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    Das Schwert der ARABER : OEL EMBARGO ?! - 500 Beiträge pro Seite

    eröffnet am 26.11.00 17:24:56 von
    neuester Beitrag 13.12.01 17:39:38 von
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      schrieb am 26.11.00 17:24:56
      Beitrag Nr. 1 ()
      Egypt opposed to oil ban, war in Mideast conflict

      Kuwait | Reuters | 26-11-00 | Print This
      Egypt`s President Hosni Mubarak was quoted yesterday as saying he was opposed to a new Arab oil embargo against the West to put pressure on Israel in its conflict with the Palestinians.

      He also rejected calls for Egypt, the largest Arab state, to launch a new war against Israel. "What will the benefit be from stopping selling oil? Can we really accept the consequences of that," Mubarak said in an interview with Kuwait`s Al Seyassah daily.

      However Mubarak, a key U.S. ally in the region, did say that Washington`s policy in the Middle East conflict "is strongly influenced by the Israeli lobby, which works inside the American administration as well as American society".

      Mubarak led Egypt`s air force in the 1973 Arab-Israeli war when regional oil exporters used the "oil weapon", cutting supplies to major industrialised nations in the West. Gulf states alone, led by Saudi Arabia, sit on some 65 per cent of the world`s proven oil reserves while some Arab states in North Africa are also key oil exporters.

      There have been some calls in Arab and other Moslem countries for an oil embargo and a boycott of U.S. and Israeli products. Arabs often accuse Washington of blindly supporting Israel. Some 270 people, the great majority of them Arabs, have been killed in two months of bitter fighting between Israeli troops and Palestinians.

      When asked about calls for war against Israel, Mubarak said: "Today is different from yesterday...the war that should really be declared is the war of development."

      "We do not listen to those who call for fighting `until the death of last Egyptian soldier`," he said in reference to calls for Jihad (holy war) against Israel by Arab countries which do not border the Jewish state. Egypt lost 120,000 soldiers in its wars against Israel.

      Mubarak, in power since 1981, justified his recent decision to recall the Egyptian ambassador from Israel. "We had to resort to this decision only when the situation became unbearable...(it was) a clear message to Israel, that continuing its suppression of the Palestinian people and the use of force against them will have dangerous effects," he added.

      Mubarak said that Cairo had repeatedly warned Israel against the "excessive use of force" which could weaken the position of Palestinian president Yasser Arafat and boost the role of extremists.

      "Arafat`s absence (from the leadership) would be catastrophic because it would mean the loss of Palestinian moderation and the way of hope.


      :(



      · Iraq`s Aziz, defying sanctions, flies to Syria
      · GCC foreign ministers discuss summit agenda
      · Yemen links bin Laden to Cole bombing, seeks proof
      · Syria refuses entry of Saudi beef over fever fears
      · Ireland offers to help Omanisation efforts
      · Saudi Arabia, most Gulf Arabs, to start Ramadan tomorrow
      · Mideast diplomacy in Egypt, bloodshed continues
      · Egypt opposed to oil ban, war in Mideast conflict
      · Saddam urges UN to include Palestinians in oil deal
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.11.00 17:33:58
      Beitrag Nr. 2 ()
      Wenn die Muslims jetzt einen Krieg gegen Israel führen, wird es so ungefähr der letzte sein, den sie in ihrer Geschichte je geführt haben. Das wissen sie, deshalb schreien sie, wie üblich, in der Gegend herum und scheuchen friedlich schlafende Hühner.
      Die sollen es dabei bewenden lassen und ihren ohnmächtigen Frust an eigenen Frauen und Kindern ausleben, das können sie gut. Krieg führen sollten sie besser echten Männern überlassen.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.11.00 17:35:26
      Beitrag Nr. 3 ()
      Ölembargo-Umweltaktien!!
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.11.00 17:56:44
      !
      Dieser Beitrag wurde vom System automatisch gesperrt. Bei Fragen wenden Sie sich bitte an feedback@wallstreet-online.de
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.11.00 18:00:57
      Beitrag Nr. 5 ()
      Wenn die Araber den Hahn zudrehen, dann hat der Westen ein Problem und die USA würden sofort einen Krieg anzetteln um ihre wirtschaft zu retten..
      Da kein Araber mehr bock auf Krieg hat werden sie weiter brav ihr öl billig verkaufen müssen.Zumindest solange wie sie noch welches haben aber das ist auch nur eine frage der Zeit bis sie ihren einzigsten Joker den sie jemals besessen haben velieren.

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      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.11.00 18:11:29
      Beitrag Nr. 6 ()
      Höchste Zeit das solare-Wasserstoff Zeitalter einzuläuten.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.11.00 18:12:31
      Beitrag Nr. 7 ()
      @ volant
      hahahahahahahah
      klasse Beitrag

      Hamas-Smilie
      hahahahah
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.12.00 15:22:56
      !
      Dieser Beitrag wurde vom System automatisch gesperrt. Bei Fragen wenden Sie sich bitte an feedback@wallstreet-online.de
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.02.01 21:13:06
      Beitrag Nr. 9 ()
      Irak 5 % der Welt - Oelförderung :(

      Thank you Mr Bush jr. 50$ Barrel
      Avatar
      schrieb am 20.05.01 20:18:52
      Beitrag Nr. 10 ()
      Wieder da : Armageddon !

      US Energy Secretary Does Not Expect Oil Embargo
      VOA News
      20 May 2001 17:07 UTC

      U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham says he does not believe that current tensions in the Middle East will mean another oil embargo. Appearing on a television news program Sunday, Mr. Abraham said the OPEC countries, in particular, Saudi Arabia have always said they would not use oil as a bargaining chip. But he says the instability of foreign oil sources justifies the need for increasing domestic production.

      Mr. Abraham said the United States must expand U.S. coal, oil and nuclear power production. He said that includes oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska.

      Meanwhile, U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney, appearing on the television news shows said mandatory price limits are not the answer to the energy problems in the state of California.

      Mr. Cheney says price-caps are the politically expedient answer, but not a long-term solution. He says the state of California`s flawed regulatory system and the failure to build new power plants has caused the current energy situation. Vice-President Cheney says the Bush administration is looking at nuclear power as well. The Bush plan calls for new plants and the resumption of reprocessing nuclear fuel.

      Critics say the Administration`s energy plan will damage the enviornment, a charge the White House denies.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 21.05.01 09:48:06
      Beitrag Nr. 11 ()
      30 $ !!!

      Hier Opecnews Überschriften !

      DIE ANGST VOR DEM EMBARGO DER ARABER !

      Mon 21 May 2001
      Oil tops $30 led by gasoline
      Globe and Mail Reuters News Agency | Singapore — Oil prices climbed above $30 (U.S.) per barrel on Monday as t...

      Oil tops $30 led by gasoline, OPEC concerns
      Individual | 1:05am | Source: Reuters | SINGAPORE, May 21 (Reuters) - Oil prices climbed above $30 per barrel o...

      OPEC production should not be increased
      The Times Of India TEHRAN: Iranian oil minister Bijan Namdar-Zanganeh on Sunday backed calls to keep OPEC production at...

      Sun 20 May 2001
      Cheney says caps, OPEC won`t solve U.S. problems
      Houston Chronicle WASHINGTON -- Capping electricity prices or pressuring OPEC to cut oil prices will not solve U.S. en...

      Cheney Says Energy Woes Solution at Home, Not OPEC
      Yahoo Daily News Photos | Reuters Photo | By Barbara Hagenbaugh | WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Pressuring oil-producing nat...

      Cheney Says Energy Woes Solution at Home, Not OPEC
      The Los Angeles Times Reuters | WASHINGTON--Pressuring oil-producing nations to expand outpu...

      Cheney Says Energy Woes Solution at Home, Not OPEC
      Excite By Barbara Hagenbaugh | WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Pressuring oil-producing nations to expand output is ...

      Answer for US energy woes at home, not OPEC-Cheney
      Individual | 2:15pm | Source: Reuters | By Barbara Hagenbaugh | WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Pressuring oil-producing...

      Energy secretary predicts no oil embargo
      Houston Chronicle WASHINGTON -- Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham said today he does not believe there will be another ...

      OPEC President Says Output Change Unlikely
      The Los Angeles Times Reuters | TEHRAN--OPEC President Chakib Khelil repeated on Sunday that...

      Energy Secretary Does Not Expect Oil Embargo
      The Los Angeles Times Reuters | WASHINGTON--U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham said on Su...

      US Energy Secretary Does Not Expect Oil Embargo
      Voa News U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham says he does not believe that current tensions in the Middle E...

      Energy Secretary Does Not Expect Oil Embargo
      Yahoo Daily News WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham (news - web sites) said on Sunday he di...

      OPEC President Says Output Change Unlikely
      Yahoo Daily News TEHRAN (Reuters) - OPEC (news - web sites) President Chakib Khelil repeated on Sunday that the oil c...

      Cash crude oil prices firmer last week
      Irna Cash crude oil prices were firmer during last | week ending Thursday. | Average price of the Dubai c...

      Lest nur wie oft das WORT EMBARGO fällt ! Fast alle AMI Gazetten sind besorgt und zitieren US - Officials !
      Avatar
      schrieb am 27.05.01 22:13:05
      Beitrag Nr. 12 ()
      BAGHDAD, May 27 (Reuters) - A senior Iraqi energy official was quoted on Sunday as saying any suspension of Iraqi crude exports would cause a crisis in the world`s oil market.

      Oil Ministry senior undersecretary Taha Humud Musa, quoted by Ittehad newspaper, said it was unlikely that Saudi Arabia would be able fill the void if Baghdad halted its exports.

      "We doubt that Saudi Arabia would compensate for Iraqi oil in the case exports were halted. The Saudis might have a production surplus but this is not enough," Musa said.

      "We are sure that if Iraqi crude is absent (from the market), there will be a crisis and then we`ll see," he said.

      Baghdad has threatened to halt oil exports if the U.N. Security Council adopts the "smart sanctions" proposal of Britain and the United States.

      Iraq currently exports about 2.1 million barrels per day.

      Washington`s aim is to get the resolution adopted before the current six-month phase for the United Nations oil-for-food programme expires on June 3.

      But with two permanent members of the Security Council -- Russia and China -- balking, an extension of the current phase looks likely.

      Iraq wants a simple renewal of the current programme. The British-U.S. plan seeks to ease restrictions on civilian goods going to Iraq but also to crackdown on oil smuggling.

      OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia has said that it and other OPEC members would step in and fill any serious supply gaps created by a break in Iraqi exports.

      An Iraqi oil official said on Sunday Iraqi Oil Minister Amir Muhammed Rasheed and top oil officials were due to attend OPEC`s June 5-6 output strategy meeting in Vienna.

      Rasheed`s entourage is to include Musa, Saddam Hassan, executive director of oil marketer SOMO, Abd al-Ilah al-Tikriti, director general of economics and finance, and Mus`ib al- Dujaili, OPEC governor and adviser to the oil minister.

      The Iraqi oil minister has previously given OPEC meetings a miss when domestic affairs have taken precedence.


      Jetzt geht es den Amis an den Kragen !

      Oelembargo IRAK IRAN !

      Das bricht den Amis das Genick ! = 100 $ Barrel in einer US
      Energiekrise mit klammen Vorräten !

      Eine Drohung unglaublichen Ausmaßes !

      Auf der Konferenz der Arabischen Liga hat Iran erstmals die Option eines Oelembargos angeregt , um die Palestina Frage
      ein für allemal zu lösen !

      Wer ist ISRAEL ? Kein Oel !

      Die Palestinenser bekommen Ihren Staat zum "Nulltarif" !


      Oder glaubt Ihr die Welt lässt sich durch die Judenfrage Ihr Schmiermittel wegnehmen ? !

      Die Araber werden IHRE absolute Macht nutzen !

      Da bin ich mir sicher ! :(

      Nur eine Frage der Zeit
      bzw. Anzahl der von Israel getöteten Glaubensbrüder :)

      Wir werden nächste Woche die 30$ + wiedersehen !

      Meine Lösung : Solarer Wasserstoff jetzt !

      Dann sind wir nicht erpressbar !
      Avatar
      schrieb am 02.06.01 17:16:10
      Beitrag Nr. 13 ()
      Irak stellt seine Oelförderung ein !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

      oelpreis wird explodieren !
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.06.01 10:15:55
      Beitrag Nr. 14 ()
      Meiner Meinung aber nicht für sehr lange Zeit. Saddam braucht das Geld aus dem Ölverkauf um Waffen kaufen zu können. Er rasselt wieder einmal nur mit dem Säbel. Außerdem werden die Saudis und Kuwait sicherlich dann etwas mehr Öl fördern. :)
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.06.01 14:27:29
      Beitrag Nr. 15 ()
      @ Aktienkrieger

      Wenn sie können !

      Aber sie können nicht :( ! siehe

      www.energiekrise.de

      Alle Fakten dort !


      Solarer Wasserstoff + Brennstoffzelle die einzige ECHTE LÖSUNG ! Für IMMER
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.06.01 14:46:07
      Beitrag Nr. 16 ()
      Mal ne Frage sind die russischen Ölgesellschaften eigentlich unabhängig von der OPEC ?
      Avatar
      schrieb am 04.06.01 12:29:08
      Beitrag Nr. 17 ()
      BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — Iraq followed up on its threat to halt most oil exports, stopping the flow early Monday to all but neighboring Turkey and Jordan.

      The indefinite halt was meant to protest a U.N. Security Council decision to extend by one month instead of the usual six months the program under which Iraq can sell oil. Baghdad has chafed at U.N. controls over its oil exports — its sole foreign exchange earner — that stem from sanctions imposed for Iraq`s 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

      War and sanctions have crippled the Iraqi economy, leaving many Iraqis dependent on government rations financed by the U.N.-supervised oil exports. Iraq has cash reserves, but it was unclear how long it could survive without further sales. It had been pumping about 3 million barrels a day.

      Sources close to the Iraqi Oil Ministry, speaking on condition of anonymity Monday, said pumping oil through an Iraqi-Turkish pipeline to Turkey`s Mediterranean port terminal at Ceyhan stopped at 8 a.m. local time. Exports through Iraq`s southern al-Bakr oil terminal were also shut off, the sources said.

      The sources said oil exports by road tankers to Turkey and Jordan were not affected. Iraqi Oil Minister Amer Mohammed Rashid had said Sunday that exports to Iraq`s neighbors would not be affected by the protest.

      Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali Naimi said Saturday the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries was ready to cover any shortfall in world oil production following Iraq`s halt. Other OPEC nations are pumping at top capacity, but Naimi said Saudi Arabia alone is capable of covering any shortage.

      A delegation headed by the Iraqi Oil Ministry`s senior undersecretary, Taha Humud Musa, was dispatched to Vienna for a regular OPEC meeting that starts Tuesday. Rashid, speaking to reporters Sunday, played down the meeting`s importance, saying OPEC ministers have already agreed not to change production.

      Rashid said Iraq has produced 3 million barrels of oil per day for the past two years, of which 2.3 million barrels per day were exported under the U.N. oil-for-food program.

      Rashid had announced Saturday that Iraqi oil exports would stop until the Security Council agreed on the usual six-month extension of the oil-for-food program.

      The one-month renewal announced Friday was a stopgap to give council members time to study a plan — proposed by Britain, backed by the United States and rejected by Baghdad — to amend the sanctions against Iraq.

      Since 1996, the U.N.-supervised oil-for-food program has allowed Iraq to use its oil earnings to buy humanitarian goods.

      The so-called smart sanctions proposal would allow civilian goods to flow freely into Iraq — except for goods that appear on a U.N. list of items that could be used for military purposes.

      The plan also permits commercial and cargo flights in and out Iraq as long as they are inspected at their departure points. It is designed to tighten border controls around Iraq and to curb oil smuggling and illegal Iraqi surcharges.

      Iraq wants all sanction lifted.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 04.06.01 12:30:40
      Beitrag Nr. 18 ()
      @ Wolf

      Russland ist inoffiziell assoziertes Mitglied der Opec !

      Formal schon !

      CU
      Avatar
      schrieb am 10.06.01 14:37:04
      Beitrag Nr. 19 ()
      Once again Opec has US over a barrel

      ( OPEC hat die Hand an der Gurgel der USA )




      Quelle Sunday Times.UK :


      PERHAPS we should blame God. After all, He put the oil where nobody can use it, and then put the need for oil at places far distant from where it flows from the earth - or almost so. For many years there was enough oil in America to fuel the growth of one of the most efficient and productive economies the world has seen. No longer. America now depends for most of its oil on Arab countries that, along with Venezuela and a few other nations, have formed the Opec cartel to keep prices at many multiples of the level that would be set in a free market.

      Worse still, one of those countries, Iraq, is run by a dictator who is perfectly willing to shut down production and impoverish his people if doing so will press America and its allies to dance to his tune. Another, Iran, is controlled by mullahs who view America as a satan, to be exploited to the maximum extent possible. And the South American partner in the cartel, Venezuela, is now run by a former putschist whose hero is Fidel Castro.

      Little wonder that Vice-President Dick Cheney, who drew up the new energy policy that President George Bush hopes to push through a hostile Congress, views America`s dependence on foreign oil as more than an economic problem. As one White House staffer put it to me: "To Cheney, energy policy is merely a subset of security policy." That is not to say the vice-president is unaware of the threat that high oil prices pose to America`s prosperity, especially at a time when it is an open question whether the economy will resume its growth or lapse into recession.

      Unfortunately, there is little that Cheney or anyone else can do to pry Opec`s fingers from America`s throat. The administration`s energy plan calls for the construction of nuclear plants. But little oil is used to generate electricity these days. So even if private-sector companies were to gamble on the technology that only recently brought many of them close to ruin, these plants cannot cut America`s oil consumption.

      Nor can many of the other measures suggested by the Bush administration have sufficient effect on American reliance on imports to remove pricing power from Opec.

      Opening up new areas to domestic drilling will help, but a hostile Senate is likely to kill such plans. Conservation can cut usage, but not enough to enable America to tell Opec members to peddle their barrels somewhere else.

      Mandated increases in fuel efficiency, unpopular with motorists who know that smaller cars are uncomfortable and less safe than the sports utility vehicles they prefer, are also unlikely to make America sufficiently independent of imports to make it immune from Opec price pressures.

      There are no long-term solutions on the horizon and, worse, even if the administration could somehow wrest control of crude oil from Opec, America does not have sufficient refining capacity to turn that crude into petrol and heating oil.

      Last week Opec refused to increase output to offset the production cuts ordered by Saddam Hussein to demonstrate his displeasure with America and the United Nations.

      The Opec planners argued that America has ample crude oil to meet its needs. Current tightness in the petrol market is due not to a shortage of crude oil but to a shortage of refinery capacity. That, said Opec, is a self- inflicted wound for which it cannot be held responsible.

      Eventually, a relaxation of environmental restrictions might increase refining capacity - but not soon, and not certainly, as the powerful green lobby is intent on forcing America to rely solely on cutting energy demand rather than increasing supply, to cope with shortages and consequent rising prices.

      The answer to Opec lies in diversification. Non-Opec sources of oil are being developed in response to the $30- per-barrel prices that the cartel is maintaining, and there are sound national-security reasons for America to encourage further exploitation of these more secure supplies.

      In line with such a policy, America might persuade Mexico, which is not an official Opec member but is acting in concert with the cartel, to abandon its refusal to fill the supply gap created by Opec`s cutbacks. After all, Mexican prosperity depends on exports to America and the remittances that Mexican immigrants send home to impoverished families.

      Canada, too, can be enlisted in what might be termed a continental energy policy. In combination with Mexico, our northern neighbour supplies 27% of our imported oil - and could supply more, especially if its ample reserves of "heavy" oil can be developed at reasonable cost.

      But in the end, God has put the cheapest and most abundant reserves of oil under the sands of Opec`s Arab members. So far, in the words of Cheney`s National Energy Policy Development Group, Saudi Arabia, the world`s most prolific producer, has provided "effective assurances that it will use its capacity to mitigate the impact of supply disruptions".

      But if Palestinian-Israeli hostilities heat up, pressure on the Saudi regime to express its displeasure with American support of Israel will mount, increasing the danger of a supply cut-off. And in any event, the Saudis prefer a cartel price of $30 per barrel to a free-market price of $10 or less.

      So Bush is in trouble. At least for now, he can do nothing to get the producing countries to bring down the price of oil. In the longer term, he has to rely on a combination of stepped-up domestic production, increased diversification of the nation`s sources of imported oil, and, if he can bring himself to it, a quiet word with the Saudis and Kuwaitis about the consequences for them of withdrawal of the American shield that protects them from Saddam. That`s the sort of tough talk that his father always shied away from when dealing with oil sheiks.


      Auch der Kommentator der Times ist auf Oel fixiert !

      Solarer Wasserstoff und die Opec ist ein zahnloser Krüppel !

      Bush der Oelmann kann das seiner Klientel aber nicht antun !

      Schade ! Na dann 50 $ das Barrel !

      Hoffentlich bald, denn dann wird Bush dazu gezwungen sich um Alternativen zu kümmern !

      Gott hat einen Fehler gemacht ? ! Nein er gab uns die Sonne
      und Wasser ! Das reicht für 5.000.000.000 Jahre Energie !

      Die Technik ist da : also lasst sie uns Nutzen !

      ENDLICH
      Avatar
      schrieb am 04.12.01 12:07:26
      Beitrag Nr. 20 ()
      Wieder Brandaktuell !

      Krieg in Israel eskaliert : Arafats Hauptquatier von israelischen Raketen
      getroffen !
      Arafat bittet arabische Liga um Unterstützung.

      Oelpreis hat schon reagiert! Und der US Winter kommt !
      Avatar
      schrieb am 13.12.01 17:39:38
      Beitrag Nr. 21 ()
      Krieg in Nah Ost !

      Araber werden reagieren !


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