekistan- 2005
(unsuccessful)”
(Technical material redacted. Ed.)
Annexe:
“Preliminary
Report on Muslim Riots in France….”
“At the suggestion of the American Vice President, Cheney, the
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, with the technical assistance of
both the Israeli MOSSAD and AMAN, have fomented domestic civil
strife inside the French Republic.”
“MOSSAD penetration of dissident Muslim groups in France,
permitted the technical coordination…” ” of the attacks in: Paris, Rouen, Lille,
Nice, Dijon, Strasbourg, Marseilles, Bordeaux, Rennes, Pau, Orleans,
and Toulouse. Later, the closely coordinated rioting spread further
to Lyon, Roubaix, Avignon, Saint-Dizier, Drancy, Evreux, Nantes,
Dunkirk, Montpellier, Valenciennes, Cannes, and Tourcoing.”
“Funds for this were supplied entirely by the CIA and technical
assistance by the MOSSAD was further enhanced by the use of a
cell-phone system believed to be secure from French
interdiction….” “The
Israeli official attitude towards France is coloured by the
perception of barely-disguised anti-Semitism on the part of French
officialdom as manifested by”
specific incidents listed. “Thusly, the hostility of the
French population against resident Arabs is guaranteed,”…
“to permit military action in the former French colony of
Syria, without let or hindrance….”
Summation:
“* The Turkish port of Ceyhan is on the Mediterranean Sea north
of the Syrian border.
* Since the Turkish Parliament refused US invasion troops overland
access to Iraq via Turkey at the last minute in February 2003,
Turkey has been re-evaluated by Washington as an unreliable ally.
* Now that Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan, bordering on Turkey,
and Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan across the Caspian
Sea, are no longer part of the Soviet Union, Turkey is less
strategically important anyway, as a US ally.
* The pipelines from Central Asia to the Black Sea are
strategically vulnerable to Russia blockading the Bosphorus.
* When Syria and Iran are either destabilized or invaded
and come under US domination, Kurdish Northern Iran and Kurdish
Syria could join with Kurdish Iraq in a Greater Kurdistan. This may (or
has?) been held out to the Kurds as a carrot to encourage their
buy-in to the larger plan.
* This larger plan would be: To build a new, or refursibh an
existing, oil and
probably also a gas pipeline from the Kurdish Northern Iranian
shores of the Caspian Sea, through Kurdish Iran, into Kurdish Iraq,
to link up with the Mosul-Haifa pipeline through Kurdish Syria into
Northern Israel.
A pipeline running via Syria that has not been used in some three decades.
* Via these mega-pipelines, all the oil and gas of Azerbaijan,
Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Greater Kurdistan (Northern Iran and
Northern Iraq) could flow, safely guarded by the Kurds, from Central
Asia into Israel and the Mediterranean.
* To open a secure line of communication and supply for U.S.
mideasst forces now in Iraq from the secure Mediterranean area,
avoiding the dangers of sending military vessels into the Persian
Gulf where they could be vulnerable to rocket attacks from Iran.
* When (not if) Turkey throws the US out of its airbase at Incirlik,
the US could relocate to a new base in former Northern Iraq, soon
to become Kurdistan, which is far more strategically located to
dominate the region, and this new airbase could also help the
Kurds guard the pipelines down to Haifa.
* Building this new US military facility would provide billions of
dollars of no-bid contracts to KBR and Halliburton. Cheney's stock
options would be worth even more than they are now.
* In order to neutralize any French assistance to their former
colony of Syria and to anger the French population against the
Arabs, joint CIA/Mossad operations have created and maintained
massive and very destructive civil unrest in France by dissident
Arab youths. These action also serve as a warning to other countries
such as England and Germany, that have large Moslem populations that
similar “civil unrest” can just as easily plague their
countries.”

Map
of Caspian Sea pipelines
Links:
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/ED04Ak01.html
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/FA27Ak03.html
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/Caspian/Background.html
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/oil.html
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/1550366.stm
http://www.indiareacts.com/archivefeatures/nat2.asp?recno=10∓ctg=policy
http://www.radioislam.org/racism/fr/juif.htm
http://www.wzo.org.il/en/resources/view.asp?id=828
http://www1.idf.il/aman/site/default.asp
http://www.intelligence.org.il/department/intelligence.htm
http://www.fas.org/irp/world/israel/aman/
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=332835&contrassID=2&subContrassID=1&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y
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