XPost: soc.culture.china, soc.culture.usa, soc.culture.russian   
   XPost: soc.culture.iraq, soc.culture.iranian, soc.culture.pakistan   
   XPost: soc.culture.latin-america   
   From: acoustic@panix.com   
      
   In article <58c61329-0800-4ef8-942b-a42b88cbb13a@googlegroups.com>,   
    wrote:   
   >Saudi made an offer, like Don Corleone, that China cannot refuse.   
   >"We will pay for the DF21 missiles with all the oil you need until 2035."   
   >   
   >With this Saudi sealed the deal with China. In return for the Saudi oil,   
   >China will supply the DF21 missiles(number to be negotiated), install   
   >the missile batteries, supply missile experts to operate and train Saudi   
   >military personnel...and maintain the missile in top operating   
   >conditions.   
   >   
   >It all started when Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi's talented   
   >super negotiator, was recalled from the cold and despatched to China for   
   >a very special mission..soon after it was known that China has   
   >successfully tested the DF21 missile designed specifically to sink US   
   >carreir.   
      
   Yeah, Bandar bin Laden, oops, I meant bin Sultan bin Abdulazziz, also   
   approached Vladimir Putin and offered tens of billions of weapon   
   purchase from Russia in return for Moscow's promise to not oppose any   
   UNSC resolution against the Syrian government based on Chapter Seven   
   earlier before Obama called off the "let's bomb Syria" project that   
   Saudi Arabia coveted with a passion.   
      
   After what he has done in Syria, Bandar is not only bad news for the   
   Middle East, you've got to ask why can't Iran offer the same kind of   
   deal to China in exchange for China's unwavering support for Iran's   
   right to have a nuclear program for peaceful use, since Iran is also   
   an oil rich country and the Iranians are many times more educated than   
   an average Saudi? The answer is quite simple! Iran has a genuine   
   democracy where its national resources cannot be just bandied around   
   for bribe and evil while the House of Saudi is a dictatorship which   
   has seized the country's asset to advance its own hegemony agenda   
   abroad (including the Middle East and Russian territories) while   
   repressing its own people domestically to protect the monarchy rule   
   and its minority Sunni minions' special interests.   
      
   Israel might be working with Bandar bin Sultan against Syria now; but   
   it would be very alarmed if the House of Saudi were to gain acceess to   
   nukes, especially when the mean education level of the population is   
   so low.   
      
   And that's why the US doesn't let Saudi Arabia have the weapons it   
   allegedly is shopping elsewhere for. On the other hand, even though   
   China might receive a few tens of billions a year for the next ten or   
   15 years from a weapon deal (I don't even know if I would trust the   
   Saudis about the sustainability of such a deal), she would certainly   
   stand to lose much within the BRICS nations because Russia has already   
   planned to expand her bilateral trade program with China to go beyond   
   100 billion a year, IIRC.   
      
   China's long term best bet is alwasy peaceful development. That means   
   that anything she does must not make the world less peaceful and less   
   stable!   
      
   We can see why there were 176, out of a total of 192 member countries   
   in the UN General Assembly that cast a favorable vote for China in her   
   running of a seat in the UNHRC. The vote was by secret ballot. The   
   yes votes mean simply that the trust factor prevails in even today's   
   untrustworthy diplomatic environment. And Saudi Arabia has shown   
   itself to be the epitome of untrustworthiness by offering this and   
   that country weapon purchase bribes. Nahhh, China should be smarter   
   than to do this type of business with such a dubious partner, oil or   
   without oil!   
      
   lo yeeOn   
      
   >   
   >He met with Chinese Defense Minister Liang Guanglie, who has direct   
   >access to the President Hu.   
   >   
   >The Saudis offered the Chinese two major incentives for the deal:   
   >1. The sum of $60 billion in payment for the purchase of the missiles.   
   >Part of the package would be the construction of new bases to house them   
   >in Saudi desert regions... the location is kept secret.   
   >2. Bandar also put on the table as part of the price a long-term Saudi   
   >commitment to cover all of China’s oil needs until the year   
   >2035...without conditions.   
   >   
   >Never before has any oil-producing country offered such terms. In   
   >effect, Riyadh agreed to open its oil fields to partial Chinese control   
   >for the sake of gaining nuclear missiles.   
   >   
   >China is aware that Saudi has approached Pakistan for the purchase of   
   >nuclear war heads and a deal will follow soon after the sale of missile   
   >agreement it signed with China.   
   >   
   >President Hu would not have agreed to the sales of nuclear missile to   
   >Saudi but in respond to the US Pacific Century move to pick fight with   
   >China, Hu was persuaded... to have a friend with unlimited oil supply is   
   >not a bad thing. Beside, Saudi armed with nuclear missile would be a   
   >huge headache for the USA.   
   >   
   >Every action, there is an reaction. The US action in the Pacific is not   
   >without unforeseen reaction !!!   
   >   
   >Another Islamic State has joined the nuclear club !!!   
   >   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
|