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still on track, to a depression
still on track, to a depression
if the diplomates where captured under false US alligations then it would be safe to say that the diplomates where stabilising iraq and this did not suit the hidden agenda of the US! to find and create any excuse to attack iran and carry out the real reason iraq was invaded years ago. {oil trading in only one curency.dollars }
more troops ,carriers close by , tactical plans,
remember the iranian oil bourse, oil for euro,s iranian oil exchange, and the beginning of the global dollar dominated collapse, its like pulling the table cloth from under the maffia monatry system{ dollars for oil since 1971 , gold no longer , oil and dollars, black gold! [the black mailing system of any country ,for who posseses the oil controls the world and the oil is controled by dollars! and iran is trying to balance the books of goverment blackmail and control, by breaking the strong hold and helping the european union balance the power of control ! in short , no more hittler style control and more freedom to countries to create enterprise and competion ,without the threat {behind the scenes} to goverments to amend there policies or stop! if it does not suit US interests,
hence why america will wage war on iran { and will create or manipulate also provoke an opertunity to do so, unless iran bows to the demands under the table!
global economic melt down, and a country trying to stay no 1 before it aventuates, how long can a bubble stay inflated when the holes appear faster than patchs!
global monatary inbalances, droughts and food shortages, increased natural disasters
if countrys where squirels,then theres a giant squirel collecting all the global goodies as theres, unrest comming!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
news below 18-01-2007
Last Updated: Thursday, 18 January 2007, 18:14 GMT
Iran condemns US 'kidnap' in Iraq Hassan Kazimi Qomi Hassan Kazimi Qomi said the men were "kidnapped" by the US Iran has accused the US of kidnapping five of its citizens who were arrested in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil.
The US has denied the men were diplomats - it says they were linked to Iran's Revolutionary Guard and were arming Shia fighters in Iraq.
Iran's ambassador to Iraq called last week's arrests "an insult to the Iraqi people". He urged the US to prove that they were helping Iraqi militants.
Hassan Kazimi Qomi denied Iran has been involved in the violence in Iraq.
He said the "kidnapped" men were diplomats engaged in legitimate tasks.
"These actions are against international conventions which guarantee diplomatic immunity and they are also against the framework of the agreement between Iraq and the Islamic Republic of Iran," Mr Qomi told the BBC's Andrew North in Baghdad.
He denied Iran had any interest in destabilising Iraq, saying the unrest and a flood of refugees could spill over Iran's border.
Diplomatic row
Mr Qomi's comments follow a similar statement made to the BBC on Wednesday by one of Iraq's most powerful Shia politicians, Abdel Aziz al-Hakim, who condemned the arrests as an attack on Iraq's sovereignty.
The five men were detained - along with one other who has now been released - at the Iranian liaison office in Irbil, in the northern, Kurdish part of Iraq.
Iran said the building was a consulate, but the US disagreed, saying it had no official diplomatic immunity, and nor did the men.
A US Navy jet launches from the USS Dwight D Eisenhower This undoubtedly signals a ratcheting up of pressure on the Iranians
US flexes muscles
Mr Qomi said it was not the first such incident targeting Iranians in Iraq.
Late last year, US troops descended on Mr Hakim's residential compound in Baghdad and detained two Iranian officials. They were later released.
He said other diplomatic staff and Iranian businessmen had been detained in the past.
Washington has often accused Iran, or factions within the Iranian government, of aiding Shia groups in Iraq militarily and politically.
US Vice-President Dick Cheney said on Sunday that Iran was "fishing in troubled waters" by aiding attacks on US forces and backing Shia militias involved in sectarian violence.
President George W Bush has accused Iran of destabilising Iraq and warned that the US would make a tough response.
Tehran denies the claims and has demanded to see proof.
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