Posts: 3,038
Threads: 437
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Sep 2008
NATO's Terror Convoys Halted at Syrian Border
By Tony Cartalucci
29 November 2015
http://journal-neo.org/2015/11/29/natos-...an-border/
Quote:For years, NATO has granted impunity to convoys packed with supplies bound for ISIS and Al Qaeda. Russian airstrikes have stopped them dead in their tracks. If a legitimate, well-documented aid convoy carrying humanitarian supplies bound for civilians inside Syria was truly destroyed by Russian airstrikes, it is likely the world would never have heard the end of it.
Instead, much of the world has heard little at all about a supposed "aid" convoy destroyed near Azaz, Syria, at the very edge of the Afrin-Jarabulus corridor through which the so-called Islamic State (ISIS) and Al Qaeda's remaining supply lines pass, and in which NATO has long-sought to create a "buffer zone" more accurately described as a Syrian-based, NATO-occupied springboard from which to launch terrorism deeper into Syrian territory.
The Turkish-based newspaper Daily Sabah reported in its article, "Russian airstrikes target aid convoy in northwestern Syrian town of Azaz, 7 killed," claims:
At least seven people died, 10 got injured after an apparent airstrike, reportedly by Russian jets, targeted an aid convoy in northwestern Syrian town of Azaz near a border crossing with Turkey on Wednesday.
Daily Sabah also reported:
Speaking to Daily Sabah, Serkan Nergis from the Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH) said that the targeted area is located some 5 kilometers southwest of the Öncüpınar Border Crossing.
Nergis said that IHH has a civil defense unit in Azaz and they helped locals to extinguish the trucks. Trucks were probably carrying aid supplies or commercial materials, Nergis added.
Daily Sabah's report also reveals that the Turkish-Syrian border crossing of Oncupinar is held by what it calls "rebels." The border crossing of Oncupinar should be familiar to many as it was the scene of Germany's international broadcaster Deutsche Welle's (DW) investigative report where DW camera crews videotaped hundreds of trucks waiting at the border, bound for ISIS territory, apparently with full approval of Ankara.
The report was published in November of 2014, a full year ago, and revealed precisely how ISIS has been able to maintain its otherwise inexplicable and seemingly inexhaustible fighting capacity. The report titled, "IS' supply channels through Turkey," included a video and a description which read:
Every day, trucks laden with food, clothing, and other supplies cross the border from Turkey to Syria. It is unclear who is picking up the goods. The haulers believe most of the cargo is going to the "Islamic State" militia. Oil, weapons, and soldiers are also being smuggled over the border, and Kurdish volunteers are now patrolling the area in a bid to stem the supplies.
The report, and many others like it, left many around the world wondering why, if the US is willing to carry out risky military operations deep within Syrian territory to allegedly "fight ISIS," the US and its allies don't commit to a much less riskier strategy of securing the Turkish-Syrian border within Turkey's territory itself especially considering that the United States maintains an airbase, training camps, and intelligence outposts within Turkish territory and along the very border ISIS supply convoys are crossing over.
Ideally, NATO should have interdicted these supply convoys before they even crossed over into Syria arresting the drivers and tracking those who filled the trucks back to their source and arresting them as well. Alternatively, the trucks should have been destroyed either at the border or at the very least, once they had entered into Syria and were clearly headed toward ISIS-occupied territory.
That none of this took place left many to draw conclusions that the impunity granted to this overt logistical network was intentional and implicated NATO directly in the feeding of the very ISIS terrorists it claimed to be "fighting."
Russia Steps In
Obviously, any nation truly interested in defeating ISIS would attack it at its very source its supply lines. Military weaponry may have changed over the centuries, but military strategy, particularly identifying and severing an enemy's supply lines is a tried and true method of achieving victory in any conflict.
Russia, therefore, would find these convoys a natural target and would attempt to hit them as close to the Syrian-Turkish border as possible, to negate any chance the supplies would successfully reach ISIS' hands. Russian President Vladmir Putin noted, regarding the Azaz convoy in particular, that if the convoy was legitimately carrying aid, it would have been declared, and its activities made known to all nations operating military aircraft in the region.
The trucks hit in the recent airstrikes, just as they were during the DW investigation, were carrying concrete and steel, not "milk and diapers" as the West would lead audiences to believe. That the supplies were passing through a "rebel" controlled crossing means that the supplies were surely headed to "rebel" controlled territory either Al Qaeda's Al Nusra Front in the west, or ISIS in the east.
Russian airstrikes insured that the supplies reached neither.
Strangling NATO's Terrorists at the Border
Russia's increased activity along the Syrian-Turkish border signifies the closing phases of the Syrian conflict. With Syrian and Kurdish forces holding the border east of the Euphrates, the Afrin-Jarabulus corridor is the only remaining conduit for supplies bound for terrorists in Syria to pass. Syrian forces have begun pushing east toward the Euphrates from Aleppo, and then will move north to the Syrian-Turkish border near Jarabulus. Approximately 90-100 km west near Afrin, Ad Dana, and Azaz, it appears Russia has begun cutting off terrorist supply lines right at the border. It is likely Syrian forces will arrive and secure this region as well.
For those that have criticized Russia's air campaign claiming conflicts can't be won from the air without a ground component, it should be clear by now that the Syrian Arab Army is that ground component, and has dealt ISIS and Al Qaeda its most spectacular defeats in the conflict.
When this corridor is closed and supplies cut off, ISIS, Nusra, and all associated NATO-backed factions will atrophy and die as the Syrian military restores order across the country. This may be why there has been a sudden "rush" by the West to move assets into the region, the impetus driving the United States to place special forces into Syrian territory itself, and for Turkey's ambush of a Russian Su-24 near the Syrian-Turkish border.
What all of this adds up to is a clear illustration of precisely why the Syrian conflict was never truly a "civil war." The summation of support for militants fighting against the Syrian government and people, has come from beyond Syria's borders. With that support being cut off and the prospect of these militants being eradicated, the true sponsors behind this conflict are moving more directly and overtly to salvage their failed conspiracy against the Syrian state.
What we see emerging is what was suspected and even obvious all along a proxy war started by, and fought for Western hegemonic ambitions in the region, intentionally feeding the forces of extremism, not fighting them.
Tony Cartalucci, Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer, especially for the online magazine"New Eastern Outlook".
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"
Joseph Fouche
Posts: 3,936
Threads: 474
Likes Received: 1 in 1 posts
Likes Given: 1
Joined: Dec 2009
"We'll know our disinformation campaign is complete when everything the American public believes is false." --William J. Casey, D.C.I
"We will lead every revolution against us." --Theodore Herzl
Posts: 3,038
Threads: 437
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Sep 2008
Britain's secret ties to governments, firms behind ISIS oil sales
by Nafeez Ahmed
https://medium.com/insurge-intelligence/....ljrh3p42n
This exclusive is published by INSURGE INTELLIGENCE, a new crowd-funded investigative journalism project
The story was originally commissioned by London's Middle East Eye, which has published an abridged version available here
Quote:In the scramble to access Kurdistan's oil and gas wealth, the US and UK are turning a blind eye to complicity in Islamic State' oil smuggling
Key allies in the US and UK led war on Islamic State (ISIS) are covertly financing the terrorist movement according to senior political sources in the region. US and British oil companies are heavily invested in the murky geopolitical triangle sustaining ISIS' black market oil sales.
The Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq and Turkish military intelligence have both supported secret ISIS oil smuggling operations and even supplied arms to the terror group, according to Kurdish, Iraqi and Turkish officials.
One British oil company in particular, Genel Energy, is contracted by the KRG to supply oil for a major Kurdish firm accused of facilitating ISIS oil sales to Turkey. The Kurdish firm has close ties to the Iraqi Kurdish government.
Genel operates in the KRG with the backing of the British government, and is also linked to a British parliamentary group with longstanding connections to both the British and KRG oil industries.
The relationship between British and Kurdish energy companies, and senior British politicians, raises questions about conflicts of interest  especially in the context of a war on terror' that is supposed to be targeting, not financing, the Islamic State.'
Kurds, Turks and blind eyes
One of ISIS' most significant sources of revenue is oil smuggling. The Islamic State controls approximately 60% of Syria's oil, and seven major oil-producing assets in Iraq.
Using a carefully cultivated network of intermediaries and middlemen' in the Kurdish region of Iraq, as well as in Turkey, ISIS has been able to produce a phenomenal 45,000 barrels of oil a day, raking in as much as $3 million a day in cash by selling the oil at well below market prices.
But the sheer scale and impunity of this oil smuggling network has caused local politicians to ask whether certain officials in the KRG and Turkey are turning a blind eye to these operations.
Iraqi, Kurdish and Turkish officials have accused both the KRG and Turkish governments of deliberately allowing some of these smuggling operations to take place.
Tensions between the KRG and Iraq's central government in Baghdad are escalating over who controls production and revenues from oil fields within the Kurdish region. Kurdish officials see the oil within the Kurdish-controlled territory of Iraq as a means to seek greater autonomy, if not potentially total independence, from Baghdad  whereas the Iraqi government seeks to ensure it retains sovereign control over all sales from its own oil fields, which include those in the KRG.
Those tensions reached a crescendo when the KRG began unilaterally selling oil by exporting it to Turkey, bypassing Baghdad.
Complicity
KRG and Turkish authorities vehemently deny any role in intentionally facilitating ISIS oil sales. Both governments have taken measures to crackdown on smuggling operations, and US and UK authorities work closely with the KRG to identify ISIS smuggling routes.
Despite KRG arrests of Kurdish middlemen' involved in the ISIS black market oil sales, evidence continues to emerge that these measures are largely piecemeal, and have failed to address corruption at the highest levels.
According to a senior source in the Iraqi government's ruling Islamic Dawa Party, US and Iraqi authorities have developed "significant intelligence confirming that elements of the KRG have tacitly condoned ISIS oil sales on the black market."
The source, which has direct access to top Iraqi government officials, said that the KRG had originally seen the ISIS invasion of Iraq as an opportunity to consolidate Kurdish control over disputed territory, especially the oil-rich region of Kirkuk. The Kurds had not, however, anticipated how powerful ISIS' presence in the region would become.
In the early period of the invasion last year, he said: "Elements of the KRG and Peshmerga militia directly facilitated secret ISIS oil smuggling through the Kurdish province. This was known to the Americans, which shared intelligence on the matter with the Iraqi government in Baghdad."
The issue inflamed tensions between Baghdad and the KRG, contributing to efforts by Hussein al-Shahrestani, then Iraq's deputy prime minister for energy affairs, to crackdown on independent Kurdish oil exports.
His successor, new oil minister Adel Abdul-Mehdi, was brought in through a reshuffle in September last year that was engineered under US diplomatic pressure. Unlike Shahrestani, the source said, Abdul-Mehdi has a much more conciliatory approach to the Kurdish oil question, one which also happens to suit the interests of US and British investors in the KRG: "This has meant that Baghdad has also been much more lax on evidence of ISIS oil smuggling through the KRG."
The source confirmed that under mounting US pressure, "KRG authorities have taken serious steps to curb the illegal smuggling on behalf of ISIS. But the smuggling still continues, although at a more restrained level, with the support of elements of KRG's ruling parties, who profit from the black market oil sales."
Turkey also plays a crucial role in the ISIS oil smuggling operations according to the Iraqi source. As the end-point through which much of this oil reaches global markets, Turkish authorities have routinely turned a blind eye to the IS-run black market. "The Turks have an acrimonious relationship with the Americans," he claimed, but admitted that US intelligence is familiar with Turkey's role:
"US intelligence is monitoring many of these smuggling operations in minute detail. Some of this intelligence has been passed on to us. The Americans know what is going on. But Erdogan and Obama don't have a great relationship. Erdogan basically does what he likes, and the US has to lump it."
The allegations have been confirmed by Turkish government officials and parliamentarians. In particular, a source with extensive connections to the Turkish political establishment including the office of the Prime Minister, said that Turkey's support for Islamist rebels opposed to Bashir al-Assad's reign in Syria began long before the emergence of the Islamic State, and was pivotal in the group's meteoric rise to power.
Turkey, a longstanding NATO member, is part of the US-led coalition fighting IS, and has been integral to the region's moderate' rebel training schemes supervised by Western military intelligence agencies.
"Turkey is playing a double-game with its Syria strategy," said the source.
"Turkey has sponsored Islamist groups in Syria, including ISIS, since the beginning, and continues to do so. The scale of ISIS smuggling operations across the Turkish-Syrian border is huge, and much of it is facilitated with the blessings of Erdogan and Davitoglu, who see the Islamists as the means to expand the Turkish foothold in the region."
Recep Tayyip Erdogon is the President of Turkey, and Ahmet Davutoglu is the country's Prime Minister. Asked how this fits with recent Turkish operations to shut-down ISIS smuggling operations and target ISIS strongholds across the border, the source described the actions as too little, too late.
"These actions fit with Erdogan's strategy of expansion," he said. "We are not trying to shut down the infrastructure of ISIS, we are attacking it selectively."
A shadow network in broad daylight
The ISIS oil smuggling route  which encompasses the KRG and ends up at the Turkish port of Ceyhan  was recently investigated by two British academics at the University of Greenwich.
The paper by George Kiourktsoglou, Lecturer in Maritime Security and former Royal Dutch Shell strategist, and Dr Alec Coutroubis, Acting Head at the Faculty of Engineering and Science, attempted to identify suspicious patterns in the illicit oil trade.
Their extraordinary study, published by Maritime Security Review in March, examined the international route used by ISIS, based on "a string of trading hubs" comprising the localities of Sanliura, Urfa, Hakkari, Siirt, Batman, Osmaniya, Gaziantep, Sirnak, Adana, Kahramarmaras, Adiyaman and Mardin. "The string of trading hubs ends up in Adana [in southeast Turkey], home to the major tanker shipping port of Ceyhan."
By comparing spikes in tanker charter rates from Ceyhan with a timeline of ISIS activities, the University of Greenwich analysis identified significant correlations between the two. Whenever the Islamic State fights "in the vicinity of an area hosting oil assets, the… exports from Ceyhan promptly spike. This may be attributed to an extra boost given to crude oil smuggling with the aim of immediately generating additional funds."
While the evidence is still "inconclusive" at this stage, the authors wrote that "there are strong hints to an illicit supply chain that ships ISIS crude from Ceyhan" to global markets. Since the launch of the ISIS oil venture in summer 2014, "tanker charter rates from Ceyhan re-coupled up to a degree with the ones from the rest of the Middle East."
Though they could not be categorical, primary research including interviews with informed sources indicated that this was most likely "the result of boosted demand for ultra-cheap smuggled crude, available for loading" from the Turkish port.
Kiourktsoglu and Coutroubis call for "further research" on ISIS criminal ventures which "can potentially integrate it within the global economy." The academics have previously given evidence before the parliamentary foreign affairs select committee regarding maritime security off the Somalian coast.
Their study also highlights failures in the US military approach to the ISIS oil operations. Although they commend how US, Turkish and Gulf air raids have "curtailed" the Islamic State's "oil cashflows" by destroying some "oil manufacturing facilities," this has not gone far enough. They report that:
"… extraction wells in the area of bombardments have yet to be targeted by the US or the air-assets of its allies, a fact that can be readily attributed to the at times toxic' politics in the Middle East."
Despite large convoys of trucks transporting ISIS oil through government-controlled areas in Syria, Iraq and Turkey, "allied US air-raids do not target the truck lorries out of fear of provoking a backlash from locals." As a result, "the transport operations are being run efficiently, taking place most of times in broad daylight."
The public record
Evidence already in the public record corroborates the allegations of the Iraqi and Turkish sources, showing that corruption is endemic at both the origin and end-points of the ISIS smuggling route.
Informed observers inside and outside Turkey have accused the Turkish government of turning a blind eye to the smuggling of oil across the Syrian-Turkish border in its commitment to bringing down the Assad regime.
Prosecutor and witness testimony in Turkish courts revealed that in late 2013 and 2014, Turkish military intelligence had supplied arms to areas in Syria under Islamist rebel control, contributing directly to the rise of ISIS.
Turkish opposition MP Ali Ediboglu last year said that some $800 million worth of ISIS oil had been smuggled into Turkey. He also said that over a thousand Turkish nationals were helping foreign fighters join ISIS in Syria and Iraq through Turkish territory. Both, he alleged, are occurring with the knowledge and involvement of Turkish military intelligence.
In July 2014, Iraqi officials revealed that when ISIS had begun selling oil extracted from the northern province of Salahuddin, "the Kurdish peshmerga forces stopped the sale of oil at first, but later allowed tankers to transfer and sell oil."
Three months later, a KRG Interior Ministry document leaked to the Kurdish media outlet, Rudaw, showed that a former opposition MP, Burhan Rashid, had accused KRG institutions of facilitating the flow of funds and arms to ISIS militants in Iraq.
"A Kurdish political party in Erbil has supplied the ISIS militants with weapons and ammunition in exchange for oil," Rashid is recorded as saying. The document revealed that the KRG chief public prosecutor had secretly prepared a lawsuit against Rashid for making the allegations.
The lawsuit, which apparently went nowhere, was an obvious effort to silence criticism. By January, however, an investigative committee led by the KRG interior minister and natural resources minister had largely corroborated Rashid's allegations.
Kurdish parliamentary sources familiar with the final report of the committee, which remains secret, told Rudaw the report had confirmed:
"… a number of officials from the ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and the Peshmerga have been involved in the illegal trade."
Half a year later, the identities of officials investigated remain undisclosed, and no one has been charged, tried or sentenced. The KRG's UK office did not respond to a request for comment.
The Nokan Group
Instead, a couple of months after the committee had reached its conclusions, evidence emerged that the Nokan Group, a major Kurdish company with close ties to the KRG, had been directly facilitating ISIS oil sales.
In a letter to the Nokan Group, Mark D. Wallace  a former US ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush and CEO of the New York-based Counter Extremism Project  noted credible "reports that some Kurdish entities are in fact facilitating ISIS-related oil trade…
"Specifically, certain Kurdish companies are reportedly contracted to transport refined fuel from the ISIS-controlled Baiji refinery, north of Tikrit, Iraq, for delivery throughout the Kurdish region by Sulaymaniyah province authorities in Iraqi Kurdistan, in the north-eastern region of Iraq."
Trucks owned or operated by Meer Soma, a "subsidiary" of the Nokan Group, "are being used to transport refined petroleum products from ISIS-controlled refineries to Kurdish entities in or near Kirkuk," wrote Ambassador Wallace in the letter dated 20th March 2015.
Wallace noted that according to the Kurdish press, Meer Soma is among several Nokan-controlled dummy companies operating on behalf of the group, to avoid public association with the parent firm.
According to a 2012 country report by the Paris-based business intelligence agency MarcoPolis, the Nokan Group is among the largest companies in the province, and "has interests" in Meer Soma.
In 2014, the same year that photographs of Meer Soma tankers transporting ISIS oil to Kurdish refineries were published online, the Nokan subsidiary's website was deleted.
Ambassador Wallace's letter has generated little more than silence. No response from the Nokan Group was received by Wallace. The Nokan Group could not be reached for comment.
Copies of the letter were sent to relevant Congressional committees, as well as John E. Smith, Acting Director of the US Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control. The US Treasury did not respond to queries about what was done to investigate the allegations.
Even a spokesperson for the Counter Extremism Project, on behalf of which the letter was sent, declined to comment when asked to clarify the follow-up from US authorities.
Corruption, Nokan and the KRG
The Nokan Group is a conglomerate of companies owned and controlled by the Iraqi Kurdish political party, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), which is one of the KRG's ruling parties alongside the majority KDP.
The Kurdistan Tribune reports that Nokan is run from the general management office of the PUK in Sulaymani district. The newspaper estimates that, accounting for its 23 subsidiary companies, the Nokan Group's net worth approaches roughly 45 billion US dollars, many multiples larger than its declared value.
The Tribune points out that the PUK business model is representative of private enterprise across the KRG  rife with corruption and nepotism, largely for the enrichment of political elites and their allies. "The economic model in Kurdistan monopolises the market for the benefit of a few and poisons the environment for Small Medium Enterprises (SMEs)," observes the paper.
A lengthy report in The Nation found that the KRG's patronage system was alienating and disenfranchising much of the population: "Many of the most profitable companies, such as those controlling construction projects, are owned by a Barzani or Talabani," the heads of the two KRG ruling parties.
"But beyond the gleaming new suburbs, five-star hotels and flashy cars lies an ancient city in which critics say corruption remains a problem and the lines dividing government and business are unhealthily blurred," noted the Financial Times.
Until last year, the PUK's leader Jalal Talabani was President of Iraq. His son, Qubad Talabani, is currently Deputy Prime Minister in the KRG. Previously, the latter served as the KRG's representative in the United States. In both capacities Qubad has played a key role in developing commercial relationships with the West, especially concerning oil.
Jalal Talabani's other son, Pavel, oversees the KRG's anti-terror squad in Sulaymani, which is run by PUK member Lahur Sheikh Jangi.
The elder Talabani's sister-in-law, Shanaz Ibrahim Ahmed, is the PUK representative to the UK responsible for media relations, as well as for the finances of the Nokan Group.
Qubad Talabani, incumbent KRG deputy PM, is slated to speak at the Kurdistan-Iraq Oil & Gas Conference to be held in London this November. The conference, organised by British firm CWC Group in partnership with the joint PUK-KDP government, is sponsored by a number of energy corporations including Exxon Mobil, Chevron, DNO, Gulf Keystone Petroleum, and the Qaiwan Group.
The Qaiwan Group, among the London conference's platinum sponsors, is contracted to the KRG's Ministry of Energy to design, construct and operate planned expansions to the Bazian oil refinery under a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA).
The current phase three' expansion, due for completion by 2018, aims to lift the refinery's capacity from 34,000 to 80,000 barrels per day.
The Bazian refinery is, however, owned and controlled by WZA Petroleum  another subsidiary of the PUK's Nokan Group, dominated by the Talabani family.
WZA Petroleum's president is Parwen Babakir, in which capacity she is the principal owner of the Bazian refinery. Babakir is also the Chairman of the Nokan Group, and is in charge of the PUK's oil and gas portfolio. She was previously appointed Minister of Industry in the Sulaymani district by Talabani from 2003 to 2007. She did not respond to questions concerning the Nokan Group's alleged facilitation of IS oil sales.
While KRG government officials and their relatives are directly profiting from lucrative oil and gas contracts brokered by the KRG, the same officials  who are responsible for anti-terrorism in the Sulaymani province  oversee the Nokan Group, which is implicated in facilitating ISIS oil smuggling.
The British connection
A British energy company with strong backing from the UK political establishment operates the oil field supplying the Nokan-owned Bazian refinery.
The refinery, owned by the Nokan Group whose trucks were seen transporting IS oil through the Kurdish province earlier this year, is supplied from the KRG's Taq Taq field. The oil field produces a total of around 100,000 barrels per day, most of which is shipped to local refineries. British-Turkish firm Genel Energy has a 45 percent stake in the Taq Taq field.
Genel Energy was formed from a $2.1 billion merger in 2011 between a UK firm, Vallares Plc, and a Turkish company, Genel Enerji. The firm is run by Tony Hayward, a former CEO of British Petroleum (BP).
Asked about Genel's position on working with institutions allegedly involved in financing ISIS terrorism, Andrew Benbow, spokesperson for the Anglo-Turkish company, stated: "These are all questions to be asked to the KRG rather than ourselves."
According to the final report of the House of Commons Select Committee on Foreign Affairs' inquiry into the British government's policy toward the KRG, published in January 2015, Genel is the only major British investor in the province.
The report noted that the Kurdistan region holds an estimated 45 billion barrels of oil  in the same league as Libya and Nigeria  and a further 110 trillion cubic feet of gas, placing it around tenth or twelfth in the world for reserves. The KRG aims to export as much as 2 million barrels per day by 2020, a prospect of huge interest to Western companies including, according to the report, "Exxon, Chevron, Repsol, Total, the local giant KAR, and the British-Turkish company, Genel Energy."
Just a month earlier, David Cameron's then Energy Minister Matthew Hancock told the 4th Kurdistan-Iraq Oil & Gas Conference in Erbil, that Iraq "has a critical role to play in meeting the world's future demand for oil." Remarking that US oil production is "forecasted to peak in 2020," he said that therefore "the world is expected to become ever more dependent on Iraqi supply."
Iraqi oil production will treble to over 8 million barrels a day by 2040, he added: "Reserves in Kurdistan play a significant role in this increase. The region is not only thought to be one of the largest untapped areas of oil in the world, but also has significant gas potential."
Genel Energy is positioned to profit massively from increased Kurdish output, bar an oil shock or other such wild card. Genel's president, Mehmet Sepil, told the 2014 conference that his firm planned to play the lead role in exploiting 11 trillion cubic feet of gas in the Kurdish province.
A year earlier, the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on the Kurdistan Region of Iraq had released a report from its fact-finding mission to the province, recommending that the Foreign Affairs Select Committee undertake this inquiry.
As part of that fact-finding mission, British Conservative MP Nadhim Zahawi, who is co-chair of the APPG on Kurdistan, visited the Taq Taq oil field being run by Genel Energy in November 2013.
Zahawi held shares in Genel Energy, according to the House of Commons Register of Interests, which shows that he declared his relationship to Genel in June 2013. According to Zahawi, he sold his shares in Genel on 30th April 2014.
Later in 2013, Zahawi was appointed by David Cameron to the Prime Minister's Policy Board, with special responsibility for business and the economy, a post he still holds.
By June 2014, Zahawi was appointed as a member of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, and played a key role in its inquiry into government policy.
"These are obviously very serious allegations which I was not previously aware of and that were not submitted to the Select Committee's inquiry," said Zahawi regarding the Ambassador Wallace's letter concerning the Nokan Group. He explained that the committee would investigate ISIS funding sources in a further inquiry.
Zahawi also denied knowledge of the KRG's internal investigation into support for ISIS terrorism, as well as the allegations concerning Genel's relationship to Nokan. "As an ex retail shareholder," he explained, "I have no more knowledge of the details of their operation than any other retail share holder or member of the public. I would suggest that you submit your evidence and questions to Genel directly."
The APPG on Kurdistan is intimately connected to both the PUK-KDP run government and Western oil interests in the province. Gary Kent, who is Director of Labour Friends of Iraq, is paid directly by Gulf Keystone Petroleum  which is heavily invested in KRG oil assets  to provide secretariat services for the APPG.
The KRG and its UK arm also provide "administrative services" for the APPG, including "dinners for parliamentarians," annual receptions, and funding group delegations to the province.
Describing the APPG on Kurdistan's findings in January 2014, APPG Vice Chair Robert Halfon  who is now a Minister (without portfolio) in David Cameron's new cabinet and Deputy Chairman of the Tory Party  told the House of Commons:
"Across the Kurdistan region, business is flourishing… and people are keen on British and foreign investment. Privatisation continues apace and huge property complexes are being built. There are significant oil and gas reserves, which, unusually in these parts, are used for the benefit of the country, not salted away in corruption. As I pointed out in an early-day motion [tabled with Zahawi and others]… the KRG can become an important ally in guaranteeing the UK's future energy security."
In January 2015, as the UK parliamentary Foreign Affairs Select Committee released its inquiry report, Zahawi was back in the KRG as part of an official UK trade delegation led by Mayor of London Boris Johnson, recently appointed to the Prime Minister's political cabinet.
Fracturing Iraq for oil
Although the KRG launched its investigation of ISIS terrorism financing by Kurdish officials while the British parliamentary inquiry was still ongoing, the inquiry report makes no mention of it, nor does it acknowledge that the KRG investigation had confirmed the allegations nearly a month before publication.
The parliamentary committee did not come across such allegations, nor had any such information ever been submitted to the inquiry, Zahawi said.
The 2015 UK parliamentary report repeatedly justifies calls for cementing British-KRG ties due to the KRG's role as a reliable "partner in the fight against terrorism."
While the parliamentary report goes to pains to emphasise the British government's formal position in favour of a unified Iraq, it also leans heavily toward a federal solution granting the KRG considerable autonomy, based on its ability to exploit oil and gas resources in the province.
Pointing to the UK Foreign Secretary's recommendation of "devo max" (maximum devolution) as the best possible model of democratic governance in Iraq, the report recommends that the British government should be prepared for "the possible consequences of Iraq's break-up."
The KRG's "increased self-governance, or even independence, is itself rational, given its economic potential and demonstrable capacity for effective self- governance, and also understandable, given its recent history." While the move to independence is not imminent, "it is a medium-term possibility, depending in large part on the Kurdistan Region's energy export strategy, for which the UK Government should be prepared."
In its reporting on Zahawi's visit to KRG oil fields run by Genel Energy, The Independent observed that there is "no suggestion of any impropriety in relation to the Kurdistan APPG."
But irrespective of parliamentary rules, the APPG's brazen role in facilitating British oil and gas interests in the region is hardly a secret.
"We have taken the detailed reports from our delegations to UK ministers and other groups to promote the message that Kurdistan is open to business and to boost British connections in trade, culture and other fields," the APPG declares on its website.
"This has helped change the UK's approach to Kurdistan… The group's reports helped overcome that erroneous assumption and persuaded the UK Government to send its first official mission to the Erbil Trade Fair  more British companies are expected at next month's fair."
Like many of the other interests involved, the UK Foreign Office (FCO) simply failed to respond when questioned about the British government's relationship with regional authorities and firms implicated in the facilitation of IS black market oil sales.
Genel Energy CEO Tony Hayward has previously spoken out in defence of the KRG's decision to ask the company to truck exports of crude oil from the Taq Taq field to Turkey. The Anglo-Turkish firm is receiving payments for these exports directly from the KRG, rather than from the Baghdad government, which had condemned them as illegal.
Until her resignation earlier this year, former Labour MP Meg Munn was chair of the APPG on Kurdistan alongside Zahawi. A former Foreign Office minister under Tony Blair, she is Vice Chair of the Westminster Foundation for Democracy (WFD), an "executive non-departmental public body" sponsored by the Foreign Office that promotes parliamentary institutions abroad.
The WFD has been contracted for many years by the Foreign Office and UK Department for International Development (DFID) to augment the formal mechanisms of democracy in Iraq and the KRG.
Yet an independent review of the organisation's work commissioned by the FCO in 2010 concluded that its own internal records "provide little evidence that the organisation is having significant, long-term and sustainable impact." Rather, the review concluded:
"… the purpose of party support  strictly defined  is not to show demonstrable improvements in the functioning of democracy… [but] allows the parties to engage in activity that would be impossible for the FCO to undertake."
This involves political activities "designed to help their ideological counterparts in other countries" and which facilitate "access to, and influence over parties in developing democracies," thus supporting the "UK government's diplomatic objectives."
Thus, the WFD ultimately functions to promote British government interests. Its constitution stipulates that all fourteen members of its Board of Governors must be appointed by the British Foreign Secretary, with eight of them nominated by Westminster political parties. One WFD Annual Report concedes that:
"WFD offers the FCO and HMG [Her Majesty's Government]… a focus on political work which the FCO or the Government could not or would not wish to undertake directly… where direct British government support could be interpreted as foreign interference."
Despite its self-description as a "neutral convener" between demands for national unity and federalisation, the WFD's entire national Iraq programme is run from the KRG capital, Erbil.
In Iraqi Kurdistan, for the WFD this has meant, according to the APPG's 2011 report, promoting "a democratic market economy" safe for foreign capital penetration: "The menu includes a smaller but smarter state, an active civil society, a free and professional media system and more private businesses."
"Kurdistan is exploiting its oil and gas riches commendably and ahead of schedule through making good use of the private sector," the APPG report under Zahawi and Munn's watch enthused.
"European energy security will gain from their ability to supply gas through the projected southern energy corridor for a century. This deserves UK recognition and support."
The eagerness of American and British oil companies to exploit Iraqi Kurdish resources, however, raises urgent questions as to whether US-UK government support for the KRG-Turkish oil nexus is undermining the war on ISIS, if not fuelling the terror group.
Neither the British nor American governments appear to be willing to answer these questions.
Dr Nafeez Ahmed is an investigative journalist, bestselling author and international security scholar. A former Guardian writer, he writes the System Shift' column for VICE's Motherboard, and is also a columnist for Middle East Eye.
He is the winner of a 2015 Project Censored Award, known as the Alternative Pulitzer Prize', for Outstanding Investigative Journalism for his Guardian work, and was selected in the Evening Standard's Power 1,000' most globally influential Londoners.
Nafeez has also written for The Independent, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, The Scotsman, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, Quartz, Prospect, New Statesman, Le Monde diplomatique, New Internationalist, Counterpunch, Truthout, among others. He is a Visiting Research Fellow at the Faculty of Science and Technology at Anglia Ruskin University.
Nafeez is the author of A User's Guide to the Crisis of Civilization: And How to Save It (2010), and the scifi thriller novel ZERO POINT, among other books. His work on the root causes and covert operations linked to international terrorism officially contributed to the 9/11 Commission and the 7/7 Coroner's Inquest.
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"
Joseph Fouche
Posts: 3,038
Threads: 437
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Sep 2008
Pepe Escobar, independent geopolitical analyst talks about Russia's revelations on Turkey's oil trade with Daesh:
https://soundcloud.com/sputnik_fr/pepe-e...urkey-does
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"
Joseph Fouche
Posts: 3,038
Threads: 437
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Sep 2008
The Real "Terrorist Sympathizers" Want To Wage War On Syria ... And Russia
December 02, 2015
http://www.moonofalabama.org/2015/12/the...l#comments
Quote:Syria airstrikes: Cameron accuses Corbyn of being 'terrorist sympathiser'
David Cameron has appealed to Conservative MPs to give him an overall parliamentary majority in favour of military action in Syria by warning them against voting alongside "Jeremy Corbyn and a bunch of terrorist sympathisers".
"You should not be walking through the lobbies with Jeremy Corbyn and a bunch of terrorist sympathisers," the prime minister reportedly told the committee.
To get rid of the "terrorist sympathizers" who do not want to bomb Syria the pig-fucker will have to incarcerate half of the British people.
Surely terrorist sympathizer should not be allowed to run around freely and to influence the children. These could end up no longer believing what the government and the media are telling them. They would become radicals:
A leaflet drawn up by an inner-city child safeguarding board warns that "appearing angry about government policies, especially foreign policies" is a sign "specific to radicalisation".
Parents and carers have also been advised by the safeguarding children board in the London Borough of Camden that "showing a mistrust of mainstream media reports and a belief in conspiracy theories" could be a sign that children are being groomed by extremists.
The "war on terror" is turning into a war on the local opposition of the ruling classes. Those who oppose its polices are labeled 2terrorists" and those who doubts its word are "radicalized extremists". How far is it from such verbal insults to actually concentration camps?
---
Who initiated this sudden rush within major NATO governments to get parliamentary blank checks for waging a long war on Syria? Not only in the UK but also in France and Germany?
The German government turned on a dime from "no military intervention in Syria ever" to "lets wage a war of terror on Syria" without any backing from the UN or international law. (The German government's legal argument for war is so flimsy that the constitutional court will probably stop it.) Who initiated this? A simple, medium size terror attack in Paris by some Belgians and French can not be the sole reason for this stampede.
Did Obama call and demanded support for his plans? What are these?
I smell that a trap is being laid, likely via a treacherous Turkey, to somehow threaten Russia with, or involve it in, a wider war. This would include military attacks in east-Ukraine or Crimea as well as in Syria. Obama demanded European backing in case the issue gets of of hands. No other reason I have found explains the current panic. The terrorists the "west" supports in Syria are in trouble. The real terrorist sympathizers need to rush to their help. It is a start of all-out war on Syria and its Russian protectors.
But Russia is cool headed and is preparing to make its position in Syria even stronger. There will soon be at least 100 Russian military planes in Syria, some say up to 150 in total, plus dozens of ground attack helicopters including the very modern KA-52 (vid). New airfields for Russian fighter jets are being prepared in Shayrat (map), south-east of Homs. 10 fighter jets and 15 attack helicopters are already stationed there. Another airport will be in Tiyas (map), some 30 km west of Palmyra. This one will be used to cover east Syria and the Syrian army's movement against the Islamic State in Raqqa. A fourth airport for jets, likely near Hama, is planned and several smaller airfields are to be used for more helicopters. Some 1,000 additional Russian personal will include special forces to designate targets and to provide support for Syrian troops.
The Syrian army was provide with new electronic snooping systems to be able to listen to its enemies communication. To protect against U.S. made anti-tank missiles (TOWs), which the CIA handed to the Jihadists, Syrian tanks are upgraded with the Shtora anti-missile systems. Brand new artillery has also arrived.
The "moderate rebels" of Jabhat al Nusra and Ahrar al Sham which Turkey and others support currently get squeezed (map) in their corridor from the Turkish border down to Aleppo. The Islamic State is pressing from the east against the corridor while Kurdish YPG fighters, with Russian air support(!), are attacking from the west and the Syrian army is pushing from the south. The moves on the government and YPG side and the IS side are not coordinated but a race to conquer as much as possible of the area before the other party reaches it. Two month ago the Kurdish leader had hinted at this plan to close the uncontrolled gap at the Turkish border.
This is the area Turkey wanted to occupy as a "safe zone" for the terrorists it supports. It also needs the corridor to smuggle oil from the Islamic State to Turkey. Should Turkey, backed by the U.S. and NATO, have funny ideas and try to invade Syria to secure that safe zone, it will have to take on very well armed and serious opponents. From there to World War III is only a small step.
I prefer to be called a terrorist sympathizer over supporting any move into that direction.
Posted by b on December 2, 2015 at 08:21 AM
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"
Joseph Fouche
Posts: 9,353
Threads: 1,466
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Sep 2008
It's enough to make you weep. Far more British people were against getting involved militarily in Syria then were for it. But our "representative" MP's vote against their wishes (how's that for representation?) and now we're in yet another fucking war that, for me, can and probably will lead anywhere and everywhere. The Neocons get their way again.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge. Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
Posts: 17,304
Threads: 3,464
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 2
Joined: Sep 2008
Yes, how stupid do you have to be? The pro bomb bomb bomb Syria speeches were excruciating to listen to. I know not all are stupid and know exactly what is going on. One month of Russia making real progress on ISIS strongholds and the oil tanks - bingo! Calls for bombing from all the neo cons. Like the end of WW2 when they realised they better get involved in the war before USSR and local partisans took all of Europe for themselves. Russia better move fast and cut off the options for Turkey and US.
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx
"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.
“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Posts: 9,353
Threads: 1,466
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Sep 2008
And on our beloved Beeb radio today we had an American professor, Scott Lucas, of Birmingham Uni, supporting Cameron's bullshit by stating that there really are over 70,000 fighters in Syria that will form the necessary "boots on the ground".
He included the Free Syrian Army - so that's five! - and also the Kurds, the approx, number of which is 60,000 with none having anything whatsoever to do with fighting ISIS. And when he wasn't haranguing the other guest on the show, he was pumping out the old evil Assad regime's responsibility for the Sarin gas attacks - even though Seymour Hersh has thoroughly debunked this as US propaganda.
It is now becoming evident that Cameron's figure of 70,000 is going to be his "dodgy dossier" moment. But I don't think he gives a toss anyway. He's retiring at the end of this Parliament, and doubtless he will join Tony Blair's pre-promised pension pot supplement and all round wallet trotting:
Quote:Tony Blair: Why I need £5m every year just to get byBy JASON GROVES FOR THE DAILY MAIL and SAM GREENHILL FOR THE DAILY MAIL
UPDATED: 09:39, 31 March 2010
145View comments
Hefty sum: Tony Blair, who intervened in the election campaign yesterday, is thought to have a wage bill of over £5m
Tony Blair has told friends he needs to earn at least £5million a year just to break even.
The former prime minister has been heavily criticised for cashing in on his contacts for personal gain and is thought to have made around £20million since leaving office.
But last night his former election agent John Burton claimed Mr Blair needed the astonishing annual income - and possibly much more - to pay spiralling wage bills at his growing list of companies and charities.
Daily Mail Online.
Blair (the poor dear only has $30 million) clearly wanted to join the ranks of another British prime minister, John Major who has $50 million. Whereas the old witch, Margaret Thatchler, had only a paltry $10 million, but she did live in suite at the swanky Ritz hotel in her last months, having moved from her Chester Square, Belgravia address (but owned offshore in the dodgy British Virgin Islands for inheritance tax evasion reasons) valued at £12 million, but actually sold for just over £4.16 million.
An old cynic like me actually thinks her wealth was also vastly understated (and possibly also hidden in the BVI?) because of all the stories that circulated in the wake of her signing the Al Yamamah arms deal with Saudi where the kickbacks and payoffs were simply enormous -- and where her doting son got a very big pay cheque for 'doing' for "Mummy", er sorry, I mean paid a considerable "commission" for his extremely very hard work he undertook to ensure the deal was a success for the good of the country and everyone who sails in it! (Ed: where the fuck is my share then?)
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge. Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
Posts: 3,936
Threads: 474
Likes Received: 1 in 1 posts
Likes Given: 1
Joined: Dec 2009
And this right on the heels of Cameron promising no use of ground troops. [URL="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3343732/So-bombs-comes-Hague-drops-bombshell-shouldn-t-rule-ground-war.html"]
Hague: We Shouldn't Rule Out a Ground War[/URL]
"We'll know our disinformation campaign is complete when everything the American public believes is false." --William J. Casey, D.C.I
"We will lead every revolution against us." --Theodore Herzl
Posts: 9,353
Threads: 1,466
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Sep 2008
Lauren Johnson Wrote:And this right on the heels of Cameron promising no use of ground troops. [URL="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3343732/So-bombs-comes-Hague-drops-bombshell-shouldn-t-rule-ground-war.html"]
Hague: We Shouldn't Rule Out a Ground War[/URL]
Too many Brit generals are saying it's necessary for it not to happen. Cameron, for me, is just waiting for the right time.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge. Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
|