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erskine wrote:Seems China want to take part too.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPjxeyG-Ztw

Luzwei wrote:galanter wrote:For years Iran denied nuclear development of any kind at all. When the evidence became overwhelming their response was to admit nuclear development, but to deny it was towards nuclear weapons. If they aren't developing nuclear weapons then throwing open all doors to inspectors should be a simple thing to do. The world waits.
why should they? open to whom? last time I checked Iran is an independent country to which was proven nothing of these allegations.

galanter wrote:Luzwei wrote:galanter wrote:For years Iran denied nuclear development of any kind at all. When the evidence became overwhelming their response was to admit nuclear development, but to deny it was towards nuclear weapons. If they aren't developing nuclear weapons then throwing open all doors to inspectors should be a simple thing to do. The world waits.
why should they? open to whom? last time I checked Iran is an independent country to which was proven nothing of these allegations.
Iran is a party to the Non-Proliferation Treaty and the International Atomic Energy Agency and thus is bound by the treaties of membership. This includes non-proliferation of nuclear weapons and being open to inspection.


brisket wrote:The Iranians say they don't want nukes. They don't have any and aren't making any. Not even the Americans, not even the Israelis claim that they are.
But it probably doesn't matter. Remember how Iraq gave complete access to weapons inspectors and how that didn't matter? The Americans are pants-shittingly scared of any Middle Eastern country that isn't a client state.

Andrew. wrote:brisket wrote:The Iranians say they don't want nukes. They don't have any and aren't making any. Not even the Americans, not even the Israelis claim that they are.
But it probably doesn't matter. Remember how Iraq gave complete access to weapons inspectors and how that didn't matter? The Americans are pants-shittingly scared of any Middle Eastern country that isn't a client state.
Well said.

galanter wrote:Andrew. wrote:brisket wrote:The Iranians say they don't want nukes. They don't have any and aren't making any. Not even the Americans, not even the Israelis claim that they are.
But it probably doesn't matter. Remember how Iraq gave complete access to weapons inspectors and how that didn't matter? The Americans are pants-shittingly scared of any Middle Eastern country that isn't a client state.
Well said.
The UN found Iraq in noncompliance. There was little to no disagreement about this. The disagreement was whether noncompliance automatically triggered the allowing of use of force, or whether an explicit vote on use of force was needed despite agreement Iraq was in noncompliance.
Iran is now in a similar situation. Whatever the state of their nuclear program they are in violation of the treaties they are parties to. This isn't just in the opinion of the US. Many countries agree this is the case. The point of debate is what to do about it.



Luzwei wrote:No, not really. It's really about the oil. It has always been about it. Kuwait, Iraq. Now Iran. Yeah it's about the oil.

galanter wrote:Luzwei wrote:No, not really. It's really about the oil. It has always been about it. Kuwait, Iraq. Now Iran. Yeah it's about the oil.
I guess I just don't know what you mean when you say that then.


galanter wrote:Luzwei wrote:No, not really. It's really about the oil. It has always been about it. Kuwait, Iraq. Now Iran. Yeah it's about the oil.
I guess I just don't know what you mean when you say that then.
Paul Mason wrote:There is only one sure-fire way to provoke an inflation shock and that is to close the Straits of Hormuz, or otherwise cause Middle Eastern oil to cease, temporarily. Diplomacy anyone?

Cranius wrote:It's about oil since if the Straits of Hormuz were to close the resulting spike in oil prices and the inflationary knock-on effect would serve Western economic interests. It's one of the levers Western powers can use to engage in what is called repressonomics, a crude means of solving the debt crisis.Paul Mason wrote:There is only one sure-fire way to provoke an inflation shock and that is to close the Straits of Hormuz, or otherwise cause Middle Eastern oil to cease, temporarily. Diplomacy anyone?
Oil is the issue here, rather than nuclear. If you cause oil prices to rise, you can inflate your debts away.

Cranius wrote:galanter wrote:Luzwei wrote:No, not really. It's really about the oil. It has always been about it. Kuwait, Iraq. Now Iran. Yeah it's about the oil.
I guess I just don't know what you mean when you say that then.
It's about oil since if the Straits of Hormuz were to close the resulting spike in oil prices and the inflationary knock-on effect would serve Western economic interests. It's one of the levers Western powers can use to engage in what is called repressonomics, a crude means of solving the debt crisis.Paul Mason wrote:There is only one sure-fire way to provoke an inflation shock and that is to close the Straits of Hormuz, or otherwise cause Middle Eastern oil to cease, temporarily. Diplomacy anyone?

Wood Goblin wrote:A spike in oil prices could also have a deleterious effect on Western economic interests, if the spike is so severe that retailers find it difficult to absorb. More problematic is how this analysis gels with the pretty universal belief among leftists that bankers control the economic agenda of Western nations. After all, inflation erodes the value of their debt too.

Cranius wrote:Wood Goblin wrote:A spike in oil prices could also have a deleterious effect on Western economic interests, if the spike is so severe that retailers find it difficult to absorb. More problematic is how this analysis gels with the pretty universal belief among leftists that bankers control the economic agenda of Western nations. After all, inflation erodes the value of their debt too.
Well, George Osborne for one is all-in for financial repression. This is why he's releasing 100-year gilts, which operate as a sort of perpetual debt, last issued in the 19th century and first introduced after the South-Sea Bubble.
As it becomes clear that austerity won't work, other riskier options will be pursued. And as you say, the effects could equally be deleterious, but the temptation in the crisis is to displace the problem. You can do this temporally as with long-yield debts or spatially by exporting your crisis in the form of trade wars, embargoes and if it comes to it, actual war.
I mean, they don't need a full-on hot war to spike the prices enough to double gas or petrol. This is why the stand-off with Iran is pure spectacle.
Remember when Enron was instigating rolling black-outs in California in order to spike the energy prices? Think of that but on larger-scale and with millions of more lives at stake.


Cranius wrote:Head of Israeli Military says he doesn't think Iran will develop nuclear weapons:
Iran undecided on nuclear bomb - Israel

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