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*~1Best~*

05/12/08 1:51 PM

#8105 RE: *~1Best~* #8104

Are they playing war games. Now Arab is united against 5/9/08 statement.


What's next? "Pan Asians" Now we may see "Pan Asians" union.











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*~1Best~*

05/12/08 3:35 PM

#8117 RE: *~1Best~* #8104

Al-Qaeda Base Destroyed, Cease-Fire Agreed In Baghdad
5/12/2008 3:33 PM ET

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So now we will have joint arguments.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=29222085



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The U.S. military has claimed on Monday that its Air Force has destroyed an al-Qaeda in Iraq training base south of Baghdad.

The fighter jets have dropped eight big bombs in a large area in the district of Arab Jabour, used to manufacture bombs, stash weapons caches and train and launch sniper attacks at U.S. military convoys, the military said.

Also on Monday, representatives of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and parliament members from Iraq's main Shiite political bloc have signed a four-day cease-fire in an effort to end seven weeks of fighting in Baghdad's Sadr City slum.



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*~1Best~*

05/13/08 9:43 AM

#8144 RE: *~1Best~* #8104

It is naive like chicken herd unless the tension is just a game.

http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=29222085

Congress wants Bush to stop buying crude
updated 3 minutes ago
GOP, Dems agree: Halt emergency reserve efforts, send oil to open market
The Associated Press
updated 9:36 a.m. ET, Tues., May. 13, 2008

WASHINGTON - Amid daily bipartisan sniping over high gas prices, Democrats and Republicans appear to agree on at least one thing: With oil over $120 a barrel, President Bush ought to stop buying crude for the government emergency reserve.

Both the House and Senate are expected to approve, with bipartisan support, legislation Tuesday directing Bush to temporarily halt the shipment of about 70,000 barrels of oil a day to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Bush has refused to do so, arguing that this small amount of oil won't impact prices and that for security reasons he wants to increase the stockpile to its full capacity of 726 million barrels. It now has about 701 million barrels, equal to nearly two months of oil imports.

Lawmakers' search for a response to high gasoline and oil prices comes as Bush is preparing later this week to travel to Saudi Arabia where he is expected to try to convince the Saudis to increase oil production. So far, Saudi Arabia and other OPEC countries have refused to do so, arguing the high price of oil stems from other factors than a shortage of supply.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., plans to bring up for a vote Tuesday a provision to halt oil shipments to the federal reserve until the end of the year. Senate Republicans said they want shipments halted for six months, but are expected to support the Democratic measure.

The House is taking up a similar provision later in the day that also is expected to get broad support.

By all accounts, the president is standing firm.

"Our position hasn't changed," said White House press secretary Dana Perino on Monday.

She said the president believes the emergency reserve needs to be increased "in order to protect ourselves against oil shocks" and that the oil being put — a tenth of one percent of global production — "would have a negligible impact on gas prices" if put into the market.

The government obtains the oil in lieu of royalties that otherwise would be paid by producers who pump it from federal land. If shipments were halted, the oil would flow into the open market.

Many Democrats and Republicans in Congress say it doesn't make sense for the government to essentially purchase oil for a reserve 97 percent full when crude is costing more than $120 a barrel.

"I think it's nuts," said Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D. "It makes no sense at all. It increases gas and oil prices."

Sen. Pete Domenici of New Mexico, the top Republican on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said that "it's clear that many Republicans and Democrats agree that given the high price of gasoline it would be wise to suspend shipments to the SPR for the time being."

How much such a move would influence prices — if at all — is unclear.

"Taking barrels of oil off the market to put in the reserve puts upward pressure on markets," Frank Rusco, acting director of the Government Accountability Office, the Congress' investigative arm, told a hearing recently. Some lawmakers believe such a move could send a signal to oil markets and tone down speculation.

"We don't think it would have a big enough impact on prices for anybody to really notice," said Perino, when asked about the push in Congress to force the president to halt the shipments.


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*~1Best~*

05/13/08 1:35 PM

#8157 RE: *~1Best~* #8104

It could be the nuke bomb punishment.

Games are disgusting.



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Seven Arab Countries To Boost Energy Resources Using Nuclear Power
5/12/2008 1:46 PM ET

Seven Arab nations have agreed on a four-year plan to augment energy resources in the Arabian region by using nuclear power, the Associated Press reported.

The strategically important plan was discussed by energy officials from Saudi Arabia, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, Jordan and the UAE during a three-day meeting in Jordan's capital of Amman.

The plan aims to focus on reducing waste from energy production and protecting the coastal environment of the Red Sea, the Mediterranean and the Persian Gulf, the report said on Monday.

by RTT Staff Writer



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Iran's nuclear program a threat to global security, says atomic powers

5/9/2008 3:25 PM ET

In a joint statement issued on Friday, world's five main atomic powers have expressed serious concern over Iran's nuclear program, as “its proliferation of nuclear weapons constitutes a threat to international peace and security.”

China, France, Russia, Britain and the U.S. issued the statement at the conclusion of talks in Geneva, which is a forerunner of the 2010 NPT review conference to be held in New York.

Releasing the statement, British ambassador John Duncan said the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, known as NPT, remained “a key instrument for collective security.”

The five nations called on Iran to respond to the concerns of the international community through prompt and full implementation of the relevant UN Security Council resolutions and the requirements of the IAEA.

The atomic powers reiterated their support for the Six-Party Talks process aimed at securing the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and the 1995 resolution to maintain a nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East.

Ukrainian Ambassador Volodymyr Yelchenko, who chaired the talks, told reporters that the Geneva conference also discussed recent disclosures about alleged attempts by Syria to build a nuclear reactor aided by North Korea.