PDA

View Full Version : Turkey, Iran, Brazil sign deal on nuclear fuel swap



Sarmatian
05-22-2010, 09:33
Iran inked a nuclear fuel swap deal Monday which commits it to ship 1,200 kilograms of low enriched uranium to Turkey, potentially ending a standoff with world powers gearing for new sanctions against the Islamic republic. link (http://www.worldbulletin.net/news_detail.php?id=58614)

US still silent officially, China welcomed the deal after some deliberation, which puts US in a difficult position to push for sanctions in UN security council. What happens now?

Not totally related, but is this also "coming of age" for Brazil? For the first time they involved themselves in such a big issue in world politics...

Fragony
05-22-2010, 09:51
Powerplay

Incongruous
05-22-2010, 12:18
Whatever, if Iran want Nuclear power give it to them. The towel heads in charge would never be stupid enough to use them, it would mean bye bye middle-east. This is all power-bollocks, everyone should stop being so silly and just give Iran the attention it really deserves, zilch, it's a piece of crappy real-estate with a public ready to shoot its absurd leadership.

PanzerJaeger
05-22-2010, 13:28
Two of America's supposed "allies" and "partners" have subverted our efforts at sanctions and given Iran the cover it needs to continue its weapons program. How the mighty have fallen. :shame:

Vladimir
05-22-2010, 15:02
Brazil has prided itself on being independent from but friendly with the U.S. I don't see a betrayal there.

I suspect the deal with Turkey has U.S. support. It is consistent with the administration's overall foreign policy and the silence is telling.

Husar
05-22-2010, 15:06
Two of America's supposed "allies" and "partners" have subverted our efforts at sanctions and given Iran the cover it needs to continue its weapons program. How the mighty have fallen. :shame:

Sticking to the USA (Bazil is America as well...) was probably not in those nations' best interest.

PanzerJaeger
05-22-2010, 16:40
Sticking to the USA (Bazil is America as well...) was probably not in those nations' best interest.

Ok, Megas.

I agree, though, the hegemony that THE UNITED STATES created during the Cold War is quickly falling apart as former partner nations look to deal with the old communist bloc powers and rogue nations. It will hurt THE UNITED STATES, and the Western World, far more than we realize, especially when the dollar ceases to be the world's reserve currency, but that is the way of realpolitik. If you're not going up, you're going down. Hopefully, in the future, THE UNITED STATES will learn to be more self serving. Despite the far Left's cries of imperial intentions, no superpower has been more self defeating and destructive, which is both a compliment and a tradgedy (if you're a United Statesperson). :nice:

LittleGrizzly
05-22-2010, 17:04
Any progress towards Iranian nukes is progress towards destroying western fantasies of attacking Iran, that in turn is progress towards Iranians seeing less threats to thier country, that in turn will lead to future presidents having less of a scary outside threat that the people will be distracted by him/her (the president) protecting them from. Progress is a good thing.

Tellos Athenaios
05-22-2010, 18:05
Brazil has prided itself on being independent from but friendly with the U.S. I don't see a betrayal there.

I suspect the deal with Turkey has U.S. support. It is consistent with the administration's overall foreign policy and the silence is telling.

Even more telling if you read the first clause. Basically Brazil + Turkey got what the US failed to get: a re-affirmation of Iran's commitment to the NPT.

gaelic cowboy
05-22-2010, 21:41
Any progress towards Iranian nukes is progress towards destroying western fantasies of attacking Iran, that in turn is progress towards Iranians seeing less threats to thier country, that in turn will lead to future presidents having less of a scary outside threat that the people will be distracted by him/her (the president) protecting them from. Progress is a good thing.

Except progress in that direction will land an Israeli nuke in Tehran one day when they both miscalculate each others steps in the Great Game

Husar
05-22-2010, 21:46
Ok, Megas.

I agree, though, the hegemony that THE UNITED STATES created during the Cold War is quickly falling apart as former partner nations look to deal with the old communist bloc powers and rogue nations. It will hurt THE UNITED STATES, and the Western World, far more than we realize, especially when the dollar ceases to be the world's reserve currency, but that is the way of realpolitik. If you're not going up, you're going down. Hopefully, in the future, THE UNITED STATES will learn to be more self serving. Despite the far Left's cries of imperial intentions, no superpower has been more self defeating and destructive, which is both a compliment and a tradgedy (if you're a United Statesperson). :nice:

Look, now I reminded you that the USA <> America as america is actually a continent while the USA are just the biggest nation on that continent and that small fact made you turn into some liberal pinkoweenie using loads of colours everywhere. I'm not sure whether I find that more funny or worrying. ~;)
I've got nothing against the USA and comparing me to Megas is a bit off (haven't you read my previous arguments with him?).
But you guys are always the ones going "oh, we ruin other nations because we can and it's in our own best interest", so for you to cry about other nations doing things that are in their own best interest is a bit...weird and contradictory perhaps. I'm not saying I'm against US hegemony, quite the opposite, but it's mostly because of the good things this brought and when you're arrogant about it that doesn't look very good, just...arrogant... :shrug:

LittleGrizzly
05-22-2010, 23:11
Except progress in that direction will land an Israeli nuke in Tehran one day when they both miscalculate each others steps in the Great Game

If that would be the case then not only does the need for Iranian nukes grow stronger but they need a good few of them quickly to give them a chance to respond to any first strike

Louis VI the Fat
05-22-2010, 23:30
Basically Brazil + Turkey got what the US failed to get: a re-affirmation of Iran's commitment to the NPT.I would reverse that argument: if Iran really wanted to show commitment to the NPT, it indeed could've taken the similar deal that was proposed last year by France, Russia and America.*


If it is a serious proposal, at the very least it shows a willingness to obstruct, just to stick it to the Americans. Not a willingness to find a workable means to swap nuclear fuel, but power politics set the agenda of Tehran.

Obama now faces the prospect of rejecting a proposal it offered in the first place, or seeing months of effort to enact new sanctions derailed.


Tehran has two goals: build a bomb, and defeat America. I think they are willing to drop either one of these goals, but not both. This new agreement works towards either goal, so a clever move. It will be interesting to see what China does. Russia has gotten more in line with the West. China will have to choose between joining the established powers, or becoming the champion of the emerging ones.



*Showing that in common parlance nobody mistakes the country for the two continents.

Sarmatian
05-22-2010, 23:53
I would reverse that argument: if Iran really wanted to show commitment to the NPT, it indeed could've taken the similar deal that was proposed last year by France, Russia and America.*


If it is a serious proposal, at the very least it shows a willingness to obstruct, just to stick it to the Americans. Not a willingness to find a workable means to swap nuclear fuel, but power politics set the agenda of Tehran.

Obama now faces the prospect of rejecting a proposal it offered in the first place, or seeing months of effort to enact new sanctions derailed.


Tehran has two goals: build a bomb, and defeat America. I think they are willing to drop either one of these goals, but not both. This new agreement works towards either goal, so a clever move. It will be interesting to see what China does. Russia has gotten more in line with the West. China will have to choose between joining the established powers, or becoming the champion of the emerging ones.



*Showing that in common parlance nobody mistakes the country for the two continents.

There is also a part of not losing face. Turkey, as a muslim country and by being in relative vicinity, is a perfect choice for storing and inspecting the material if need be. It can hardly be said that American have tried to be constructive with Iran in the past.

Your explanation of Iranian foreign policy (build a bomb and defeat America) made me laugh really. Defeat America? Someone would have to be crazy over there. Not even a religious fanatic covers it, I'm talking genuine, certified "cluck-cluck, gibber-gibber, my old man is a mushroom" crazy. I'm still not convinced that Tehran is building a bomb. Sorry, but previous intelligence errors concerning similar issues leave me a bit skeptical.

gaelic cowboy
05-23-2010, 00:02
If that would be the case then not only does the need for Iranian nukes grow stronger but they need a good few of them quickly to give them a chance to respond to any first strike

Wrong the need to prevent a strike will precipitate one instead.

LittleGrizzly
05-23-2010, 00:18
Not quite sure what your saying, are you saying if Iran gets a nuclear weapon Israel will launch a pre emptive strike before Iran can ?

I thought the strike on nuclear facilities as was done with Iraq was it ? was not possible this time

My point is that Israel as sole superpower of the region needs some kind of counter balance, Iran is nothing to write home about and even with nukes hardly a big power but it will at least mean Israel has to be somewhat reasonable in its dealings with Iran, maybe this will even mean some of the pawns in the game (palestinians) could get something out of thier jockeying between each other.

Husar
05-23-2010, 00:38
*Showing that in common parlance nobody mistakes the country for the two continents.

I know, everybody does, I do if I'm not careful, but that doesn't make it right! :sweatdrop:

Louis VI the Fat
05-23-2010, 01:23
Your explanation of Iranian foreign policy (build a bomb and defeat America) made me laugh really. Defeat America? Someone would have to be crazy over there. Not even a religious fanatic covers it, I'm talking genuine, certified "cluck-cluck, gibber-gibber, my old man is a mushroom" crazy.Defeat not as military defeat within a time-span of a few years. But defeat as in replacing America as the greatest power in the Middle East? Yes. Defeat as replacing America's cultural soft power? Sure. Even demographic and economical eclipse.

See, the thing is, we are fighting an assymetrical war. A war who's assymtry is best summed up as: they are trying to defeat us, we are not even aware that they are trying to do so.



AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE


TEHRAN -- Iran boasted yesterday it could defeat any American military action over its nuclear drive, in one of the Islamic regime's boldest challenges yet to the United States.


"You can start a war but it won't be you who finishes it," said Gen. Yahya Rahim Safavi, the head of the Revolutionary Guards and among the regime's most powerful figures.


"The Americans know better than anyone that their troops in the region and in Iraq are vulnerable. I would advise them not to commit such a strategic error," he told reporters on the sidelines of a conference in Tehran. "I would advise them to first get out of their quagmire in Iraq before getting into an even bigger one," Gen. Safavi said with a grin.


"We have American forces in the region under total surveillance. For the past two years, we have been ready for any scenario, whether sanctions or an attack." Iran announced this week it had successfully enriched uranium on a small scale that could be used for nuclear reactors. The claim represented a direct challenge to the United States and the U.N. Security Council, which has demanded that Iran halt enrichment activities by April 28.


At a Friday prayer sermon in Tehran yesterday, senior cleric Ayatollah Ahmad branded the U.S. as a "decaying power" lacking the "stamina" to block Iran's ambitions. And hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told Agence France-Presse that a U.S. push for tough U.N. sanctions was of "no importance." "She is free to say whatever she wants," the president replied when asked to respond to comments by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice highlighting part of the U.N. charter that provides for sanctions backed up by the threat of military action. "We give no importance to her comments," he said with a broad smile.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1615797/posts

That is how many view the conflict. From the US 'encirclement' in Iraq and Afghanistan, to America's 'defeat' in Iraq, to economical breakdown of America/the West and economical ascendescy of emerging powers. To many hardliners, not only is Iran trying to defeat America, but many would say that Iran has been making great strides too towards defeating America these past three decades. Unlike America / the West, they have the patience and capacity to think long-term. There is a relentless drive to eclipse America in huge parts of the world, completely unknown to America - which is not an imperialistic, expansionist power, and is as such mostly oblivious to this sentiment.

Tellos Athenaios
05-23-2010, 02:02
China has moved already. And re-affirmation of the NPT is a bit of a cuddly couch-politics feel-good game; rather than a hard commitment to actually change something.

I think Iran will, for the time being, be content to have a two-speed negotiation device at its disposal which allows the regime to make concessions without submitting to the little & big devil directly. I think the regime would view an untouchable, unquestionable autonomy over its (civil) nuclear ambitions as the end goal. Iran works by a combination of angry state rhetoric and funding massive subsidies on petrol, and the more oil it requires for its domestic demand the more expensive this becomes.

gaelic cowboy
05-23-2010, 02:11
@LittleGrizzly

I am talking about how if Iran goes down the route of nuclearisation then it first must normalize its relationship with Israel. The idea that this is same as the cold war in that two side balance each other is false Israel has no strategic depth while Iran does as a result Iran can take a hit or three but Israel cannot.

Therefore it is obvious that Israel cannot allow Iran to obtain nukes or the equation will be unbalanced to Iran's benefit talk of how Iran fears Israel misses the point that Israel fears Iran more due to there continual interference in Israel through proxies and the fact the repeatedly call for the actual destruction of Israel

On how an Israeli strike would be attempted is ultimately of little use it would simply have to be done or Israel would be risking everything. Iran is effectively gambling that the USA will constrain Israel due to the Iraq war and that once it presents it's cards it will be allowed at the table while continuing to meddle in the greater mid-east secure behind MAD but really a MAD in favor of themselves.

gaelic cowboy
05-23-2010, 02:23
See, the thing is, we are fighting an assymetrical war. A war who's assymtry is best summed up as: they are trying to defeat us, we are not even aware that they are trying to do so.

They will miss us when were all gone Louis they see the WEST (there capitals not mine) as all the same and they go to bed at night praying they win or America exhausts itself which it possibly is. The day China rules the Great Game will change there wont be anyplace to hide for an errant regime the nukes will fly at tinpot dictators no bother.

Seamus Fermanagh
05-23-2010, 05:49
Acquiring nuclear weapons and some form of semi-reliable delivery system is a rational choice for any nation-state. This is especially true if one of the powers that be dislike them for some reason. Nuclear technology and weapons must proliferate and will do so for more or less the same reasons the musket and bayonet did.

Eventually, a nuke will fall into the hands of some extra-national willing to use it. Then the death toll will be 300k+ not 3,000. We need to think what we can do to minimize such events and how best to respond to them.

Husar
05-23-2010, 11:37
Defeat not as military defeat within a time-span of a few years. But defeat as in replacing America as the greatest power in the Middle East? Yes. Defeat as replacing America's cultural soft power? Sure. Even demographic and economical eclipse.

You mean Iranian restaurants may one day be more numerous than McDonalds? And iranian goat/camel milk or whatever will take over Coca Cola(I really have no idea what drinks they have invented over there, if any)? But what about Döner? Can they ever beat Turkey?

Subotan
05-23-2010, 14:00
ZamZam Cola (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zam_Zam_Cola) :yes:

Skullheadhq
05-23-2010, 14:07
America as america is actually a continent while the USA are just the biggest nation on that continent :

I thought Canada was bigger then the US...

Seamus Fermanagh
05-24-2010, 02:50
I thought Canada was bigger then the US...

Depends how you count things. Usable land? Resources therein? In terms of strict mathematical area, they are of course larger.

a completely inoffensive name
05-24-2010, 02:55
Two of America's supposed "allies" and "partners" have subverted our efforts at sanctions and given Iran the cover it needs to continue its weapons program. How the mighty have fallen. :shame:

Two independent countries have not followed along with America's policies, how dare they.

rory_20_uk
05-24-2010, 13:22
Two of America's supposed "allies" and "partners" have subverted our efforts at sanctions and given Iran the cover it needs to continue its weapons program. How the mighty have fallen. :shame:

Yes, America expects unquestioned obedience from allies. Of course, none has to be shown in return...

India wants the bomb? Fine - they're stable as a rock (apart from the showoffs with Pakistan, the internal Maoist uprisings and squaring up to China)
Pakistan wants the bomb? Fine. Stability exemplified. First amongst equals (as long as the equals are Afghanistan, Zimbabwe and Georgia).
Israel wants the bomb? Fine. Fair minded people. Only want peace and the right to exist. Who can deny that? (OK, other people happen to live where they want the right to exist, but no problem...)

Iran wants the bomb... They'll destabilise the whole region as no one else has one aprt from Israel. They're not allowed one as... they're not, OK?

Nukes are far less likely to be used than biologicals or chemical agents. Getting nukes is a way of posturing on the world stage, not really a useful addition to one's arsenal - except if one is afraid of being overrun by a foreign power in short order and conventional forces are not enough... the logical Israel used and Iran is justified in feeling the same way.

~:smoking:

gaelic cowboy
05-24-2010, 13:58
Nukes are far less likely to be used than biologicals or chemical agents. Getting nukes is a way of posturing on the world stage, not really a useful addition to one's arsenal - except if one is afraid of being overrun by a foreign power in short order and conventional forces are not enough... the logical Israel used and Iran is justified in feeling the same way.

~:smoking:

This is incorrect it does not follow that to be truly safe the equation must be perfectly balanced some factors can be far more important to the strategic equation. In this case Israel has no strategic depth so it must have nukes to deter invasion it does not follow that Israel will use then in aggression as the states around it have many chemical and biological weapons and strategic depth.

Iran having nukes massively unbalances Israels security this means that the period of time we are in now is the most dangerous for Iran as Israel MUST prevent it getting nukes.

You propose that nukes are not useful when infact the case is too many nukes are useless but small numbers of nukes are useful. Cold War levels of nukes cause both side to have to be on the same page in regard to the moves they make on the chessboard. Each side must anticipate the other sides reaction to it's own move plus the counter move it will make after there first move.

This having to know the other sides head can be dangerous and luckily we escaped without blowing up the world. However when less nukes enter the equation the danger is that the incentive for use goes up as the entire world is not at stake in the game being played.

Put simply more nukes equals stalemate equals 50/50 chance of extinction, however close to zero levels means the incentive to use goes up and at zero levels the incentive to obtain one is massively increased.

Seamus Fermanagh
05-24-2010, 17:07
This is incorrect it does not follow that to be truly safe the equation must be perfectly balanced some factors can be far more important to the strategic equation. In this case Israel has no strategic depth so it must have nukes to deter invasion it does not follow that Israel will use then in aggression as the states around it have many chemical and biological weapons and strategic depth.

Iran having nukes massively unbalances Israels security this means that the period of time we are in now is the most dangerous for Iran as Israel MUST prevent it getting nukes.

You propose that nukes are not useful when infact the case is too many nukes are useless but small numbers of nukes are useful. Cold War levels of nukes cause both side to have to be on the same page in regard to the moves they make on the chessboard. Each side must anticipate the other sides reaction to it's own move plus the counter move it will make after there first move.

This having to know the other sides head can be dangerous and luckily we escaped without blowing up the world. However when less nukes enter the equation the danger is that the incentive for use goes up as the entire world is not at stake in the game being played.

Put simply more nukes equals stalemate equals 50/50 chance of extinction, however close to zero levels means the incentive to use goes up and at zero levels the incentive to obtain one is massively increased.

I don't think Iranian nuclear weapons represent an insurmountable strategic problem for Israel. Israel is currently a very hard target for Iran or, as history has demonstrated, most of the Arab Middle East at once. Israel is known to be possessed of nuclear weapons, a fact that all potential invaders must acknowledge in their plans. Iran would be well aware that lobbing a nuke at Tel Aviv would earn them a response that would not be to their liking. On the other hand, it will make Israel far more reticent of launching air strikes into Iran either as a means of harming Iranian industry or as responding punitively for Iran's support of Hezbollah. Even more importantly from Iran's thinking is that it puts nukes in the hands of a Shia state and minimizes the likelihood of another Iran-Iraq or other quasi shia v sunni struggle from happening again. Add in the bonus of being able to tell the USA to piss up a rope without getting airstriked for it and you simply have to see the appeal from their perspective.

All in all, the greatest threats to Iranian and Israeli security lie within their own borders -- no outside threat is truly comparable.

Nation states will not be the next player to use atomic weaponry in combat -- some NGO/terror group will.

ajaxfetish
05-25-2010, 07:04
America as america is actually a continent while the USA are just the biggest nation on that continent

I thought Canada was bigger then the US...

Depends how you count things. Usable land? Resources therein? In terms of strict mathematical area, they are of course larger.
Bigness also does not necessarily mean land area at all. If we talk population, the USA is definitely the biggest American nation.

Ajax

Louis VI the Fat
05-25-2010, 11:37
AMERICA HAS THE TEXAS SO ITS THE BIGGEST

Louis VI the Fat
05-25-2010, 18:58
Stop imprisoning your film makers, you torturing, raping, murdering religio-fascist scum.


Confusion is surrounding an announcement in Cannes that detained Iranian director Jafar Panahi would be freed today. The news was contrasted by word that Panahi’s incarceration may be extended and that the filmmaker would in fact begin a hunger strike. The dramatic and conflicting information gripped a press conference here today with fellow Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami. The leading Iranian filmmaker spoke out in solidarity with Panahi this afternoon at the Cannes Film Festival, advocating on behalf of the freedom of filmmakers in Iran.

“The [Iranian] government does not accept the independence of filmmakers and the independent filmmaker,” Kiarostami said this afternoon during a press conference. “They will not approve our films if they don’t like our films. My films go overseas because of the fact that I have contacts overseas and they are unable to control this.”

Abbas Kiarostami, an internationally acclaimed auteur who is in Cannes with his competition film, “Certified Copy,” was joined by stars Juliette Binoche and William Shimell at a press conference this afternoon where he made the announcement. His own film, which will have its gala premiere at the Cannes Film Festival tonight in France, was banned by Iranian authorities. Before the formal press conference began, he read a statement about Panahi’s detention and the plight of other filmmakers who are currently being silenced in Iran.
As I was typing this, google revealed Panahi has been released today, just after the Cannes film festival has ended. Lovely games they play. I should hope this will end the threats by the regime to gang-rape his daughter in another prison cell if he makes that movie about last year's election.


*Who, incidentally, was refused entry in to the US where he was to be screened at a festival and lecture at Harvard. Those poor Iranians!



If I had a say in this, I'd give this regime a bomb when they give us back Neda.

Beskar
05-25-2010, 20:55
it is only me who has seen Louis' style and political alignment change ever since he became a moderator?

Vladimir
05-25-2010, 20:59
it is only me who has seen Louis' style and political alignment change ever since he became a moderator?

Since Louis is an institution, not a person, you're just seeing the shifting influence of factions within that organization.

Seamus Fermanagh
05-25-2010, 22:18
it is only me who has seen Louis' style and political alignment change ever since he became a moderator?

A few weeks before donning the cowl, actually. But I see more intensification than change.

Beskar
05-25-2010, 22:35
A few weeks before donning the cowl, actually. But I see more intensification than change.

I noticed it when he "swapped" with Strike for the South, and as you said, intensified since then.

Sarmatian
05-25-2010, 23:14
If I had a say in this, I'd give this regime a bomb when they give us back Neda.

You're right!!! Countries that do possess the bomb (China, Russia, US, Pakistan, France...) are prime examples of non-violence, either within their own borders or abroad (or both, depending on the country)...

Louis VI the Fat
05-26-2010, 12:29
it is only me who has seen Louis' style and political alignment change ever since he became a moderator?My politics has always been a brew of left and right, and of moderation and extremity. I'm as close to you as I am to Rabbit, ranging from Idaho to Panzer.


I was looking for a little personal angle about Iran. The individual story is better to identify with than with statistics, or abstractions like 'oppressive'. I picked Panahi, that movie director (http://www.payvand.com/news/10/may/1241.html), who wanted to make a movie about last year's election, who was locked up, threatened and mistreated. By the time I was ready to post it here, I had read several articles, and was seething with rage. :furious3:

The Iranian regime is a perfect storm of everything I loathe: religious nuttery, fascism, oppression, humiliation, lies and deceit, murder, rape, arrogance, pettiness.



Iran is a 'normal' country. More Portugal or Argentina than third world. Iranians are normal people, they wake up in the morning and drive their car to work, send their children to piano lessons in the afternoon, make movies and write books.
But stuck with this pathetic scum in power.

Pannonian
05-26-2010, 12:43
I noticed it when he "swapped" with Strike for the South, and as you said, intensified since then.

Strike for the Fat is an Org institution.

gaelic cowboy
05-26-2010, 14:04
Iran is a 'normal' country. More Portugal or Argentina than third world. Iranians are normal people, they wake up in the morning and drive their car to work, send their children to piano lessons in the afternoon, make movies and write books.
But stuck with this pathetic scum in power.

I would agree with this as I have worked with a fair few Iranians in my time in various places. Ireland played a world cup qualifer a fewe years back against them and place looked very nice.

I have often heard the theory that the Shia are a far more natural ally of the West than the Sunnai regimes that are defended probably because of the fact US got burned when the Shah fell. Unfortunately the current people in power are loons so we are stuck with the current problem.

Husar
05-26-2010, 19:53
Iran is a 'normal' country. More Portugal or Argentina than third world. Iranians are normal people, they wake up in the morning and drive their car to work, send their children to piano lessons in the afternoon, make movies and write books.
But stuck with this pathetic scum in power.

I think that's a myth and reality looks more like that place where they "create" new orcs does in the LotR movies...

Louis VI the Fat
05-26-2010, 22:12
I think that's a myth and reality looks more like that place where they "create" new orcs does in the LotR movies...Yes. But...some countries are not 'normal' countries, at least ones you and I would recognise as normal.

For example, Saudi Arabia. Mass slavery, apartheid, religious nuttery. Thousands of Saud princes, who have so many children with so many women they are a demographic force. Opulence, decadence and hypocrisy of an unimaginable scale. Saudi Arabia does not at all resemble a middle class society, such as exists at least in Iranian cities.

Kadagar_AV
05-27-2010, 02:26
I dont get the Iran hate.

I mean, I GET it, the regime is horrid to say the least. But then, so is Saudi Arabia, and they are somehow in the good books (ok, not in educated countries, but in certain western super powers).

Beskar
05-27-2010, 08:26
Being bending over to the USA = Good, not bending over = Bad.

Remember when France voiced objections to the Iraq invasion? They banned French Mustard and renamed "French Fries" to "Freedom Fries".

Kadagar_AV
05-27-2010, 08:56
I remember.

One would have hoped that when it turned out France was right all along, they would have named something with "freedom" - "french".

Vladimir
05-27-2010, 11:20
Being bending over to the USA = Good, not bending over = Bad.

Remember when France voiced objections to the Iraq invasion? They banned French Mustard and renamed "French Fries" to "Freedom Fries".


I remember.

One would have hoped that when it turned out France was right all along, they would have named something with "freedom" - "french".

You two need to get a room.

Kadagar_AV
05-27-2010, 11:41
Louis could snuggle in between us :)

Vladimir
05-27-2010, 13:47
Louis could snuggle in between us :)

:laugh4: Don't forget that when you get one, you get the other: https://forums.totalwar.org/vb/showthread.php?128301-Science-Sub-forum-Separate-But-Equal

It's good to see that the Backroom can bring people together. ~;)

Seamus Fermanagh
05-29-2010, 04:31
Louis could snuggle in between us :)

Good Lord, I know he's a moderator now so serving as a go between makes sense...oh wait, he's our Monastary chap.

'nuff said.

Furunculus
06-14-2010, 19:37
Saudi, Jordan, and Egypt just as anxious as Israel about Iran's nuclear weapons program.

Saudi willing to turn a blind eye to an Israeli raid.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article7148555.ece

PanzerJaeger
06-15-2010, 03:18
Yep, despite the populist rhetoric Arab leaders aim towards Israel to placate the masses, détente was reached a long time ago. They care about the Palestinians about as much as the Israelis do, and both parties have a strong interest in regional stability. Enter Iran - which has been a destabilizing force in Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanistan and throughout the region.