Matt Collins
Member
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2007
- Messages
- 47,707
Ugh... good thing I just put a tank full of gas in my truck.
low. they prefer to use contract killers anyway (mercenaries).
plus, if they did reinstate the draft could you imagine how many dodgers there would be?
However, the US and Israel will likely use the incursion as an excuse that Iran needs to be contained.
At least 1 here.![]()
Can we start a timeline? I am not sure what time it was in Iraq when Iran suppossedly invaded, as corresponding to the "breaking" news here in the US.
Anyone know?
What time was the invasion, why did it start where it did, when it did?
Who were the first "reporters' on the scene? why were they there? were they embedded?
etc, etc, etc,
its time to start f'in questioning "THE PRESS".
(breathing, breathing)
False flag, anyone?
About 9:30pm local time in Iran.
-t
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/6840337/Iran-invades-Iraqi-territory-to-seize-oil-field.htmlOil prices rose after reports emerged that a unit of Iranian military personnel had raised the Islamic Republic flag on East Maysan oilfield 4.
The Iranian troops were digging in last night almost 24 hours after the incursion was launched. "They positioned tanks around it and dug trenches," General Zafer Nazmi, the head of the Border Police in Basra said. "They are still there, they raised the flag."
...."Iran also announced it was ready to undertake an aggressive expansion of its uranium production programme in defiance of international efforts to prevent its acquisition of an atomic weapon.
It said it would install third and fourth generation centrifuges capable of processing uranium faster and more reliably. Iran has been testing the advanced machines at its plant in Natanz and said it was ready to move to establish a full-scale production unit by 2011.
The new models are said to operate at twice the speed of the existing plant operated by Iran and boast improved reliability, which would put the state much closer to the threshold of nuclear power.
Major powers have offered to supply nuclear fuel to Iran for the production of energy but Iran has continued to expand its own production facilities.
www.canada.com/news/Iraq+Iran+play+mouse+game+over+well/2360384/story.htmlUNITED NATIONS — Iraq on Friday demanded Iran immediately withdraw its forces from an Iraqi oil well, which it accused the Islamic republic of seizing after crossing the border with tanks.
Despite an Iranian agency report denying there had been any incursion, Iraq's deputy interior minister said that 11 Iranian soldiers had dug in at the well in the Fauqa Field after raising the Iranian flag there.
An Iraqi border general said the Iranians "positioned tanks . . . and dug trenches" around the field's Well No. 4, while other officials said the incursion was the latest of several like it this week.
Iraq is the third largest oil producer in the Middle East, while Iran is second only to Saudi Arabia.
"Iraq will not give up its oil wealth," Iraq's interior minister, Jawad al-Bulani, pledged in a televised statement.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar gained broadly on Friday on improved economic sentiment and a safe-haven bid after Iranian soldiers crossed into Iraq and took up positions in a disputed southern oilfield, which also lifted oil prices.
The euro fell below $1.43 for the first time since early September, flushing out short dollar trades, while the dollar rose for a fourth consecutive day against the Japanese yen.
The dollar's advance led investors to pare risky bets earlier in the session, but U.S. stocks ended higher and trimmed the U.S. currency's gains.
Oil rose above $73 a barrel after Iran's incursion into an Iraqi oilfield sparked tension between two major crude exporters.
A cold snap in the U.S. Northeast, the biggest heating oil market in the world, also helped support prices.
Dollar strength forced investors who had bet on further weakness in the greenback to cover their short positions by selling equities or other assets.
www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2009/12/iran_iraq_oil_field_prices.htmlReports that some Iranian soldiers have entered Iraq and taken over an oil well that lies in a disputed piece of territory have pushed oil prices up slightly today.
Benchmark crude is selling for nearly $74 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, up a bit more than $1.
But exactly what's going on at the al-Fakkah oil field in southeast Iraq is very unclear:
Reuters says that:
A senior Iraqi official said Iranian soldiers crossed into Iraqi territory on Friday and took up position at a southern oilfield whose ownership is disputed by Iran, but Tehran denied the report.
The BBC reports that "an Iraqi official played down the incident, saying the area was abandoned and right on a disputed border section." And, "an Iranian oil company spokesman denied the accusation, saying no troops had taken control of any oil well."
To further confuse matters, Dow Jones Newswire says "an official from (Iraqi) state-run Missan Oil" said that "the incident happened two weeks ago."
Al-Jazeera adds that Ahmed Ali al-Khafaji, Iraq's deputy interior minster:
Said Baghdad had taken no military action against the Iranian troops and would seek a measured, diplomatic response to the situation.
"We are awaiting orders from our leader," he said.
http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20091218-713550.htmlIranian forces have occupied a southern Iraqi oil well in a disputed section of the border after opening fire against Iraqi oil workers, an official from state-run Missan Oil Co. told Dow Jones Newswires.
"Two weeks ago around 10 to 11 Iranian troops occupied well 4 in al-Fukka oil field after Iraqi oil workers started work in the well near the border," the official who is familiar with the story said.
The official said Iranian troops opened fire against the workers who fled the worksite immediately. The fire caused no casualties, ...
This does all seem a little fishy.
This does all seem a little fishy
Sure takes our mind off health care, 'climate change', troop surges, unemployment, dollar devaluation, etc.