Use ISIS in your searches.
This goes way back. War in Georgia. Kurds.
This is what the whole shit storm in Syria has been about the whole time. How to get the oil to the EU from that region via pipeline. 2 opposing factions having a proxy war.
Hussein and co furnished the transport and more. When US forces pulled out in ernest of Iraq, they left the vehicles KEYS IN and ready to roll.
Not a Patriot move.
AND don't forget–Bankrupt Russia. Russia's GDP is the size of Texas's. Most of the income is from oil and gas export to the EU.
They needed that pipeline THROUGH Syria, and where else?????
Hello–and The Khazar Kikes were hoping to sneak up on Syria's backside and steal that land they lost.
>AND don't forget–Bankrupt Russia. Russia's GDP is the size of Texas's. Most of the income is from oil and gas export to the EU.
>They needed that pipeline THROUGH Syria, and where else?????
>Hello–and The Khazar Kikes were hoping to sneak up on Syria's backside and steal that land they lost
https://www.middleeasteye.net/big-story/pipelineistan-conspiracy-war-syria-has-never-been-about-gas
http://www.courtfool.info/en_Pipelines_to_9_11.htm
Pipelines to 9/11
by Rudo de Ruijter,
Independent researcher,
Netherlands
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, followed by the war in Afghanistan and the “War on Terror” have changed the world. However, like the presumed Weapons of Mass Destruction had nothing to do with the invasion of Iraq, Osama bin Laden had nothing to do with the war in Afghanistan. The real reasons are oil, gas and pipelines around the Caspian Sea. “Operation September 11” aimed to give a new impulse in the US conquests to gain control over foreign oil and gas.
Short content
This article is about backgrounds of the US war against Afghanistan. It is about oil, gas and pipelines around the Caspian Sea. To transport oil and gas from the east side of the Caspian Sea, pipelines had been planned through Afghanistan. Because a US company, UNOCAL, failed to control the Afghan route, the war was prepared. When the military was ready to strike, the terrorists of 9/11 gave Bush the pretext to start this war and obtain support from Congress, the U.S. population and the rest of the world.
Contents:
Introduction
Timeline 1989 – 2000
Neo-conservative ideas
Wealthy actors and influences
Preparations for 9/11 and the invasion of Afghanistan
9/11
Conclusion
Pipeline projects through Afghanistan
On December 25, 1991, the Soviet flag was lowered from the Kremlin for the last time. [4] The former Soviet republics become independent. Among them were the countries around the Caspian Sea, all rich in oil and gas. [MAP: http://worldatlas.com/webimage/countrys/as.htm ]
Before, the oil and gas went through pipelines to their soviet neighbours, or were exported via Russia to Europe. Now each country could sell its own oil and gas and explore new markets. Buyers showed up from everywhere.
In the beginning, the new leaders still had no experience with the world oil business. One of the first deals of Turkmenistan was to auction an oil well for as little as $100,000. [5] US companies showed up, too.
The biggest challenge was to get the Caspian oil and gas to the world markets. The problem? The region is land-locked. If you trust neither Russia on the North side of the Caspian Sea, nor Iran on the South side, you need to build new pipelines. [MAP: http://europe.mapquest.com/ maps/map.adp?formtype=address&country= TM&addtohistory=&city= ]
Today, from the West side of the Caspian Sea, oil is pumped through several pipelines towards the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea from where it can be shipped.
Big business on the East side of the Caspian Sea is still limited. To unlock oil and gas from this side, pipelines have to be built through Afghanistan. Here, since the early nineties, two pipelines - one for oil and one for gas - have been in project. The oil pipe should go South to the Indian Ocean, ending at the port of Gwadar in Pakistan.
super interdasting article
Member ENRON. 2nd millennium company. They went broke shortly after 911.
They had plans for a pipeline through Afghanistan. See, when the US went into that country for Badden-Bin+Laden they built bases all along the proposed pipeline… hmmm.
Not sure if they ever succeeded with their pipelie Lt Dan.
http://ww25.sea.wreia.us/caspian-sea-countries-map/?subid1=20201022-1519-040a-a97f-e826f766c3b3
https://sofrep.com/news/chinese-taliban-partnership/
THE CHINESE & TALIBAN PARTNERSHIP NOBODY IS TALKING ABOUT UNTIL NOW
by Brandon Webb
Jul 31, 2012
Village Stability Operations (VSO)
VSO are one of several national priority efforts currently conducted by joint/combined SOF teams in rural village areas across Afghanistan in support of the International Security Assistance Force’s, or ISAF’s, comprehensive campaign of counterinsurgency, or COIN. The ultimate goal of the COIN campaign is to foster an enduring stability for the people of Afghanistan. Performing what are commonly described as “bottom-up” stability efforts….so says big Army.
The Chinese Taliban Partnership
VSO is a losing strategy if the U.S. is not invested in Afghanistan for the long haul and we all know that we’re only building houses of cards. Current VSO operations in theater will only provide temporary shelter from a Chinese storm that is sweeping across the Afghanistan nation, and squeezing the land of every available natural resource. China doesn’t give a fuck if the TB (Taliban) is in charge, just as long as they look the other way once they’re on the take; the TB will want their cut of course. This will happen as soon as the U.S. pulls out and it’s back to burkas as usual.
Ever heard of the Trans Afghan pipeline?
A friend of mine going to Afghanistan soon says….
“Guys like you and me can see the real future if China taps that 1Trillion worth of resources (God knows that they need them…). China will not give two shits if AFG returns to a complete safe haven for every terrorist faction on the globe that hates the USA. In fact, an unstable AFG is better for what they are hoping to accomplish. They may even promote that shit just to keep us on our toes knowing that there is no way in hell we would return. They are a very strategic “chess playing” country. Pricks.”-Anonymous US SOCOM Operator
Special Operations units will be the last line of defense in Afghanistan
Read Next: Special Operations units will be the last line of defense in Afghanistan
Score: China 1 America 0.
China’s Afghan Game Plan
In his latest book, On China, Henry Kissinger uses the traditional intellectual games favored by China and the West – weiqi and chess – as a way to reveal their differing attitudes toward international power politics. Chess is about total victory, a Clausewitzian battle for the “center of gravity” and the eventual elimination of the enemy, whereas weiqi is a quest for relative advantage through a strategy of encirclement that avoids direct conflict.
This cultural contrast is a useful guide to the way that China manages its current competition with the West. China’s Afghan policy is a case in point, but it also is a formidable challenge to the weiqi way. As the United States prepares to withdraw its troops from the country, China must deal with an uncertain post-war scenario.
Afghanistan is of vital strategic interest to China, yet it never crossed its leaders’ minds to defend those interests through war. A vital security zone to China’s west, Afghanistan is also an important corridor through which it can secure its interests in Pakistan (a traditional ally in China’s competition with India), and ensure its access to vital natural resources in the region. Moreover, China’s already restless Muslim-majority province of Xinjiang, which borders on Afghanistan, might be dangerously affected by a Taliban takeover there, or by the country’s dismemberment.
The US fought its longest-ever war in Afghanistan, at a cost (so far) of more than $555 billion, not to mention tens of thousands of Afghan civilian casualties and close to 3,100 US troops killed. But China’s strategy in the country was mostly focused on business development, and on satiating its vast appetite for energy and minerals. The US Defense Department has valued Afghanistan’s untapped mineral deposits at $1 trillion. But it is China that is now poised to exploit much of these resources.
Indeed, China’s development of the Aynak Copper Mine was the largest single foreign direct investment in Afghanistan’s history. China was also engaged in constructing a $500 million electric plant and railway link between Tajikistan and Pakistan. Last December, China’s state-owned National Petroleum Corporation signed a deal with the Afghan authorities that would make it the first foreign company to exploit Afghanistan’s oil and natural-gas reserves.