| Topic: |
Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus |
| User: |
"Xa ta Zac Xa Ta Amac -The Last 1800 Days - HOOROO !" |
| Date: |
17 Oct 2007 03:00:27 AM |
| Object: |
PUTIN WARNS U.S. AGAINST ATTACKING IRAN |
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071016/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_russia;_ylt=Aq_HUfyJE737HbbV._2SdtCs0NUE
Putin warns against attacks on Iran
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV, Associated Press Writer
Tue Oct 16, 7:48 PM ET
Vladimir Putin issued a veiled warning Tuesday against any attack on
Iran as he began the first visit by a Kremlin leader to Tehran in six
decades - a mission reflecting Russian-Iranian efforts to curb U.S.
influence.
He also suggested Moscow and Tehran should have a veto on Western
plans for new pipelines to carry oil and natural gas from the Caspian
Sea, using routes that would bypass Russian soil and break the
Kremlin's monopoly on energy deliveries from the region.
Putin came to Tehran for a summit of the five nations bordering the
Caspian, but his visit was aimed more at strengthening efforts to
blunt U.S. economic and military ties in the area. Yet he also refused
to set a date for completing Iran's first nuclear reactor, trying to
avoid an outright show of support for Iran's defiance over its nuclear
program.
Putin strongly warned outside powers against use of force in the
region, a clear reference to the United States, which many in Iran
fear will attack over the West's suspicions that the Iranians are
secretly trying to develop nuclear weapons.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad made similar comments.
"We are saying that no (Caspian) nations should offer their territory
to outside powers for aggression or any military action against any of
the Caspian states," Putin said.
The five national leaders at the summit later signed a declaration
that included a similar statement - an apparent reflection of Iranian
fears that the United States could use Azerbaijan's territory as a
staging ground for military strikes in Iran.
Putin has warned against such attacks previously, but reiterating them
in Tehran gave them greater resonance - particularly at a summit for a
region where Moscow deeply resents U.S. and European attempts at
greater influence.
The Russian leader also used the occasion to make a nod to Iran's
national pride - describing it as a "world power" and referring to the
might of the ancient Persian empire.
In Iran's confrontation with the West, Russia has tread a fine line,
warning against heavy pressure on Iran and protecting it - for now -
from a third round of U.N. sanctions, while urging Tehran to heed the
Security Council's demand that it halt uranium enrichment.
Putin's careful stance on completing the Russian-built Bushehr nuclear
power plant in Iran suggested the Kremlin is seeking to preserve solid
ties with Tehran without angering the West.
"Russia is trying to sit in two chairs at the same time," Fyodor
Lukyanov, editor of Russia in Global Affairs magazine, told The
Associated Press. A pledge to quickly complete the plant would send a
"strong signal to the West that Russia is with Iran," he said.
Putin showed he wouldn't be pressed into speeding up completion of the
$1 billion contract to build Bushehr.
"I only gave promises to my mom when I was a small boy," he snapped
when Iranian reporters prodded him to promise a quick launch.
At the same time, Putin - on the first trip to Iran by a Kremlin
leader since Josef Stalin visited in 1943 for talks with Winston
Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt during World War II - said Moscow
wouldn't back down on its obligation to finish the plant.
"Russia has clearly stated that it's going to complete this work,"
Putin said. "We are not renouncing this obligation."
Russia has warned that the Bushehr plant would not go on line this
fall as originally planned, saying Iran was slow in making payments.
Iranian officials have angrily denied being behind in its payments and
accuse the Kremlin of caving in to Western pressure.
Moscow also has ignored Iranian demands to ship nuclear reactor fuel
for the plant, saying it would be delivered only six months before the
Bushehr plant begins operation. The launch date has been delayed
indefinitely amid the payment dispute.
Putin said the two sides were negotiating revisions to the Bushehr
contract, and once agreed a decision on fuel can be made.
The Caspian leaders offered a degree of support for the Iranian
nuclear program, stressing in their joint statement that any country
like Iran which has signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty has the
right to "carry out research and can use nuclear energy for peaceful
means without discrimination."
Putin underlined his disagreements with Washington on Iran last week,
saying he had seen no "objective data" showing Tehran is trying to
construct nuclear weapons. Iran says it need enriched uranium to fuel
nuclear reactors that will generate electricity.
The main issue before the summit was the Caspian Sea itself.
Divvying up territory in and around the inland sea - believed to
contain the world's third-largest reserves of oil and natural gas -
has been a divisive issue among the five nations, and the leaders
showed no signs of progress toward resolving the dispute.
The Caspian's offshore borders have been in limbo since the 1991
Soviet collapse. The lack of agreement has led to tensions and
conflicts over oil deposits, but Putin and Ahmadinejad strongly warned
outside powers to stay away from the region.
"All issues related to the Caspian should be settled exclusively by
littoral nations," Ahmadinejad said.
Moscow strongly opposes U.S.- and European-backed efforts to build
pipelines to deliver Central Asian and Caspian oil and gas to the West
by bypassing Russia, through which all the region's pipelines now
flow. Russia has pushed for new pipelines to cross its territory as
well.
Putin argued that all pipeline projects in the region should require
the approval by all five Caspian nations to take effect, a view that
would give each capital a veto.
"Projects which may inflict a serious damage to the Caspian
environment can't be and mustn't be implemented without a preliminary
discussion by the Caspian five and making a consensus decision in the
interests of our common sea," Putin said.
But the idea was barely mentioned in comments by the leaders of the
former Soviet republics of Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan,
which are striving to balance their relations with Russia, the West
and Asia.
In Baku, Azerbaijan's capital, political analyst Ilgar Mamedov said
the veto idea was only "Putin's opinion." Caspian nations "are
independent and act in accordance with their own interests," he said.
___
Associated Press writers Ali Akbar Dareini and Nasser Karimi in Tehran
and Steve Gutterman in Moscow contributed to this report.
===========================
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| User: "Yaako Warrior from AUZ, Germany, RSA, USA, Sweden, Hong Kong, Canada, Russia, China, Denmark, UK, .........., the slayer of fecal stained moslems." |
|
| Title: Filthy raghead rubbish !!!!!! - Mohammed - A 6th century paedophilewife bashing pervert who became deluded that his epileptic episodes wererevelations from a moon god. His tendency toward megalomania was clearlycaused by a dose of the clap. |
18 Oct 2007 03:08:19 AM |
|
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wrote:
Filthy raghead rubbish !!!!!!
Historically, prove this WRONG.
If not, your ENTIRE BELIEF IS A LIE !!!
Mohammed - A 6th century paedophile wife bashing pervert who became
deluded that his epileptic episodes were revelations from a moon god.
His tendency toward megalomania was clearly caused by a dose of the
clap.
This also caused him to retreat into moralistic denial hence the
preoccupation with punishment and sex.
His crazy outpourings were subjected to the spindoctoring attentions
of his successors - hence the schism amongst his sons and nephews.
There is still offence regarding the area of the Satanic verses that
were "abrogated" by Al Eiliah aka Allah. Apparently Allah is so all
powerful that he is above the restraint of personal integrity.
He can deliver scripture to men and then retract it if he feels like
it.
Anyone who subsequently refers to it is deemed a blasphemer because
Allah has withdrawn his statements and so they do not exist anymore.
Allah's word is eternal unless he decides to change it.(What a joke)
So Salman Rushdie gets a death fatwa for raising a question about the
stars and the moon in the Muslim emblem. Allah did not have two
daughters and he is not the moon. He has withdrawn this statement and
anyone who mentions it again is an infidel who must be killed.
Is it any wonder that you Muslims are unable to effectively defend
your faith in a focussed military way. Suicide bombing, lies, threats
and blackmail, perpetrated from behind masks are the only cowardly way
that you are able to assert yourselves.
The Israelis kicked your asses 40 years ago.
Sorted YOU out in six days and would have taken over completely if the
UN had not intervened.
The Muslims have been hiding behind women and children ever since.
The western world should stop appeasing you lot and allow the Israelis
to
kick your ***** again.
.
|
|
|
| User: "Yaako Warrior from AUZ, Germany, RSA, USA, Sweden, Hong Kong, Canada, Russia, China, Denmark, UK, .........., the slayer of fecal stained moslems." |
|
| Title: Re: Filthy raghead rubbish !!!!!! - Mohammed - A 6th century paedophilewife bashing pervert who became deluded that his epileptic episodes wererevelations from a moon god. His tendency toward megalomania was clearlycaused by a dose of the clap. |
18 Oct 2007 09:35:04 AM |
|
|
Yaako Warrior from AUZ, Germany, RSA, USA, Sweden, Hong Kong, Canada,
Russia, China, Denmark, UK, .........., the slayer of fecal stained
moslems. wrote:
ArchangelMichael.GodsGeneral@gmail.com wrote:
Filthy raghead rubbish !!!!!!
Historically, prove this WRONG.
If not, your ENTIRE BELIEF IS A LIE !!!
Mohammed - A 6th century paedophile wife bashing pervert who became
deluded that his epileptic episodes were revelations from a moon god.
His tendency toward megalomania was clearly caused by a dose of the
clap.
This also caused him to retreat into moralistic denial hence the
preoccupation with punishment and sex.
His crazy outpourings were subjected to the spindoctoring attentions
of his successors - hence the schism amongst his sons and nephews.
There is still offence regarding the area of the Satanic verses that
were "abrogated" by Al Eiliah aka Allah. Apparently Allah is so all
powerful that he is above the restraint of personal integrity.
He can deliver scripture to men and then retract it if he feels like
it.
Anyone who subsequently refers to it is deemed a blasphemer because
Allah has withdrawn his statements and so they do not exist anymore.
Allah's word is eternal unless he decides to change it.(What a joke)
So Salman Rushdie gets a death fatwa for raising a question about the
stars and the moon in the Muslim emblem. Allah did not have two
daughters and he is not the moon. He has withdrawn this statement and
anyone who mentions it again is an infidel who must be killed.
Is it any wonder that you Muslims are unable to effectively defend
your faith in a focussed military way. Suicide bombing, lies, threats
and blackmail, perpetrated from behind masks are the only cowardly way
that you are able to assert yourselves.
The Israelis kicked your asses 40 years ago.
Sorted YOU out in six days and would have taken over completely if the
UN had not intervened.
The Muslims have been hiding behind women and children ever since.
The western world should stop appeasing you lot and allow the Israelis
to
kick your ***** again.
.
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "The Last 1900 Days... HOOROO !" |
|
| Title: PUTIN WARNS U.S. AGAINST ATTACKING IRAN |
18 Oct 2007 10:08:16 PM |
|
|
Putin warns against attacks on Iran
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071016/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_russia;_ylt=Aq_HUfyJE737HbbV._2SdtCs0NUE
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV, Associated Press Writer
Tue Oct 16, 7:48 PM ET
Vladimir Putin issued a veiled warning Tuesday against any attack on
Iran as he began the first visit by a Kremlin leader to Tehran in six
decades - a mission reflecting Russian-Iranian efforts to curb U.S.
influence.
He also suggested Moscow and Tehran should have a veto on Western
plans for new pipelines to carry oil and natural gas from the Caspian
Sea, using routes that would bypass Russian soil and break the
Kremlin's monopoly on energy deliveries from the region.
Putin came to Tehran for a summit of the five nations bordering the
Caspian, but his visit was aimed more at strengthening efforts to
blunt U.S. economic and military ties in the area. Yet he also
refused
to set a date for completing Iran's first nuclear reactor, trying to
avoid an outright show of support for Iran's defiance over its
nuclear
program.
Putin strongly warned outside powers against use of force in the
region, a clear reference to the United States, which many in Iran
fear will attack over the West's suspicions that the Iranians are
secretly trying to develop nuclear weapons.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad made similar comments.
"We are saying that no (Caspian) nations should offer their territory
to outside powers for aggression or any military action against any
of
the Caspian states," Putin said.
The five national leaders at the summit later signed a declaration
that included a similar statement - an apparent reflection of Iranian
fears that the United States could use Azerbaijan's territory as a
staging ground for military strikes in Iran.
Putin has warned against such attacks previously, but reiterating
them
in Tehran gave them greater resonance - particularly at a summit for
a
region where Moscow deeply resents U.S. and European attempts at
greater influence.
The Russian leader also used the occasion to make a nod to Iran's
national pride - describing it as a "world power" and referring to
the
might of the ancient Persian empire.
In Iran's confrontation with the West, Russia has tread a fine line,
warning against heavy pressure on Iran and protecting it - for now -
from a third round of U.N. sanctions, while urging Tehran to heed the
Security Council's demand that it halt uranium enrichment.
Putin's careful stance on completing the Russian-built Bushehr
nuclear
power plant in Iran suggested the Kremlin is seeking to preserve
solid
ties with Tehran without angering the West.
"Russia is trying to sit in two chairs at the same time," Fyodor
Lukyanov, editor of Russia in Global Affairs magazine, told The
Associated Press. A pledge to quickly complete the plant would send a
"strong signal to the West that Russia is with Iran," he said.
Putin showed he wouldn't be pressed into speeding up completion of
the
$1 billion contract to build Bushehr.
"I only gave promises to my mom when I was a small boy," he snapped
when Iranian reporters prodded him to promise a quick launch.
At the same time, Putin - on the first trip to Iran by a Kremlin
leader since Josef Stalin visited in 1943 for talks with Winston
Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt during World War II - said Moscow
wouldn't back down on its obligation to finish the plant.
"Russia has clearly stated that it's going to complete this work,"
Putin said. "We are not renouncing this obligation."
Russia has warned that the Bushehr plant would not go on line this
fall as originally planned, saying Iran was slow in making payments.
Iranian officials have angrily denied being behind in its payments
and
accuse the Kremlin of caving in to Western pressure.
Moscow also has ignored Iranian demands to ship nuclear reactor fuel
for the plant, saying it would be delivered only six months before
the
Bushehr plant begins operation. The launch date has been delayed
indefinitely amid the payment dispute.
Putin said the two sides were negotiating revisions to the Bushehr
contract, and once agreed a decision on fuel can be made.
The Caspian leaders offered a degree of support for the Iranian
nuclear program, stressing in their joint statement that any country
like Iran which has signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty has
the
right to "carry out research and can use nuclear energy for peaceful
means without discrimination."
Putin underlined his disagreements with Washington on Iran last week,
saying he had seen no "objective data" showing Tehran is trying to
construct nuclear weapons. Iran says it need enriched uranium to fuel
nuclear reactors that will generate electricity.
The main issue before the summit was the Caspian Sea itself.
Divvying up territory in and around the inland sea - believed to
contain the world's third-largest reserves of oil and natural gas -
has been a divisive issue among the five nations, and the leaders
showed no signs of progress toward resolving the dispute.
The Caspian's offshore borders have been in limbo since the 1991
Soviet collapse. The lack of agreement has led to tensions and
conflicts over oil deposits, but Putin and Ahmadinejad strongly
warned
outside powers to stay away from the region.
"All issues related to the Caspian should be settled exclusively by
littoral nations," Ahmadinejad said.
Moscow strongly opposes U.S.- and European-backed efforts to build
pipelines to deliver Central Asian and Caspian oil and gas to the
West
by bypassing Russia, through which all the region's pipelines now
flow. Russia has pushed for new pipelines to cross its territory as
well.
Putin argued that all pipeline projects in the region should require
the approval by all five Caspian nations to take effect, a view that
would give each capital a veto.
"Projects which may inflict a serious damage to the Caspian
environment can't be and mustn't be implemented without a preliminary
discussion by the Caspian five and making a consensus decision in the
interests of our common sea," Putin said.
But the idea was barely mentioned in comments by the leaders of the
former Soviet republics of Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan,
which are striving to balance their relations with Russia, the West
and Asia.
In Baku, Azerbaijan's capital, political analyst Ilgar Mamedov said
the veto idea was only "Putin's opinion." Caspian nations "are
independent and act in accordance with their own interests," he said.
___
Associated Press writers Ali Akbar Dareini and Nasser Karimi in
Tehran
and Steve Gutterman in Moscow contributed to this report.
===========================
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