Anonymous ID: 6aeec6 Aug. 31, 2022, 7:43 p.m. No.17474456   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4571

>>17474435

Translation of John Bolton, CFR (London City) ruling body for the Americas:

 

We haven't found the Iran Deal documents yet. Time to look at his other properties. Oh wait, he has thousands of properties across the globe.

 

Trust the plan. American Corporation ruled by London City (Biden) vs American Republic re-constituted (Trump). It was over before it started.

Anonymous ID: 6aeec6 Aug. 31, 2022, 7:54 p.m. No.17474504   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4514

The 2022 Election comes down to:

 

Dem = confirmation of the final Congressional/Senior Executive Service (SES)/Military conversion to reporting to the CCP.

GOP = Snap election in Congress invalidating the 2020 election for fraud and confirmation of Donald Trump as President of the United States effective January 21, 2023.

 

To save the Republic we must outvote the cheats.

Anons have much work to do.

Exposing the Iran deal is up to the plate.

Anonymous ID: 6aeec6 Aug. 31, 2022, 8:08 p.m. No.17474554   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Anons are going to lead a legal takeover of Congress through the vote and GOP is the horse we're going to ride right in the middle of Senate Chamber and drop 5 pounds of horse manure right on the seat of Cocaine Mitch.

 

Trust the plan. We need voices. We need votes.

Anonymous ID: 6aeec6 Aug. 31, 2022, 8:20 p.m. No.17474600   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4612 >>4619 >>4623 >>4647 >>4726 >>4865

All Jake Sullivan remarks on the record relating to Iran. Iran deal must be exposed. Jake Sullivan is trying to re-implement the Iran deal and nobody even knows what is in the Iran Deal. It seems to me that if the FBI raided a former President's home to gain intel on what the white hats know, there must be something very damning in the Iran Deal that when exposed will finish off the Dems. I'm a digging.

 

https://iranprimer.usip.org/blog/2021/jan/26/jake-sullivan-iran

Anonymous ID: 6aeec6 Aug. 31, 2022, 8:35 p.m. No.17474641   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4647 >>4726 >>4865

An Iran nuclear deal revival could dramatically alter oil prices — if it happens

 

  • “Should the nuclear deal be revived, 1-2 million barrels per day of extra oil could hit the market in a comparatively short period of time,” one commodities analyst told CNBC.

 

  • Iranian negotiators in mid-August expressed optimism about the prospects for an agreement, with one advisor saying “we’re closer than we’ve been before” to securing a deal.

 

  • But so far, it seems there are a few remaining sticking points that are proving difficult to resolve.

 

The return of the Iran nuclear deal could be imminent — and with it, the return of a lot of oil to international crude markets. Before the U.S. resumed sanctions on Iran after former President Donald Trump left the deal in 2018, Iran was the third-largest producer in OPEC after Saudi Arabia and Iraq. In 2017, it was the fourth-largest oil producer in the world, after the U.S., Saudi Arabia and Russia. “OPEC could easily produce 30.5 million bpd (barrels per day) if Iran comes back and those barrels are not accommodated,” Tamas Varga, analyst at PVM Oil Associates in London, told CNBC on Tuesday. “Under this scenario my model shows Brent dipping to $65″ per barrel in the second half of 2023, Varga said. That’s a massive drop from the current price of Brent crude, which was trading at just over $101 a barrel on Tuesday morning in New York. Last week, Saudi Arabia’s energy minister, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, warned that OPEC could be forced to cut oil production. The minister’s reasoning was that physical and paper markets are “disconnected” with the latter suffering from “very thin liquidity, extreme volatility,” he said in an interview with Bloomberg last week. But Iran’s potential reemergence on the market is also likely to be a concern, analysts say. “OPEC+ might be preparing for the eventual return of Iran,” Varga wrote in a report Tuesday. “Should the nuclear deal be revived, 1-2 million barrels per day of extra oil could hit the market in a comparatively short period of time.” And veteran OPEC analyst Helima Croft, head of global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, told the Financial Times last week that “earlier this year I think it’s fair to say Saudi Arabia and other regional actors were reasonably confident the Iran deal wasn’t going to happen in the near future … Now that the negotiations have been revived I think they will be focused on both the oil market and the wider security implications of this deal potentially getting over the finish line.” Iranian negotiators in mid-August expressed optimism about the prospects for an agreement, with one advisor saying “we’re closer than we’ve been before” to securing a deal and that the “remaining issues are not very difficult to resolve.” But so far, it seems there are a few remaining sticking points that are proving fairly difficult to resolve. The main issue of contention between the Iranian and Western camps is an ongoing investigation by the International Atomic Energy Agency — the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog — into unexplained traces of uranium found at Iranian facilities in the early 2000s. Tehran wants the investigation closed before they’ll accept any deal; the IAEA and U.S. and European governments are so far refusing.

 

The nuclear deal, formally called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and penned under the Obama administration along with France, the U.K., Germany, Russia, and China, lifted economic sanctions on Iran in exchange for limits on its nuclear program. Since the U.S. withdrawal in mid-2018 however, sanctions have crushed Iran’s economy of 84 million people and Tehran has progressively ramped up its nuclear activity in breach of the deal, enriching uranium to the highest levels it has ever enriched and prompting the head of the IAEA to warn that “only countries making bombs” are exhibiting this level of activity. That means the stakes are high, and particularly for the Biden administration, which listed the revival of the deal as a key foreign policy goal. It’s also become more urgent as sanctions on Russia due to its invasion of Ukraine slash Europe’s oil and gas supply and send prices soaring. While Iranian oil wouldn’t fully offset the loss of Russian barrels, it would still help ease supply pressures, analysts say. “An Iran deal would represent an additional 1.1, 1.2 million barrels per day in crude exports, production and exports. That would happen over the next eight months.

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/08/31/an-iran-nuclear-deal-revival-could-dramatically-alter-oil-prices.html