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Archive for November 18th, 2007

Sino-Russian split at regional summit

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Sino-Russian split at regional summit

By John C K Daly

On November 2, the sixth annual meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) council of heads of government began in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. The six member states include Kazakhastan, China, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. India, Iran, Mongolia and Pakistan attended as observers and Afghanistan as a guest of the host country Uzbekistan.

Xinhua News Agency, the mouthpiece of the Chinese government, breathlessly reported: “In a friendly, pragmatic, and constructive

atmosphere, delegations of the member states held in-depth discussions on a host of pressing issues, including deepening economic trade and cultural cooperation within the SCO as well as safeguarding the region’s peace, stability and security.”

Behind all the camaraderie, two underlying issues permeated the discussions: joint military cooperation and trade, most notably in energy. It is on these two issues that Russian and Chinese priorities diverge, with the Central Asian SCO members watching from the sidelines.

Despite a 20-point declaration that was subsequently issued on strengthening cooperation among SCO member states in the economic, investment, innovation, science, educational and cultural fields, perhaps the most telling point was the seventh item, which stated “that the SCO member states should cooperate closely to map out a common position on energy issues”. Significantly, none of the items specifically mentioned deepening military cooperation, only a general commitment to deepening regional security.

Russia is most keenly interested in military cooperation, envisaging the SCO as an embryonic Eurasian counterweight to NATO and US “hegemony”. Russia successfully linked the SCO to the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) through the signing of a memorandum that focuses on broadening cooperation on issues such as security, crime and drug trafficking. China is more interested in the SCO developing into a nascent trading organization loosely based on a European Union model.

Both interpretations can claim successes and failures. Russia has had remnants of the 201st Motorized Rifle Division based in Tajikistan since the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991. In October 2003, the Russian Federation established an airbase at Kant, near Bishkek, ostensibly to provide immediate air support for CSTO ground units. The Kant airbase was Russia’s first foreign military facility established since 1991, and it is less than 30 miles away from the US aerial facility at Manas. The US facility was established in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, attacks in December 2001, along with another airbase at Karshi-Khanabad in Uzbekistan. In contrast, China currently has no foreign military bases.

Both China and Russia have been opposed to the US military presence in Central Asia. Following Washington’s ambivalent response to the May 13, 2005, tragic events in Andijan, the Uzbek government on July 29 told the Pentagon to evacuate the bases within six months, which it did in November 2005. The SCO saw the dispute as a heaven-sent opportunity, in stark contrast to Washington characterizing Andijan as a terrorist plot that subsequently lead to a resolution in July 2005. At a summit in Almaty, the SCO called for nations to deny asylum to Uzbek refugees who had fled from Andijan to Kyrgyzstan as well as for setting a timetable for the withdrawal of US bases in the region.

From August 8-17, the SCO staged “Peace Mission 2007″, an anti-terrorism exercise that was the SCO’s largest joint exercise in its six-year history, with nearly 6,500 troops and 80 aircraft participating. The exercise was held in two areas, first at the Russian Army’s 34th Motorized Rifle Division facility in the Volga-Urals Military District. Then at Chinese insistence, the exercise later shifted to Urumqi, capital of China’s Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region.

The one point of commonality between all six SCO members is the need to fight terrorism. In stark contrast to US diplomatic fumbling in Central Asia, Russia, pressing forward wherever it might gain a military advantage, has convinced CSTO’s secretariat and joint headquarters to finalize a draft agreement to form a single collective Central Asian air defense system.

While Moscow and Beijing can concur about the need to diminish or even end US military presence in Central Asia, their views on economic issues diverge sharply. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao used the occasion to network with delegates and forcefully promote bilateral energy schemes with the attendees. Wen held talks with Iranian First Vice President Parviz Davudi on a host of issues, including energy. Iran gained a powerful ally in Wen over its nuclear dispute with the West, with Wen concluding: “China respects Iran’s right to peaceful use of nuclear energy … The Chinese side holds the view that peaceful resolution of the Iranian nuclear issue through negotiation is the best option.”

As China is a member of the UN Security Council and thus able to block further sanctions proposed by the United States, it is likely that Tehran will return this favor and show its appreciation by allowing increased Chinese access to the country’s vast energy resources.

Wen followed up the SCO meeting with an official state visit to Uzbekistan on November 3; it was the first visit to Uzbekistan by a Chinese premier in 13 years (former premier Li Peng first visited in 1994). Wen met with Uzbek President Islam Karimov, Prime Minister Shavkat Mirziyaev and leaders of the Oly Majlis legislature. For the first eight months of 2007, total Sino-Uzbek trade reached US$750 million and China is now Uzbekistan’s fourth-largest trading partner.

Wen then hurried to Ashgabat, meeting on November 3-4 with Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdimukhamedov, where the prime topic of conversation was the construction of a Turkmenistan-China natural gas pipeline. More than any other Chinese Central Asian initiative, this is the one that rattles Moscow’s cage the most, as it currently has a lucrative export monopoly via its Transneft pipelines, buying Turkmen gas for $100 per 1,000 cubic meters while shipping its own natural gas to European consumers for $260 per 1,000 cubic meters.

Loss of Turkmen gas would force Russia’s Gazprom to dig deep into Russia’s indigenous resources while depriving it of the added cash flow, should the 4,350 mile-long natural gas pipeline to China with a 30 billion cubic meters annual capacity, agreed upon in April 2006 by the late Turkmen President Saparmurat Niyazov, ever come to fruition.

While in Belarus, Wen signed a basket of agreements with Belarus President Alyaksandr Lukashenka totaling $530 million, and announced that China approves Belarusian acceptance into the World Trade Organization. As Belarus is energy-poor, it seems likely that the agreements paralleled those signed in Moscow for machinery imports.

During Wen’s November 5-6 visit to Russia to follow up on the SCO forum, Wen put forward a four-point proposal in Moscow at the second high-level Sino-Russian economic forum to boost bilateral economic and trade cooperation. During the visit, the two sides were set to conclude 15 agreements worth $1.3 billion. According to Russian Ambassador to China Sergei Razov, in 2007 Russian-Chinese bilateral trade will exceed $40 billion, a growth over 2006’s rate of $33 billion.

Russia, however, realized that it suddenly joined a host of nations in developing a trade deficit with China in 2007 for the first time. Moscow officials believe that the shortfall can be made up by increasing exports of timber, oil and machinery to China. Currently oil and oil products account for nearly 54%; in 2006, nearly 6 million tons of oil were exported to China, a 25% increase over 2005 exports. China is also Russia’s second-largest arms export market, only exceeded by India.

The most interesting item on the Sino-Russian economic forum agenda for discussion between Zubkov and Wen was undoubtedly the agreement that the pair was expected to sign for constructing an oil pipeline from Skovorodino, Russia, to the Chinese frontier. While the interest might be there, Russia is insisting that the deal incorporates long-term import quota guarantees with pricing policy assurances. The pipeline would replace Russia’s current oil shipments by railway, which is believed in Beijing to be grossly inefficient.

By any yardstick Wen’s visit can only be judged a grand success, but it also revealed the underlying rifts between China and its largest SCO partner, Russia. Moscow did not see off the American military from Central Asia only to see them replaced with multitudes of Chinese businessmen. Behind all the recent smiles, Beijing and Moscow’s shadow struggle for primacy in Central Asia continues unabated.

John C K Daly received his PhD in Russian and Middle Eastern studies from the University of London and is an adjunct scholar at the Middle East Institute in Washington, DC.

(This article first appeared in The Jamestown Foundation. Used with permission.)

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/IK16Ad01.html
 

Written by eldib

November 18, 2007 at 5:15 pm

Mosaic: World News From The Middle East – November 2007

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Mosaic: World News From The Middle East – November 2007

“Iraq Declares Border Crisis with Turkey Over” Al Jazeera English, Qatar

“Cost of Iraq & Afghanistan Wars Totals 1.6 Trillion Dollars” Al Jazeera TV, Qatar

“Bribery Cited in Jordanian Elections” Al Arabiya TV, UAE

“King Abdullah Returns from Germany” Jordan TV, Jordan

“Bernard Kouchner Concludes Visit to Lebanon” Future TV, Lebanon

“Twenty-Eight Terrorists Captured in Iraq” Al Iraqiya TV, Iraq

“Fighting in Somalia Paralyzes the Lives of Citizens” Al Arabiya TV, UAE

“Mauritanians Demonstrate Over the Rise of Oil Prices” Al-Alam TV, Iran

“Ahmadinejad Receives Vote of Confidence from Iran’s Parliament” IRIB2 TV, Iran
Produced for Link TV by Jamal Dajani.

        

Written by eldib

November 18, 2007 at 1:08 pm

PENTAGON INSIDER HAS DIRE WARNING

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PENTAGON INSIDER HAS DIRE WARNING

Daniel Ellsberg, the former Defense Department analyst who leaked the secret Pentagon Papers history of the Vietnam War, offered insights into the looming attack on Iran and the loss of liberty in the United States at a recent American University symposium. What follow are his comments from that speech. They have been edited only for space.

By Daniel Ellsberg

Let me simplify . . . and not just to be rhetorical: A coup has occurred. I woke up the other day realizing, coming out of sleep, that a coup has occurred. It’s not just a question that a coup lies ahead with the next 9-11. That’s the next coup that completes the first.

The last five years have seen a steady assault on every fundamental of our Constitution . . . what the rest of the world looked at for the last 200 years as a model and experiment to the rest of the world—in checks and balances, limited government, Bill of Rights, individual rights protected from majority infringement by the Congress, an independent judiciary, the possibility of impeachment.

There have been violations of these principles by many presidents before. Most of the specific things that Bush has done in the way of illegal surveillance and other matters were done under my boss Lyndon Johnson in the Vietnam War: the use of CIA, FBI, NSA against Americans.

All these violations were impeachable had they been found out at the time but in nearly every case the violations were not found out until [the president was] out of office so we didn’t have the exact challenge that we have today.

That was true with the first term of Nixon and certainly of Johnson, Kennedy and others. They were impeachable. They weren’t found out in time. But I think it was not their intention, in the crisis situations that they felt justified their actions, to change our form of government.

It is increasingly clear with each new book and each new leak that comes out, that Richard Cheney and his now chief of staff David Addington have had precisely that in mind since at least the early 1970s. Not just since 1992, not since 2001, but [they] have believed in executive government, single-branch government under an executive president—elected or not—with unrestrained powers. They did not believe in restraint.

When I say this, I’m not saying they are traitors. I don’t think they have in mind allegiance to some foreign power or have a desire to help a foreign power. I believe they have in their own minds a love of this country and what they think is best for this country—but what they think is best is directly and consciously at odds with what the Founders of this country [and the Framers of the Constitution] thought.

They believe we need a different kind of government now, an executive government essentially, rule by decree, which is what we’re getting with ‘signing statements.’

Signing statements are talked about as line-item vetoes which is one [way] of describing them which are unconstitutional in themselves, but in other ways are just saying the president says: ‘I decide what I enforce. I decide what the law is. I legislate.’

It’s [the same] with the military commissions, courts that are under the entire control of the executive branch, essentially of the president—a concentration of legislative, judicial, and executive powers in one branch, which is precisely what the founders meant to avert, and tried to avert and did avert to the best of their ability in the Constitution.”

* * *

Now I’m appealing to that as a crisis right now not just because it is a break in tradition but because I believe in my heart and from my experience that on this point the Founders had it right. It’s not just ‘our way of doing things’— it was a crucial perception on the corruption of power to anybody, including Americans.

On procedures and institutions that might possibly keep that power under control because the alternative was what we have just seen, wars like Vietnam, wars like Iraq, wars like the one coming.

That brings me to the second point. This executive branch, under specifically Bush and Cheney, despite opposition [even] from most of the rest of the branch, even of the cabinet, clearly intends a war against Iran, which, even by imperialist standards, [violates] standards in other words which were accepted not only by nearly everyone in the executive branch but most of the leaders in Congress.

The interests of the empire, the need for hegemony, our right to control and our need to control the oil of the Middle East and many other places. That is consensual in our establishment. …

But even by those standards, an attack on Iran is insane. And I say that quietly, I don’t mean it to be heard as rhetoric. Of course it’s not only aggression and a violation of international law, a supreme international crime, but it is by imperial standards, insane in terms of the consequences.

Does that make it impossible? No, it obviously doesn’t; it doesn’t even make it unlikely.

That is because two things come together that with the acceptance for various reasons of the Congress—Democrats and Republicans—and the public and the media, we have freed the White House — the president and the vice president—from virtually any restraint by Congress, courts, media, public, whatever.

And on the other hand, the people who have this unrestrained power are crazy. Not entirely, but they have crazy beliefs.

And the question is what then, can we do about this?

We are heading toward an insane operation. It is not certain. [But it] is likely.… I want to try to be realistic myself here, to encourage us to do what we must do, what is needed to be done with the full recognition of the reality. Nothing is impossible.

What I’m talking about in the way of a police state, in the way of an attack on Iran, is not certain. Nothing is certain, actually. However, I think it is probable, more likely than not, that in the next 15, 16 months of this administration we will see an attack on Iran. Probably. Whatever we do.

And . . . we will not succeed in moving Congress, probably, and Congress probably will not stop the president from doing this. And that’s where we’re heading. That’s a very ugly, ugly prospect.

However, I think it’s up to us to work to increase that small, perhaps—anyway not large—possibility and probability to avert this within the next 15 months, aside from the effort that we have to make for the rest of our lives.

* * *

Getting back the constitutional government and improving it will take a long time. And I think if we don’t get started now, it won’t be started under the next administration.

Getting out of Iraq will take a long time. Averting Iran and averting a further coup in the face of a 9-11, another attack, is for right now, it can’t be put off. It will take a kind of political and moral courage of which we have seen very little.

We have a really unusual concentration here and in this audience, of people who have in fact changed their lives, changed their position, lost their friends to a large extent, risked and experienced being called terrible names, ‘traitor,’ ‘weak on terrorism’—names that politicians will do anything to avoid being called.

How do we get more people in the government and in the public at large to change their lives now in a crisis in a critical way? How do we get Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid for example? What kinds of pressures, what kinds of influences can be brought to bear to get Congress to do their jobs? It isn’t just doing their jobs. Getting them to obey their oaths of office.

I took an oath many times, an oath of office as a Marine lieutenant, as an official in the Defense Department, as an official in the State Department as a Foreign Service officer. A number of times I took an oath of office which is the same oath of office taken by every member of Congress and every official in the United States and every officer in the armed services.

And that oath is not to a commander in chief, which is not [even] mentioned. It is not to a Fuehrer. It is not even to superior officers. The oath is precisely to protect and uphold the Constitution of the United States.

Now that is an oath I violated every day for years in the Defense Department without realizing it when I kept my mouth shut when I knew the public was being lied into a war as they were lied into Iraq, as they are being lied into war in Iran.

I knew that I had the documents that proved it, and I did not put it out then. I was not obeying my oath, which I eventually came to do.

I’ve often said that Lt. Ehren Watada—who still faces trial for refusing to obey orders to deploy to Iraq which he correctly perceives to be an unconstitutional and aggressive war—is the single officer in the United States armed services who is taking seriously [the matter of] upholding his oath.

The president is clearly violating that oath, of course. [All the personnel] under him who understand what is going on — and there are myriad — are violating their oaths. And that’s the standard that I think we should be asking of people.

On the Democratic side, on the political side, I think we should be demanding of our Democratic leaders in the House and Senate—and frankly of the Republicans —that it is not their highest single absolute priority to be reelected or to maintain a Democratic majority so that Pelosi can still be speaker of the House and Reid can be in the Senate, or to increase that majority.

I’m not going to say that for politicians they should ignore that, or that they should do something else entirely, or that they should not worry about that.
Of course that will be and should be a major concern of theirs, but they’re acting like it’s their sole concern. Which is business as usual. “We have a majority, let’s not lose it, let’s keep it. Let’s keep those chairmanships.”

Exactly what have those chairmanships done for us to save the Constitution in the last couple of years?

I am shocked by the Republicans today that I read [about] in The Washington Post who threatened a filibuster if we … get back habeas corpus. The ruling out of habeas corpus with the help of the Democrats did not get us back to George the First it got us back to before King John 700 years ago in terms of counter-revolution.

I think we’ve got to somehow get home to them [in Congress] that this is the time for them to uphold the oath, to preserve the Constitution, which is worth struggling for in part because it’s only with the power that the Constitution gives Congress responding to the public, only with that can we protect the world from madmen in power in the White House who intend an attack on Iran.

And the current generation of American generals and others who realize that this will be a catastrophe have not shown themselves —they might be people who in their past lives risked their bodies and their lives in Vietnam or elsewhere, like [Colin] Powell, and would not risk their career or their relations with the president to the slightest degree.

That has to change. And it’s the example of people like those up here who somehow brought home to our representatives that they as humans and as citizens have the power to do likewise and find in themselves the courage to protect this country and protect the world. Thank you.”

http://www.americanfreepress.net/html/pentagon_insider.html

Written by eldib

November 18, 2007 at 3:24 am

Local news station confirms barium in chemtrails

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Local news station confirms barium in chemtrails

     

 

Chemtrails on german RTL-TV (english translation)

Géoingénierie 

Chemtrails-Chemtrails-Chemtrails-Chemtrails

Written by eldib

November 18, 2007 at 3:00 am

There ’s a war going on outside

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TIMZ  a christian american iraqi sing against war.

TIMZ on Al Jazeera English

    

Written by eldib

November 18, 2007 at 2:54 am

Posted in Irak, USA

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A perfect storm for gold as mines left empty

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gold1.jpgA perfect storm for gold as mines left empty

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, International Business Editor

Last Updated 16/11/2007

The era of ‘peak gold’ has arrived.

Try as they might, miners cannot find enough ore at viable costs to replace their fast-depleting reserves, even if they dig miles into the centre of the earth.Dollar crunch puts gold centre stage Eastern glitter: models wear Just Gold jewellery from the collection of Henry Jewellery Group“There’s not much gold out there,” said Gregory Wilkins, chief executive of top producer Barrick Gold.

“Global mine supply is going to decrease at a much faster rate than people generally believe. Many of the new mines that people are anticipating will never come into production,” he told the RBC Capital Markets gold conference in London.

“There is a great disparity between the money spent on exploration and success. It’s hard to say where the price of gold is going because we’re in uncharted waters. I would say it could easily move to $900, $1,000, or beyond. It could happen very quickly,” he said.

We know from the US Academy of Sciences that some 26pc of all the copper and 19pc of all the zinc that ever existed in the earth’s crust has already been lost to mankind, mostly wasted in milling or smelting or buried in landfills.

Data has never been collected for gold, and the 5bn ounces of mined over history is still around. Roughly 1bn are in central bank vaults. But the same patterns of exhaustion are emerging.

South Africa’s output is down to the lowest since 1932. Much of what remains elsewhere is locked up in no-go countries run by demagogues or serial expropriators.

“You don’t put yourself in harm’s way. It’s a non-starter to invest in a country that takes your mine away from you,” said Mr Wilkins.

“The list of countries where we won’t go is getting longer. There’s Venezuela, and all the countries in Latin America that are influenced by (Hugo) Chavez.

“In Ecuador they withdraw licences after they have been issued: you can’t tolerate that kind of instability. Russia is another country where things are deteriorating,” he said.

Kevin McArthur, chief executive of Goldcorps, said his group was not setting foot outside North America.

“We won’t build a mine where we won’t go on holiday. We’re even tending to stay out of the US because that has some of the highest political risk in terms of mining investment,” he said.

The gripe is that revisions to the 1872 Mine Act will add royalty costs and allow regulators to shut down projects on a whim.

Mr McArthur said global output was on a relentless slide. “We’ll see four digit gold. It will have to reach $2,500 an ounce to equal the 1980 record in today’s terms, so we have a long way to go,” he said

Gold reached a 27-year high of $846 an ounce in early November following rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve, though it has fallen back on profit taking.

Investors seem to be betting on a “Bernanke reflation”, suspecting that the Fed will turn the liquidity tap back on to cushion the US property slump.

Tony Fell, chairman of RBC Capital Markets, said the world money supply has been growing by 5pc-10pc while the stock of mined gold has been rising at 1.6pc, creating a mismatch that must be covered.

Mr Fell says the total debt burden in the US has exploded to 340pc of GDP, in stark contrast to the steady levels of around 150pc of the post-War era.

It almost insures further dollar debasement. “We’re in the very early phases of a prolonged bull market,” he said.

RBC argues that the global dollar system known as Bretton Woods II is “coming apart at the seams” as Asian, Mid-East, and Latin American states start to break their dollar links to avoid importing US inflation.

The result is to resurrect gold, which is fast regaining its role as the world’s benchmark currency.

It was the last currency bust-up — caused by America’s attempt to the fight the Vietnam War and fund the Great Society, without adequate taxes — that lay behind the 1970s bull market in gold.

“The fact that monetary policy in the core was too loose for the periphery triggered the demise of Bretton Woods 1. The late 1960s saw first France and then Germany and Britain all start to swap their dollar reserves for gold. We may well be witnessing a similar situation today as price pressures build in the emerging world,” it said in a new report.

However, the bank warned that gold was looking toppy after the blistering Autumn rally and faced a likely sell-off in coming weeks, perhaps to $725-$750.

India’s gold buying season is coming to an end with the Diwali Festival. The country accounts for 22pc of world gold demand.

The level of speculative “long” positions on New York’s Comex futures market has remained above 20m ounces for five weeks in a row. This sort of pattern is typically followed by a sharp slide, although the global credit crunch and bank scares may change the game this time.

RBC says any correction is likely to be short, with gold probing record highs of $900 an ounce early next year.

Whether the gold mining shares will at last join the party is far from clear. Many have languished through the bull market, and some are trading well below levels reached when gold was half the price.

Costs are rising at $60 an ounce annually. They will average of $460 by next year. From tires, to diesel fuel, and the geologists’ salaries, mine inflation is running at 15pc.

Ian Cockerill, head of Gold Fields, said the industry had “shot itself in the foot” by touting production cash costs that were not even close to the real figure.

Hence the fury of shareholders left trying to understand how so many mines could have gone bust when alleged costs per ounce were half the spot price of gold.

“We’ve deluded ourselves and we’ve deluded investors by failing telling them about all the other bills we have to pay. Until we tell them the total cost per ounce, we’ll never have credibility,” he said.

RBC is betting that the gold mining shares will soon start to shine again, enjoying their famed leverage to the spot price.

At $1000 an ounce, it forecasts a share feast: Barrick up 65pc, Newmont 80pc, IAMGOLD 90pc, NovaGold 90pc, and Centerra 100pc.

Purists will always prefer ingots of glistening metal.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/11/15/bcngold115.xml

Written by eldib

November 18, 2007 at 12:07 am

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Sarkozy et les musulmans

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Sarkozy et les musulmans

sarkozy_sale_tete_tgp.jpg

L’histoire se raconte dans les chancelleries européennes. Nicolas Sarkozy, recevant le Premier ministre irlandais, Bertie Ahern, le 21 septembre, puis suédois, Fredrik Reinfeldt, le 3 octobre, se serait livré à une véritable diatribe anti-musulmane devant ses invités.

Selon mes sources, le chef de l’Etat s’est lancé dans une diatribe confuse d’une vingtaine de minutes, « dans un langage très dur, très familier, choquant pour tout dire», contre le « trop grand nombre de musulmans présents en Europe » et leurs difficultés d’intégration.

Il a aussi décrit de façon apocalyptique le « choc de civilisation » qui oppose les musulmans à l’occident. Le tout, manifestement, pour justifier son opposition à l’adhésion de la Turquie à l’Union.

Mais ses interlocuteurs, qui n’en sont toujours pas revenus, ne sont même pas sûrs de l’avoir bien compris, tant le discours était décousu et surtout hors de propos avec l’objet de ces rencontres, la préparation du Sommet de Lisbonne des 18 et 19 octobre. Ils en ont, en tout cas, retiré la désagréable sensation que Sarkozy, non seulement avait un sérieux problème avec les musulmans, mais avait du mal à maîtriser ses nerfs.

Cette idée du “choc des civilisations” a déjà été développée, de façon plus policée, par le chef de l’Etat, dans une indifférence assez étonnante, le 27 août dernier, dans son discours aux ambassadeurs.

Il avait alors expliqué que le “premier défi, sans doute l’un des plus importants” auquel doit faire face la France est : “comment prévenir une confrontation entre l’Islam et l’Occident? Ce n’est pas la peine d’employer la langue de bois : cette confrontation est voulue par les groupes extrémistes tels qu’Al Qaeda qui rêvent d’instaurer, de l’Indonésie au Nigéria, un khalifat rejetant toute ouverture, toute modernité, toute idée même de diversité. Si ces forces devaient atteindre leur sinistre objectif, nul doute que le XXIe siècle serait pire encore que le précédent, pourtant marqué par un affrontement sans merci entre les idéologies”.

Pour Sarkozy, “nous aurions tort de sous estimer la possibilité” “d’une confrontation, entre l’Islam et l’Occident”:  “l’affaire des caricatures en a été un signe avant-coureur”. Dès lors, la surprise de Bertie Ahern et de Fredrik Reinfeldt s’explique: ils n’avaient sans doute pas lu ces quelques lignes.

http://bruxelles.blogs.liberation.fr/coulisses/2007/11/sarkozy-et-les-.html

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Pendant la période des élections Sarkozy parle hors antenne sur le channel tv TF1

    

Written by eldib

November 18, 2007 at 12:02 am

Posted in France

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