http://www.reuters.com/article/us-depet ... SKBN19S335
Again US recognition (or the lack of it) is apparently a major problem, and Clinton appears to put concerns about the Taliban's treatment of woman, and how recognition would play with US voters, ahead of any pipeline concerns. This really doesn't suggest a project so vital it becomes a motive for 9/11 less than three years later. And when you examine the timeline more closely, this seems even less likely.
In his earlier account, for instance, Griffin reported that "Rashid, finishing his book in mid-1999, wrote that the Clinton Administration had shifted its support to the pipeline route from Azerbaijan through Georgia to Turkey, adding that "by now nobody wanted to touch Afghanistan and the Taliban."" What he didn't mention is that Clinton signed an agreement to proceed with this pipeline in November 1999
http://americablog.com/2014/03/putin-wa ... viser.html
August 10, 2008 Georgian tanks and infantry, aided by Israeli military advisers, captured the capital of breakaway South Ossetia, Tskhinvali, early Friday, Aug. 8, bringing the Georgian-Russian conflict over the province to a military climax.
Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin threatened a “military response.”
Georgia called up its military reserves after Russian warplanes bombed its new positions in the renegade province.
http://www.911myths.com/html/9_11_and_t ... eline.html
Moving parts and unmoving logic to petrol cartels and porous border documentations issue. Nothing new under the sun since it is a design feature of the status quo. The root is pipeline a and pipeline b
We know that the English common-law courts traveled the Atlantic Ocean and appeared in the early American colonies. We also know that the church and the court of equity rode the same ships. Apparently there used to be two different courthouses: One of the court of law (the King’s court), and one of equity (the church’s court).
Eventually, the courthouses were combined, and a single judge could hear each type of case. Yet, the issues of law and equity still exist to this day.
When Iran and China were negotiating with the Taliban, to run a pipeline through Afghanistan, the US solved the problem with 9/11.
"contracted the solution"
All that Russia needs to do, is to have their own 9/11 moment, blame the Georgian and Azerbaijani Terrorists, and prosecute them in a "War on Terror".
The complexity of pipeline politics and the web of pipeline routes can be confusing, but suffice it to say the Turkish-Greece-Italy route has won out, through the TANAP and TAP pipelines. On May 17, TAP broke ground in Thessaloniki, Greece. Construction will take several years, but when the $45 billion project is completed in 2020, it will deliver 10 billion cubic meters per year of natural gas from the Caspian Sea to Europe.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras was in attendance for the groundbreaking event, as were top officials from Georgia, Azerbaijan, Albania, the EU and even the U.S. State Department. Each have their own reasons for supporting the project. The project developers – BP, the Azerbaijan state-owned oil company SOCAR, and others – obviously have direct profit motives in mind. The national governments see economic opportunities through construction and transit fees. For Greece, in particular, the EU sees TAP as providing an economic stimulus to the indebted nation at a time when debt negotiations continue to torment both sides. "Greece was a effect not a symptom"
From the perspective of the U.S. government, TAP will reduce Europe’s dependence on and vulnerability to Russia; in essence, it is a major geopolitical victory. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, in a congratulatory letter to Greece’s Prime Minister, said that TAP is a “prime example of infrastructure that enhances European energy security.”
Gazprom calculated its prices using a formula the Lithuanians said was unintelligible. A copy reviewed by The Wall Street Journal showed a 773-word formula with multiple sub-clauses.
The result, according to Lithuanian officials, was one of the highest gas bills in Europe. In the first half of 2013, industrial buyers paid an average of 44 euro cents, or $0.47, per kilowatt-hour for Gazprom gas. Businesses in the U.K., which has its own gas reserves, paid 35 euro cents, EU data show.
Mantas Bartuska awaits a tanker to pass a narrow inlet on the Baltic Sea with the first natural gas shipments from the Gulf Coast that many hope will transform Europe’s energy market.
The red curtains and red tapes wars have just began.... Thu Mar 03, 2016 9:38 am
Sorites Paradox will decide this window. We just framed the obvious window.
Which side the curve eroded first.
The sorites paradox presents a serious logical challenge and the foregoing of it presents the
mainstream responses to this challenge.
We already check off numerous breakdowns.
Amos pointed out consequences.
The sorites paradox is the name given to a class of paradoxical arguments, also known as little-by-little arguments, which arise as a result of the indeterminacy.
Signed, A Taxpayer
The warning of not being hot or cold brings its own rewards. Sat May 07, 2016 11:49 am
Its already here and time will only tell who seen it.
Not a single source gave an edge to Republicans.
Mon Apr 13, 2009: As for 2018 and the current opinion, we shall see who survives into 2018 as we warned.
The context is a marker was noted to effects again recently seen. Carving the bottom I think is correct into 2018 as stated.
Yes, maybe incorrect, just my analysis marker only seen again recently.
thread: Elul, Ankara, Zechariah 8:19, Duration of Saros 129 = 1262.11 Years
veil metd ankara eze isa nah amos 2018 Anderson
We are on His footstool.