HunterCA -> RE: Oil interests in the Middle East? Or cliche leftist idiocy? (6/18/2015 8:30:18 PM)
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ORIGINAL: MasterJaguar01 quote:
ORIGINAL: HunterCA quote:
ORIGINAL: MasterJaguar01 quote:
ORIGINAL: HunterCA As a second corollary, show me where the private American oil companies had anything to do with British imperialism or should not have been trying to get access to oil markets. None of that is discussed in any of your links. That's a broad statement. You keep mentioning imperialism. In this case, the British, (and American oil companies for that mater) wanted one thing: Oil. The British were in a position to intervene, since they had troops there already, and they had been doing business with the Turks prior to WWI. In this case, the Britsh could care less who governed the region, as long as whomever it was, let them drill for oil. The US couldn't get in on the TPC until 6 years later. If it wasn't for "British Imperialism" as you keeepp saying, five American oil companies would not have: 1) Lead a geological team to discover oil 2) Negotiate their way into TPC As for if they should or should not have been trying to get access to oil markets, I have no comment. What I am saying is, if it were not for "British Imperialism", those companies would NOT have had that access. I imagine cotton candy people want sugar to spin. I imagine clothing manufacturers want cotton, silk or whatever. Why shouldn't oil companies want to find oil? But, your initial comment implied it was stable until Britain and the US decided to pursue oil interests. It's an old lefty saw. Would it have been stable if Asia had pursued the oil and brought it into the world? The regon was most definitely stable, operating semi-autonomously under the Ottoman turks for hundreds of years. As for what would have happened if the Asians invaaded instead? Probably the same thing? I don't know. The point of my post on tthe other thread was "Joe Biden was exactlyy right". Iraq has no common national interest. It consists of three ethnicities that, at best tolerate each other. They do not trust each other, and they certainly do NOT want to be governed by anyone outside their ethnicity. It was created to protect oil interests (I will say Western oil interests). American companies joined 6 years later. Rand Paul is now seeing that. (Or at least part of it, in the case of the Kurds (who have NEVER wanted tto be part of a unified Iraq) http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/biden-once-called-iraq-one-obamas-great-achievments_794909.html quote:
As Iraq falls apart, it's worth remembering Vice President Joe Biden hailing that country as one of President Obama's "great achievements" in a 2010 interview with then CNN host Larry King: "I am very optimistic about -- about Iraq. I mean, this could be one of the great achievements of this administration. You're going to see 90,000 American troops come marching home by the end of the summer. You're going to see a stable government in Iraq that is actually moving toward a representative government," said Biden. "I spent -- I've been there 17 times now. I go about every two months -- three months. I know every one of the major players in all of the segments of that society. It's impressed me. I've been impressed how they have been deciding to use the political process rather than guns to settle their differences." September 2006 on NPR uncle Joe said: quote:
Sen. Joseph Biden (D-DE) talks about his plan for a decentralized Iraq, divided along ethnic and religious lines — a Kurdish area to the north, and the rest divided between Shia and Sunni Muslims. In 2010 uncle Joe said this: http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2010/jul/21/joe-biden/joe-biden-says-he-never-called-partition-iraq/ quote:
"I don't want to debate history here, but I never called for a partition," Biden said. "I called for a central government with considerable autonomy in the regions." So which uncle Joe was right? Which should we listen to? And, if we had done that wouldn't have been exactly what you complained Churchill did?
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