WELCOME :: MAIN MENU MOVED TO THE BOTTOM OF THIS BLOG

SEARCH THIS BLOG

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Where are they leading us to?

The negotiations over Iran's nuclear energy program and the possibility of reaching a concrete agreement to insure that Iran does not someday decide to build a nuclear weapon was doomed from the start because it was based on a completely false pretense. Iran is not building a nuclear weapon. It has not even made a decision to seek such technology, and the CIA and Mossad have both made public statements confirming this. The talks pretended to address an accusation that the United States and its allies know full well is a lie, and if the negotiations had resulted in an actual agreement NATO powers would have lost their main line of rationalization for their incessant saber rattling with Iran. They weren't about to let that happen, but they had to maintain appearances. After all the U.S. couldn't be seen as rejecting a reasonable deal that actually made their military options impossible to whitewash.
So the deal had to be scuttled, but in such a way that didn't draw too much attention to the culprits. As is becoming a pattern in this game France played a key support role by taking a hardline approach and reportedly rejecting a proposal that the other Western powers had placed on the table. This while the U.S. congress muddied the waters even more by proposing new, tougher sanctions on Iran while the negotiations were still in progress. The Obama administration made public statements condemning the move by congress saying that it would lead to war with Iran, but this was just an example of the good cop bad cop technique. The damage was done while still allowing the White House to come off as reasonable. Make no mistake though, those who control Obama want war with Iran. They don't want a political solution.

more here>>

Monday, February 10, 2014

Drug Hub: UN report on Israel's star role in narcotics trade

Published on 9 Feb 2014 | Trillions spent, thousands dead but the global war on drugs is turning into an even steeper uphill battle. The UN says almost 300 million people around the world are addicted to illegal substances and that the global trafficking network is growing. RT's Paula Slier reports now on how Israel, has unexpectedly become a major hub for the drug trade.