Category: Iran

Tlar: “No News Is Probably Good News”

Post From Currency Chatter – Tlar & Friends Comments After News  Article

US, Iran and Saudi agree on Maliki’s third term

The United Sates, Iran and Saudi Arabia have agreed to allow Iraq’s Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki to stay in office for a third term, Al-Araby Al-Yawm newspaper reported.

The news agency quoted an Iraqi source familiar with the agreement details as saying “according to the agreement Al-Maliki will have to give up sovereign ministries and the security file, and abide by the 2010 agreement and establish a National Security Council for Iraq, headed by a Sunni figure.”

Sunni, Shia and sections of the Kurdish Jalal Talabani’s group have united to counter Kurdistan’s attempts to separate from Iraq, the source said.
~~~

  It is expected that the agreement will be concluded before the Eid Al-Fitr holiday, at the end of July, during a meeting to choose the three government prominent posts.

According to the source, Barham Saleh will be chosen as president while Saleem Al-Jbouri will act as parliament speaker, and Al-Maliki as prime minister.

“Tarek Najm is expected to become vice president, and Hussein Al-Attiyah will act as foreign minister succeeding Hoshyar Zebari,” Al-Araby Al-Yawm said.

The source noted that Sunni figures from Tikrit and Mosul will be chosen for sovereign ministries.

The Iraqi parliament announced yesterday that it has decided to bring forward its second parliamentary session. “We have decided to bring forward the second parliament session to Sunday July 13,” acting parliament speaker, Mehdi Al-Hafez, said in a statement.

Military sources said the Iraqi forces continue to bomb Sunni areas in Tikrit, Baquba and Diyala where elements of the former Iraqi army and Baath Party affiliates are believed to be positioned.

According to the source, Sunni leaders describe Sunni militants as rebels who revolted against Al-Maliki’s sectarian policies.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/middle-east/12663-us-iran-and-saudi-agree-on-malikis-third-term

BlueyesinLevis:  The Sunni’s would burn Iraq to the ground….  obvious bull crap  The Saudis DESPISE Maliki…

rDiddy   I can imagine the average Iraqi’s response – why bother having elections if the US, Iran and the Saudis are calling the shots? I call BS on this article

Tim:   don’t believe it, maybe Iran would support Maliki but there’s no way that the US and the Saudi’s would support a marginalized dictatorial government.

Rileysetter:   Saudi Arabia is 90% plus Sunni Muslim.  I highly doubt they would give their stamp of approval to Maliki.  If they found a way to strip him of most of his power…maybe…but I still have my doubts about this article.

KJWayne:   What was it tlar said would happen, more mis conflicting news and rumors JUST before the end. Or something like that.  I call this as one of the BS articles he is talking about.

Peace:  KJWayne I agree there’s too much suffocating smoke “Cough!!!!

XXXXX:  Here’s Vinman’s thoughts on this: “

If the “National Security Council,” (which would be headed by a Sunni) is the same entity discussed in the original Erbil agreement, then this is just plain BULL.

 Assuming it’s the same, the entity mentioned in the Erbil Agreement would have had POWER sharing and quasi-legislative power. THERE IS NO PROVISION FOR THIS IN THE IRAQI CONSTITUTION.

To create an entity with “power” authority would require an amendment to the Iraqi Constitution. They can’t just “create this out of thin air,” just as President Obama cannot meet with Pelosi, Reed, Boehner and McConnell to form and decree a “group” of government with any decision-making authority or legislative power.

This is exactly how Allawi got hosed last time. After winning the popular vote (like Maliki did this time), he agreed to head this “Council” as part of a power-sharing agreement. But the Council was unconstitutional. Ooops. Sorry bud… you lose. But Maliki had already become PM so it was too late.

 This is like a re-run of a really bad movie. I don’t believe it for a nano. Don’t need any popcorn for this one. I’m changin’ the channel.”

Aaanth:               ths article has “made the rounds: already and has been shown to be part of the maliki spin machine.  it’s complete BS.  disregaed this entirely

BeastMaster:     Frankie Frankie believes this to be true. Actually, Frankie Frankie implies that he knew this was coming and it’s out a day early.

 Ralph:    Tlar, pardon me, but what is POP??  Appreciate your input as always!!

Tlar:   President of Parliament.  Equivalent to our Speaker of the House in his duties.  tlar

Tlar:   There is no news that is noteworthy coming out.  At this point in the process, no news is probably good news.  What is being printed is utter nonsense. 

Articles like this and the other saying the US and Iran are on board with a third term, are ridiculous.  With all that’s gone on, who would generate such a stupid premise? 

I am sure there are a few holdouts in the SOL that are still hoping to see a third term most likely because they are deeply involved in theft and need the protection and are still speaking to the press, but by and large the SOL has turned its back on Maliki. 

There is progress being made but we won’t see it yet because the negotiations behind the scene I’m sure are delegate.  (delicate?) We will wait to see the results of what has been going on this Sunday or before.

 Everything will continue to be confusing in the news until then because the news itself is being largely kept in the dark and they are searching for stories.  Hang in everyone.  This will come out right. 

I am hopeful that they can build the government in one day but realistically it might take a couple of days.  If we see the new POP in place, that means to me that the 3 presidencies are more than likely to follow quickly. 

It also could be that the new government could be introduced all at once before Sunday.

 If that happens we would then know that parliament has already been in session for a few days and would answer someone on here who asked the question,

” if parliament is not in session, where are all the new laws that are being announced in the Gazette coming from?”  It’s a very insightful and intriguing question.   tlar 

www.currencychatter.com

Caught in crossfire – the oil industry of Iraq

While the mayhem and political impasse go on in Iraq, it is not possible to underestimate the impact on the domestic market and crude oil prices in the world.
Since almost a month’s time span, intense fighting erupted between the forces of the Baghdad government and its adversaries in most of the west and north of the country. Of course, the current situation is a result of the government’s failure to handle peacefully what was initially an orderly and transparent demonstration to demand reforms in the way the country was being run, especially in the now affected areas.
The oil situation in Iraq even before the current crisis was mixed. While crude oil production was rising slowly but surely after the signing of a multitude of service contracts with international oil companies, the domestic oil market was far from being satisfactory.
For 11 years, the government failed to operate its refineries at more than 70 per cent of capacity and their expansion was slow in coming. The quality is the lowest among its neighboring countries. It was only recently that Iraq signed a contract to build a new refinery which may come on stream in 2018.
Therefore, Iraq relied on petroleum product imports to satisfy rising demand, with severe shortages being reported every now and then. The average daily import of light petroleum products in 2013 and the first quarter of 2014 were close to 100,000 barrels a day and at an enormous cost to the economy.
Focusing on a Battle Ground
In the current crisis, the Baiji refinery became a battle ground and was even damaged by helicopters raids. It is now out of operation and it is difficult to estimate the damages. As this refinery contributes close to 50 per cent of domestic products production, imports are definitely going to rise sharply, though the government is denying products and electricity to those regions impacted by the uprising.
On the gas side, the situation is bleak; Iraq is flaring almost 12 billion cubic meters a year of gas while the power stations are crying out for more gas instead of the costly liquid fuels. Gas processing plants are not even at the level they were in 2003 and new ones are yet to be initiated to cater to rising gas production. While flaring is going on, the government is to import gas from Iran and it is doubtful whether this solution is in any way positive.
As was said earlier, Iraq’s crude oil production is rising, especially after the rehabilitation of some old fields and the start-up of production from new fields such as Badra, Gharraf, West Qurna 2 and Majnoon. Production in 2013 was close to 3 million barrels a day (mbd) and exports around 2.4 mbd. However, Iraq lost its northern exports since early March and also the Kirkuk fields to the Peshmerga. Therefore, the expected increase in the southern fields this year may only compensate for the loss of the northern production.
All this is likely to change since what happened on June 9 led to the central government losing control over large swathes of the country. Many oil companies in the south have reduced their staff substantially as fear rises that violence may even involve the southern governorates. Judging by what happened recently in Karbala, Dewaniya and other places is an indicator that this is now more probable.
Additionally, the country is locked in a political crisis where no mandates emanated from the first meeting of the Parliament to elect a speaker and president and to form a new government.
To demonstrate the seriousness of the situation we have just to look at the oil market reaction. Although Iraq’s exports have not been affected so far by the fighting in the west and north of the country, crude oil prices rose sharply with Brent rising from $109.82 a barrel on June 9 to more than $115 on June 19.
Although prices eased later due to the return of Libyan export ports to under government control, the risk premium to Iraqi oil is still there. Some media sources reported that Asian refiners shunning Iraq crude in the spot market “worried that the militant insurgency in the country could spread to the area where the oil is churned out and exported”.
The most serious result of the Iraqi situation so far is the fact that the Kurdish Regional Government has seized Kirkuk and its oilfields in addition to all what they call “disputed regions” and declaring that they will not give them back under any circumstances.

LINK

Tidbits from Frank26 and KTFA Members Thursday Morning

KTFA:

ewtohan : 
Frank .. just a question for you or any one … could Malikis son be giving the title .. he has … PM ….. thanks

Frank26: 
He no wants it ……… He no has M’s heart.

M instead put him as Commander of their Army.

Something tells me he is not to comfortable with that role too.

KTFA,   Frank
….

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kzh54 :  Frank, I’m just curious………You mentioned the 3 days of info (8-10th), and that today would be IQD and tomorrow Kurds. Seems like most articles today were about Kurds, not IQD. Not that it is important……but did “they” skip a day or reverse the news days?
Thanks,  Kathy

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Frank26:  LOL……… Wow ……. You’re good.

Yes ……. It appears as so.

KTFA,  Frank…… Key is ……… Info is NOW pouring out.

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walkongstick:  Central uses the electronic payment system for the settlement of the instruments between governmental institutions and banking   LINK

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Frank26: 
And if they sit Sunday ………… This combo will only be prosperous.

KTFA,  Frank

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walkongstick :  Iraqi provinces resorted to borrowing and lending and surpluses in 2013 to resolve the liquidity crisis     http://www.raialyoum.com/?p=119456

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Frank26:   They also now use ………. Credit.    KTFA,    Frank

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Sager :This looks like the law I posted Monday. FYI, Frank, this law is not called the “pose” law… “pose” is the person given credit to…fyi:

Regulation No. (3) for the year 2014 Payment Services electronic funds issued by Council of Ministers No. (186) for the year 2014

From what I heard: “Payment Services Electronic Funds has everything to do with banking and non-banking transactions including the ISX transactions, internet transactions, pension distributions, payment of government grants to war victims, foreign investors transactions, electronic signature cards etc. It’s big – POSE!       http://www.iraq-lg-law.org/en

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Frank26: 
I don’t care what they call it …. Nor who they give credit to …. I just salivate every time You put it up !!!   KTFA,     Frank


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Sager:     US, Iran and Saudi agree on Maliki’s third term

The United Sates, Iran and Saudi Arabia have agreed to allow Iraq’s Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki to stay in office for a third term, Al-Araby Al-Yawm newspaper reported.

The news agency quoted an Iraqi source familiar with the agreement details as saying “according to the agreement Al-Maliki will have to give up sovereign ministries and the security file, and abide by the 2010 agreement and establish a National Security Council for Iraq, headed by a Sunni figure.”

Sunni, Shia and sections of the Kurdish Jalal Talabani’s group have united to counter Kurdistan’s attempts to separate from Iraq, the source said.

It is expected that the agreement will be concluded before the Eid Al-Fitr holiday, at the end of July, during a meeting to choose the three government prominent posts.

According to the source, Barham Saleh will be chosen as president while Saleem Al-Jbouri will act as parliament speaker, and Al-Maliki as prime minister.

“Tarek Najm is expected to become vice president, and Hussein Al-Attiyah will act as foreign minister succeeding Hoshyar Zebari,” Al-Araby Al-Yawm said.

The source noted that Sunni figures from Tikrit and Mosul will be chosen for sovereign ministries.

The Iraqi parliament announced yesterday that it has decided to bring forward its second parliamentary session. “We have decided to bring forward the second parliament session to Sunday July 13,” acting parliament speaker, Mehdi Al-Hafez, said in a statement.

Military sources said the Iraqi forces continue to bomb Sunni areas in Tikrit, Baquba and Diyala where elements of the former Iraqi army and Baath Party affiliates are believed to be positioned.

According to the source, Sunni leaders describe Sunni militants as rebels who revolted against Al-Maliki’s sectarian policies.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/middle-east/12663-us-iran-and-saudi-agree-on-malikis-third-term

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Frank26:  Ta Da ………. This is a day early.

KTFA, Frank

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walkingstick » July 10th, 2014, Why Iraq Is More Stable Than You Think
By DOUGLAS A. OLLIVANT  July 09, 2014

The news from Iraq is bad. Four distinct yet intertwined problems—the rise of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), the dysfunctional politics of Iraq, the utter collapse of the Syrian state and the larger cold war between Saudi Arabia and Iran—have combined to disrupt the fragile stability gained by the Iraqis in the wake of the 2006-2008 civil war. Iraq is, once again, the paragon of a “wicked problem.”

There are, however, a number of rash conclusions being arrived at in the wake of the bad news. One does not have to read very far to find a series of assumptions being made about Iraq’s future—that Baghdad is about to fall, that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s days are numbered, that Kurdistan’s independence is imminent and that oil production is at risk. None of these are certain and some are extremely unlikely. Let’s cover them one by one.

1. Baghdad is about to fall.

This is very, very unlikely. Although comparisons between the 1975 fall of Saigon and the fall of Baghdad have (predictably) emerged, Baghdad is a city of six million people. Six million. It has had a Shia majority since at least 2007, after a wave of ethnic cleansing drove out much of the Sunni population. Iraq’s security forces, the majority of them Shia, will likely fight with much more dedication then they did in northern Iraq. Further, the Kadhamiya Shrine, one of the most revered sites in Shiite Islam, is on the northern fringe of Baghdad. We can expect fanatical dedication to protect this monument from advancing ISIL columns, particularly on the part of newly mobilized Shia militias.

And indeed, the battle lines already beginning to stabilize to the north of Baghdad and Samarra, a mixed city with another important Shiite shrine, the Askariya Mosque. This is happening even before any appreciable amount of airpower—whether U.S., Iranian, Syrian, Russian or Iraqi (via newly acquired aircraft)—has been brought to bear. If the northern front stabilizes and ISIL can hide in defensive positions and cities, then airpower may be of limited utility.

If ISIL begins to move en masse toward Baghdad, then the group could present quite attractive targets for airpower.

This is not to say that Baghdad will not be contested. We should be concerned about two possibilities in particular. The first is Baghdad International Airport (BGW), the capital’s primary link to the outside world and a major resupply node for Iraqi forces. BGW sits on the western edge of Baghdad province and is bordered by the majority-Sunni suburbs of Abu Ghraib and Ameriya to the north and east, respectively. The western side of BGW is open desert that leads to Anbar province. It is in a uniquely vulnerable piece of geography.

Second, we should not be surprised to find “fifth columns” of volunteers recruited from among the Sunni citizens of Baghdad. The neighborhoods of Ghazaliya, Doura, Abu Ghraib, Ameriya and Adhamiya could all see a return, or remobilization, of nationalist militias loosely aligned with ISIL (or just ISIL cells) in the coming weeks. I suspect that ISIL’s plan is to use these internal forces to create vulnerabilities that can exploited by their more traditional military units from the north. I don’t think anyone believes that the ISIL forces are capable of further significant moves southward, but this does not mean that we will not see skirmishes in the streets of Baghdad regardless. So, will we see increased violence, much of it sectarian? Yes, quite possibly. Baghdad falling? Utterly improbable.

2. Maliki will be leaving soon.

This is possible, but far from certain. First, barring his early demise, Maliki will only leave through the legitimate process of forming a new government, or so he insists. It is not clear exactly what those who are urging Maliki to leave mean. Under what constitutional mechanism would he “go,” and how would his successor be selected? Nor is it clear what is meant by a “national unity” government—simply ignore the results of the earlier election? One does wish that some of Maliki’s critics read the Iraqi constitution.

The process of forming a new government will be long and complicated—as the results of the first Iraqi Parliament sessions of July 1 and 8 indicated. The parliament met just long enough to clarify that there was no consensus among Iraq’s Sunni as to who should be the next speaker of parliament (traditionally a Sunni post, and constitutionally the first to be designated). The Kurdish and Shia parties, of course, responded that they won’t even talk about who will be president and prime minister until there is a speaker, so expect a long summer. (The parliament initially went into recess until August, but international pressure forced lawmakers to reschedule for July 13.)

When it comes to forming a government, Maliki remains in a dominant position, at least numerically, if not psychologically. His bloc—bolstered in no small part by his personal popularity among his own constituents—won about 28 percent (92 of 328) of the seats in a contest with (arguably) nine major parties. In this system, 28% is a major statement. Recall that the Sunni citizens of Iraq are only about 20 percent of the population (+/- 5 percent—there has been no census in decades), and their vote share reflects that, with the three major Sunni parties combined winning only 59 seats, or just short of 18 percent. These are the electoral realities. For all Maliki’s failings, it will be very important in the coming days not to give the impression to those who have put their faith in the ballot box that the Sunni minority can overthrow that verdict by force of arms. This would be a tragic precedent.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/07/why-iraq-is-more-stable-than-you-think-108708.html#ixzz374lkb5Q7

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chacha » July 10th, 2014 THE BOTTLE OF WINE

For all of us who are married, were married, wish you were married, or wish you weren’t married, this is something to smile about the next time you see a bottle of wine:

Sally was driving home from one of her business trips in Northern Arizona when she saw an elderly Navajo woman walking on the side of the road.

As the trip was a long and quiet one, she stopped the car and asked the Navajo woman if she would like a ride.

With a silent nod of thanks, the woman got into the car.

Resuming the journey, Sally tried in vain to make a bit of small talk with the Navajo woman. The old woman just sat silently, looking intently at everything she saw, studying every little detail, until she noticed a brown bag on the seat next to Sally.

‘What in bag?’ asked the old woman.

Sally looked down at the brown bag and said, ‘It’s a bottle of wine. I got it for my husband.’

The Navajo woman was silent for another moment or two.

Then speaking with the quiet wisdom of an elder, she said:      

‘Good trade…..’

Millionday Wednesday Roundtable Part 1

Millionday Roundtable 7/9/14  Part 1

    Welcome To Wednesday Roundtable With Millionday!

    [millionday] we have some new banking procedures for development

    [millionday] ok here we go

    [millionday] The Commission found emanating from the General Authority of the Association of private banks in Iraq, written for the draft new rules of procedure of the Association after mandated by the General Assembly is expected to hold a meeting Estnaúa for discussion and approval.

Announced that authoritative source in the Commission said it has completed a new version of the system in the hope of presented to the public for discussion and approval.
~~~

     [millionday] this is the rules that we expected to see

    [millionday] Source pointed out that the Commission deems modified the rules of procedure for the conviction of the importance of that is in line with the requirements of the new phase and in order to meet the need of banks to a strong bond contribute to the maintenance of the rights of the banking sector and then work on the unification of efforts by working fruitful and constructive in what between banks and to meet the requirements of development.

    [millionday] we saw yesterday that they were not working together and this is the new working rules to correct that  –  we love unification

    [millionday] explained that the rules of procedure new look will enhance the objectives of the Association and to expand the powers of those who made it and what makes it able to be a haven for banks and coordinated between monetary and fiscal authorities and to enhance the goal of cooperation in addressing the challenges faced by the capital market,

and the Association seeking to apply the provisions of the Rules and procedures the central bank aims to maintain the stability of the money market to their importance in achieving economic stability

    millionday] oh honey we love all of that

    millionday] so they are working to maintain the stability of the money market in achieving economic stability — they are addressing the challenges of the capital market — that is the market for the sale of currency — money market  –  this is great to see —

    [millionday] The move comes after being hit by private banks in Iraq to accusations are untrue by her statements to the media of views had nothing to do and it is the owners of Jurisdiction, including damaged the reputation of the Iraqi banks to enable the Association of the appropriate response in the media or, if necessary, legally.

Concluded to to say that the Association has achieved successes at both the exterior and interior and has a special assessment by the Department of organizations in the Council of Ministers and that the new system comes to complement its role in strengthening the national economy through its service to the banking sector

    [millionday] so as we see — the new rules are to strengthen the national economy — this is for the banking sector –

    [slh5282] strong economy, strong investments, strong banks

    [millionday] along with the money market involvement — we are not sad about any of this news –

    [millionday] smile  –  the best part of what we are seeing is that the complaint was in the last day or two of the rules in place  –  much faster than we have seen in the past

    [lstar877] Millionday another holiday tomorrow cuz its too hot? Did u read that?

    [millionday] no i have not seen that — too hot — they have said that for years

    [millionday] here is another statement of the kurds about gov

    [millionday] confirmed that the Kurdistan Alliance MP Vian intruder, that the Kurds are not dealing with a government headed by the current Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki for the mishandling of the state, as pointed out that the Kurdistan Regional Government will apply Article 140 does not retreat on the subject of self-determination and the declaration of the state of Kurdistan.

    [millionday] note — they are sticking to applying article 140 –

    star877] More good news

    [millionday] and they are supported

    [millionday] She said the intruder in the program late, which broadcasts its sister channel Tigris space to provide Ghazwan Jassim, seen by the Agency (news):

‘We are involved in the application of Article (140) and the referendum on the areas with the majority of Kurdish mayor of Kirkuk and Sinjar, Khanaqin, and do not retreat from the decision to report determination and the declaration of the state of Kurdistan ‘, noting that’ Kirkuk province Kurdish and will join the state of Kurdistan. ‘ and pointed to: that ‘there is international support on the declaration of – See more at: http://www.ikhnews.com/i1Qz.dpuf

    slh5282] so does that mean the HCL is in place as well?

    [millionday] so the international support is listed and the laws are massive supporting them

    [millionday] love it — thank you for sending it  –  brb with more

    [slh5282] was HCL and 140 tied together in some fashion?

    [millionday] this is very interesting about what we talked about last night

    jtank] a lot of politics last night

    [millionday] the hcl is the oil and hydrocarbon law — the article 140 establishes the areas that belong to iraq and the kurdistan region so the distribution will be established by article 140

    millionday] there was a lot of politics last night and it seems that they are wrapping things up

    [millionday] Iraqi deputies agreed to meet on Sunday after delays to the formation of a new government outraged people tired of political polarization and fearful of a brutal Sunni militant offensive.

It was unclear what prompted the about-turn after lawmakers initially said they would postpone a crucial parliamentary session for a month, but the delay was met with widespread criticism both from their constituents and internationally

    [millionday] note — the delay was not taken well and they changed it so that must have been a huge amount of pressure

    [millionday] The month-old crisis has seen a jihadist-led alliance overrun large swathes of northern and north-central Iraq, displacing hundreds of thousands and piling pressure on Nuri al-Maliki as he seeks a third term as prime minister.

With a farcical opening session having ended in disarray last week, and MPs having failed to carry out their constitutional duty to elect a speaker, lawmakers announced they would next meet on August 12, which would have been more than three months after their election.

 They later backed down, with the interim speaker scheduling their next meeting for July 13, but the initial decision nevertheless angered ordinary Iraqis.

    [millionday] that is huge news for the international community to have a part in not allowing the delay — lots of contracts involved and also the need for all the economic and strategic agreements to move forward

    [millionday] this helps to explain this and why it is so important right now

    [millionday] even though i follow the economics — this is very important and has a lot to do with the upcoming economics — jobs — and contracts — and losses occurring in the country due to attacks

    [millionday] “The postponement of the parliamentary session was a shock to Iraqis living amid a sea of blood and a lack of services and jobs,” said Essam al-Bayati, a professor at the University of Kirkuk.

A Baghdad grocer who gave his name as Abu Mussa said: “We have a crisis, and this postponement for calculations and deals between politicians is the biggest betrayal of the Iraqi people who went out to vote for them.”

Though the constitution calls for the speaker, president and premier to be chosen in a sequence over a maximum of 45 days, in practice political leaders normally agree the posts in a package

    [millionday] see that explains how it is important and of course it is all connected even though we follow the money — the money is wrapped up in loss right now with all that is going on — obviously

    [millionday] it has to be stopped  –  maliki has agreed not to run and here it is

    [millionday] In a de facto agreement that has emerged following previous elections, the speaker is a Sunni Arab, the premier a Shiite Arab and the president a Kurd.

Despite saying in 2011 that he would not seek a third term, Maliki vowed last week he would not bow to mounting international and domestic pressure to step aside and allow a broader consensus.

Iraqi forces have largely regrouped after the debacle that saw soldiers abandon their positions as jihadist-led militants conquered second city Mosul and advanced to within 80 kilometres (50 miles) of Baghd

    [millionday] note — people can be removed

    [millionday] But while Iraq has received support, including equipment, intelligence and advisers from the United States, Russia, Iran and even Shiite militias it once shunned, efforts to battle the militant offensive were dealt a blow when a senior general was killed on Monday.

Staff Major General Najm Abdullah al-Sudani, commander of the army’s 6th division, was killed west of Baghdad, near where security forces have been locked in a more than six-month standoff with militants who hold Fallujah

    [millionday] this is very important and shows how they need to move forward

    [millionday] For more than a week, government forces have also tried to retake the Sunni stronghold of Tikrit from a loose alliance of Islamic State fighters, other jihadists and loyalists of executed dictator Saddam Hussein, but have so far failed to do so.

Air strikes carried out in Salaheddin and Nineveh provinces on Sunday and Monday killed 28 people, many of them said to have been civilians.

The security forces have been hamstrung by a lack of combat experience and a dearth of intelligence in Sunni areas, the result of widespread distrust of the Shiite-led authorities among minority Sunni Arabs, analysts say.

    [millionday] goodness

    [millionday] North of Baghdad, a suicide bombing and a roadside bomb targeting security forces killed eight people on Tuesday, six of them police, officials said. And with government forces still looking for a major victory, the jihadists of the Islamic State appeared to be brimming with confidence.

A few days after declaring the establishment of a “caliphate”, the group’s leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi — second only to Al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri on the US most wanted list — delivered a Friday sermon in Mosul’s largest mosque.

    [millionday] delivered a sermon? wow things are certainly calling in the troops

    [millionday] The group has attracted large numbers of foreign fighters, analysts say, drawn by Baghdadi’s own appeal as well as IS’s aims of establishing an ideal Islamic state.

 Most of the Western foreign fighters who join the group are believed to come from Europe, with US Attorney General Eric Holder estimating Tuesday that fewer than 100 Americans were fighting for the jihadists.

    [millionday] good grief is that not terrible or what  — i would expect with the statement from the UN — things should change quickly if memory serves me right  –  smile

    [jimplants] afternoon I just think i read maliki agreed to step down

    [millionday] i hope you know as a a pastors daughter that is crawling all over me

    [millionday] smile  –  i would say so — he has to go or he will not last long  imo

    [millionday] brb with more

    [fishheads] millionday So the wolves are ready for Dinner?

    [slh5282] Has he not said twice that he would not run again and then backed out at the last minute?

    [jimplants] that isis dude will not survive long in the open too much technology in the area

    [jtank] amen

    [millionday] here we go with that

    [millionday] Sources confirmed a Shiite, said on Tuesday that the parties in the coalition of state law already made three candidates instead of the head of the government expired, Nuri al-Maliki, in negotiating sessions “separate”, while likely coalition al-Hakim and the existence of “external pressure” behind the discrepancies in determining the date of the meeting next to the parliament,

predicted the Kurdistan Alliance repeat “scenario delay” if deficit of the National Alliance for resolving the candidate for prime minister because of the political blocs waiting prior to any meeting, and saw Union national forces could be reached to settle the crisis the government during the next four days, and witnessing the parliamentary session next put the name of Salim al for the presidency of the Council.

    [Domino] millionday Morning – I did read all of that but didn’t see where he said he would step down – did I miss it?

    [millionday] it is this up there above what you just typed   smile

    [Domino] Thank you

Comments may be made at the end of  Part 2 Thank you

Millionday Monday Night News Part 2

  Millionday News 7/7/14  Part 2

        Welcome To Monday Night News With Millionday!

        millionday] this is the LATEST STATEMENT FROM THE US ABOUT iRAQ`S ROLE WITH THE THREATS

        [millionday] The United States reiterated Monday emphasized the need for Iraq to be united to face the threats of the organization of the Islamic state.

Said White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the Islamic state regulation constitutes “existential threat” to Iraq, adding, “To counter this threat will no doubt be a unified country.

” Ernst added, “I do not think that one can reduce the (importance of) the problems that hinder the decisions of this kind and to reach such agreements.”

        [millionday] NOTE — REALIZE THAT THE STATEMENT READS –

” TO COUNTER THIS THREAT WILL BE NO DOUBT A UNIFIED COUNTRY” — NOW THAT SOUNDS LIKE A DARE/ULTAMATUM/CAUSE AND RESULT + MANY OTHER STRONG MEANINGS FOR Iraq
~~~

          [millionday] The spokesman said, “but let us be frank, that reaching these agreements and to take the difficult decisions necessary for the survival of Iraq.”

 U.S. officials continue to call the Kurds, Sunni Arabs and Shiites to form a government of national unity without being strides in this direction. Ernst spokesman warned that “further military intervention” by the United States “can not only be done in parallel with concrete commitments by the Iraqi leaders” and promised to “adopt a more open government program” on all sides.

        [millionday] NOTE — THEY NEED TO TAKE CHARGE OF THEIR UNIFIED GOVERNMENT AND USE THE HELP THEY ARE BEING GIVEN

        millionday] OOOPS AND HERE COMES THE RESULTS OF THE AGREEMENT THAT WAS MADE AND NOT UPHELD

        [millionday] However, the spokesman did not go so far as to say that he will not be sending military aid to Iraq as long as it is not the formation of a new government, which may take several weeks.

        millionday] SO THEY DID NOT GO AS FAR BUT THE POINT WAS MADE THAT IT CAN BE DONE SO GET OFF YOUR ROCKER AND GET TO WORK ON THE AGREEMENT

        [millionday] THAT AGREEMENT WAS MADE VERY CLEAR — SO AS WE CAN SEE IT WAS NOT UPHELD SO AT ANYTIME IT CAN BE ENFORCED IN MOST OPINIONS

        [millionday] BRB WITH MORE

        millionday] HERE ARE THE OBSTACLES ON THE KURDISTAN INDEPENDENCE

        [millionday] Iraq’s Kurds would face enormous challenges if they were to secede, but the threat of an independence vote amid chaos nationwide could squeeze concessions from Iraqi federal government, experts say.

Their autonomous three-province northern Kurdistan region expanded its control over a swathe of territory that Baghdad also claims when Kurdish Peshmerge fighters moved in last month to areas from which Iraqi soldiers withdrew during a sweeping Sunni militant onslaught.

That emboldened Kurdish president Massoud Barzani to call for a referendum on independence, which he said would be a “powerful weapon” in Kurdish hands after years of bitter haggling with Baghdad over oil, territory and funds.

        millionday] But experts say secession soon would be fraught with danger, and that the threat of a vote is more likely a bargaining tool on a longer road to independence.

One of the biggest obstacles to Kurdish secession is money, with oil revenues from areas they control insufficient to pay for the region’s numerous civil servants, and future revenues in doubt because of objections from Baghdad, which considers independent Kurdish energy exports to be illegal.

 The dispute with the federal government has led Baghdad to withhold the 17 percent share of the national budget allocated to the Kurdish regional government (KRG),www.Ekurd.net and the landlocked region’s ability to augment its income relies on exporting oil through the Turkish port of Ceyhan.

        [millionday] NOTE — THE AGREEMENT MADE BY THE KURDS DOES NOT ALLOW FOR THEM TO HAVE THE FUNDS NEEDED TO ACTUALLY RUN THE COUNTRY IF THEY WERE TO BE AN INDEPENDENT

        [millionday] NOW CHECK OUT THIS FACT

        [millionday] While the Kurds struggle for money, they are also financing an expensive campaign to keep a raging Sunni insurgency led by Islamic State (IS) jihadists from their borders and out of disputed areas vacated by the retreating Iraqi army.

 But with the IS militant onslaught held in check by state forces further south, experts say it is only a matter of time before they turn their focus on the north, which may force the KRG to call for Baghdad’s help.

Meanwhile, Kurdish politicians are fighting for key posts in Iraq’s new government after April polls, indicating they are hedging their bets on independence.

        [millionday] AND AS WE HAVE ALL SAID >>>>>>

        [millionday] “This is just a way to put pressure on the Baghdad government, and the proof of that is that they’re still battling for the post of president and other posts on the political map,” Ihsan al-Shammari, a politics professor at Baghdad University, said of the independence referendum.

Such a ploy could backfire on Barzani, however, given the Kurds’ long-time aspirations for a separate state. “He can wave that sword around his head when he’s looking toward Baghdad, but his population (is) deeply committed to independence and has in the past been frustrated he hasn’t driven them there,” said Toby Dodge, director of the Middle East Centre at the London School of Economics.

 “I don’t think he can flirt with his population without sowing deep alienation if he doesn’t deliver it.”

        [millionday] NOTE — THE CITIZENS ARE STARTING TO LIKE THE IDEA WHICH WAS MEANT FOR PRESSURE — OOOPS

        [millionday] The United States, which the Kurds are keen to cultivate as an ally, has warned against a rush for independence, while Shiite Iran, a powerful neighbour to any future Kurdish state, is unlikely to condone a unilateral breakaway from Shiite-led Iraq.

 With Turkish support uncertain, strained finances, insurgents at the door, and the possibility of revolt by Arabs in disputed lands that Kurdistan intends to fold into its realm, experts do not expect the birth of a new nation soon. “You’d end up with a dead state,” Shammari said

        millionday] AS WE HAVE SAID — THEY DO NOT HAVE THE RESOURCES TO BE INDEPENDENT FOR THIER CITIZENS AND IT IS VERY COSTLY TO IMPORT THE NECESSITIES NOT ONLY THAT BUT ANY ADVANCEMENTS WOULD TAKE SECOND PLACE IN NEEDS AND AS SAID HERE — PRODUCE A DEAD STATE — THEY ARE NOT READY

        millionday] SO WHAT WE ARE SEEING IS THE DIRE NEED AND WANT TO HOLD A HUGE ROLL IN GOVERNING THE NATION AND LACK OF COMMUNUCATION SKILLS TO GET WHAT THEY WANT — IMO AND PRETTY OBVIOUS IF YOU ASK ME

        [jarhead] Then revalue……..duh

        [millionday] SO WE HAVE NEW RULES AND REGULATIONS TO HELP WITH BANKING REFORMS

        [millionday] AND ARGUING ABOUT WHO WHAT AND WHERE FOR THE LEADERS

        [millionday] SMILE — I AGREE JARHEAD    BRB WITH MORE ‘

        [millionday] HERE WE GO  –    Hashemi reflected some of the events in different parts of the country on the commercial realities of the countries in the region with Iraq, which represents the commercial market value to promote the types of goods from those countries,

especially with regard to food and the rest of the imports other where it began some those states to find outlets for alternative purpose of the introduction of its cargo into the country which is witnessing Championships in the face of terrorism, which caused cut by major international and vital was an outlet soon have to bring their goods to Iraq.

        millionday] HERE IS THE RESULT OF TRYING TO GET THESE STEPS DONE

        [millionday] saw last Saturday debate between Prime Customs Iranian and Turkish Ambassador in Tehran for cooperation mechanism customs guarantee the continuation of the flow of goods to Iraq from the Turkish border port, yielded welcome Iran invited Turkey to allow the trucks to pass into Iraq via Mehran.

 He described the academic economic Dr Majid Baidhani that meeting that enhances the site of Iraq as a trading partner for countries in the region contributes to the diversification of the origins of the goods entering its markets and to ensure the arrival of the quantities doubling of food to meet the needs of the local market them.

        [millionday] NOTE — SO LOGISTICS ARE BEING RESOLVED AND THROUGH THE REGION

        millionday] added Baidhani (morning) that carry Turkey to change the entry ports cargo to the country may carry additional burdens related to the agreement of the customs with Iran, along with an additional charge Kklfah change point the way for the entry of goods,

stressing that Iraq represents the commercial market emerging in the region despite the events taking place. stressed that the Turkish side, this step may be the face of terrorism, blow through Challenge gangs Daash to introduce their goods and Kmutir them on the sustainability of the business relationship with Iraq, which represents the best regional markets on the commercial level

        [millionday] NOTE — THIS HAS TO BE BRINGING SOME RESOLVE IN THE NEEDS OF THE REGION — IT ONLY MAKES SENSE WITH ALL THEY HAVE DE;ING WITH RECENTLY AND THEIR NEEDS ARE GREAT AS WELLL

        [millionday] NOTE — THESE FEES ARE REVENUES

        [millionday] said Baidhani that all the fears of exposure of goods in the markets of the scarcity will be resolved because it will come from the ports, customs again, indicating that some of the material may increase their because of the change points of Transportation what carries an additional charge.

Official statistics show that Turkey was the largest exporter to Iraq, as the volume of trade exchange between the two countries about $ 15 billion last year.

 According to Iranian media that the customs of Iran welcomed the request of the Turkish side with the help of immediate transit of goods Turkish to Iraq from the Iranian port of Mehran border with Iraq to support the Turkish transit of goods to Iraq via Mehran border crossing (western Iran) border.

        [millionday] IT IS VERY NOTICABLE THAT THE PORT FEES AND THE CUSTOMS AND TARIFF TAXES ARE GOING INTO PLAY WITH ALL OF THE PLANS WE ARE READING ABOUT —HUGE HUGE ‘

        [minkfarm] So how does this article relate to what you brought last night where the private sector was asked not to stockpile food and supplies?

        [millionday] THIS SHOWS SO MUCH GOING ON AT ONCE WITH REFORMS AND ADVANCEMENTS FOR THEIR MARKET AND THEIR GAINS IN PRODUCTIVITY AND NEEDS FOR THE REGION — THIS IS NEEDED IN THE GLOBE

        [millionday] THAT REPORT WAS REFERRING TO THE PRICING THAT IS SET RIGHT NOW — THE TAXES AND THE CHANGES IN PRICING INDEX HAS TO BE DONE WITH ALL OF THE ECONOMIC REFORM AS THEY JOIN THE GLOBE AS A MARKET ECONOMY AND ALSO AS THEY ADD SOME FEES RHEY DID BO

        millionday] NOT CALCULATE

        [millionday] REDENOMINATION AS IT COMES AND WHEN IT COMES WILL ALSO BE SHOWN IN THEIR PRICING INDEX

        [millionday] YW ALL THE TIME HUN

        [millionday] SO THE QUESTION IS WHAT IS COMING WHITH THE MEETINGS FOR PARLIAMENT TOMORROW

        millionday] IS IT GOING TO TAKE PART OR IS OT GOING TO REMAIN

        [jeffusa] millionday are they meeting?

        [millionday] REMAIN AS THEY ARE

        coolspot] How effective can all these reforms be without a fully seated and effective GOI?

        [millionday] IT DEPENDS ON WHAT REFORMS AND NOW THEY ADDRESS THE UPHELD ISSUES THAT ARE NOT RESOLVED –

DO THEY APPLY PROXY IN SOME INSTANCES OR DO THEY CONTINUE WORKING ON RESOLVE –

IS IT ONLY ECONOMIC REFORM AND THE COMMERCE DEPARTMENT BRINGS MUCH NEEDED PRODUCTS AND SERVICES –

DO THE CONTRACTS GET ACTIVATED ?

THERE ARE SO MANY QUESTIONS OF WHAT IS DONE AND WHAT IS NOT –

IT MAKES IT HARD TO JUST GUESS WITH THINGS THE WAY THEY ARE NOW

        millionday] MAKE SENSE ?  we cant just guess without much more info

        [coolspot] millionday Correct

        [millionday] ok so i see no more info that can keep me alive and well in my chair

        swan2013] http://dinarupdates.com/ ··· bserver/ and http://www.dinarupdates. ··· om/blog/

    http://www.dinarupdates.com/showthread.php?14090-Millionday-News-7-7-14

France lashes out against US dollar, calls for 'rebalancing' of world currencies

France lashes out against US dollar, calls for 'rebalancing' of world currencies

RTJul 7, 2014

BNP was punished for helping counties like Iran, Sudan, and Cuba process $30 billion in transactions which are illegal under US law, since they violate US sanctions. Starting on January 1, 2015, the bank will not be able to carry out dollar-based …

France hits out at dollar dominance in international transactionsFinancial Times
You are here: HomeBig trading houses to benefit from BNP US dollar-clearing banTrade Finance (subscription)

Late Sunday Night Dinar Chatter

TNT;

BernardK:  Demonstrations by citizen planned Monday in front of parliament to insist that the parliament do their job! Hopefully millions will join.

Linda57: 
I’m just passing this along… Take it or leave it…I prefer to at least HEAR these things cause MAYBE, just MAYBE they are true!!!

zebra01 wrote: I don’t post much, but I wanted to share something with everyone. A friend that I shared the dinar with called me last night and told me a friend he shared with has a friend that is in a executive position at Wells Fargo in Florida. She called him to tell him they got their 1-800 numbers yesterday!”

CaptWillie :  Actually that goes along with what I heard from my daughter and son-in-law. They have a family friend who is fairly high up at WF. He cashed out both Dong and Dinar last week. That’s all they know, he quit talking to them about it.
….
I’ve also got another son-in-law whose CPA is invested and also handles someone who was heavily invested. The CPA will no longer discuss the Dinar or Dong with him. We are assuming it’s due to an NDA. We are very encouraged by all of the silent treatment my kids are getting. Fingers are crossed that we’re next in line…..

************

june1 0000;
  AB – JUST WONDERING!! If the time table is still there the next few days?? Is that still on the table – Thanks?!

Already Blessed : 
YES JUNE – THE TIME TABLE IS ABSOLUTELY ANY MINUTE NOW

Already Blessed:  IF WE DON’T SEE OUR RV TONIGHT….TOMORROW WILL WORK FOR ME BUT I AM NOT GIVING UP ON TONIGHT UNTIL TOMORROW MORNING! GLASS OVERFLOWING!

***************************

About the Poofness newsletter… Date: Sunday, 6-Jul-2014 19:42:07

Hi, Folks – I have not heard from Susan so far today, so I think the newsletter is probably in progress and will arrive this evening. :) If that changes I’ll let you know.

Last week over 5,000 folks read the Poofness newsletter here. Wouldn’t it be cool if they each decided to contribute $5…? That would take care of RMN’s expenses for 8 months. :)

Blessings. –hobie

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GET:

Topic: Character is choice of integrity. It is not what you say, rather, what you do & how you make people feel. – Jared Nieman

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Dinar Chronicles:

Hub
:…i have three close very close people [that] know more than we do…real…time business currency business info and they were in on the kuwait rv and they know the talk and talk the walk…the real information is the dinar has been revalued. 

[contact says it RV?]

Hub: 
two major contacts,  yes.   …some of my people are all oil people in iraq, iran, kuwait, saudi, and the other mid east oil people…these people are a special breed…my contact which is a currency broker, made a killing on the revaluation of the kuwait dinar.

The dinar has had a value for 200 years and will retain the value…in 1955 it was $2.55 and in 1990 it was $3.22. …the main outlook is the dinar will revalue…it has too to maintain the history…and so we are waiting for it to happen.   i dont know what it will revalue at…

********

Chattels:The Kurds had announced in advance their intention to leave after being sworn in if there was no declaration of the PM nominee in advance…there is a procedural “game” being played out between the SLC and the National Alliance and the anti – Maliki forces are watching it closely.  BUT, who can know what is “in play”,  Kurdish independence, oil sales, or does any of this have any effect upon our liquidity event?  there is no “RV manual”, this is all ” unploughed ” ground.

********

wmawhite: It appears to only support Maliki has is within the SoL…the rest of the NA don’t want him, the Sunnis don’t want him, the Kurds don’t want him…and he bought a $3 million home for his family within the last 3 weeks in Qatar…maybe he knows.

******************************

Stage3Alpha:


Elizabeth:   July 6, 2014 at 9:06pm  New PM to be announced Tuesday night with RV announcement to follow which is our Tuesday morning right? Mtn goat has always said the PM has to be announced first and I think she is dead on… Not once has she ever come close to calling it before this happens! Never wanted to believe her…but time will tell

******************************

I4U:

[sananddan24] MichaelWeston hello are we there yet?

[MichaelWeston] sananddan24 I WISH

[sananddan24] MichaelWeston thud why no one knows anything

[MichaelWeston] sananddan24 i wouldn’t say that. I think it’s more like they are running the play book and don’t want to other team to know the sequence of the plays

[sananddan24] MichaelWeston that is great

[MichaelWeston] so of we are smart, it’s like watching your favorite tv show on tivo…..you get to skip through the commercials and just watch the good stuff

[terrib] MichaelWeston i skip to the end roflmao

[MichaelWeston] terrib with this ride, probably a good idea

[MichaelWeston] i think we have had enough drama over the past few years

[sananddan24] thud I want a RV

[sananddan24] MichaelWeston any truth to the rumor some converting their skr’s for cash

[MichaelWeston] sananddan24 i have heard multiple rumors, but it’s very difficult if not impossible to validate that stuff

[MichaelWeston] even with very good bank contacts, when you get into account level specifics, then it gets dicey

[MichaelWeston] it’s one thing to get a banker to tell you about policy, pending changes, etc. It’s a much different thing to get them to disclose information about a specific account and release information that is protected

*********

[WCW] SpecialAgentGibbs the time to look for this blessing is when m is out and who knows when that would be should have already happend

 [SpecialAgentGibbs] WCW For me, the reports that M is staying on his own accord is caca… IMHO, no high level politician gets into or stays in office unless the PTB’s say so

[WCW] i have said this before and will say it again the world will not give a dictator a tradeable currency this is the reason it was took away from them the first time

[SpecialAgentGibbs] ANY leader is disposable if they do not do as told (RIP JFK)

[dinardiamonds] IMO maliki will NOT be gone until the PTB are ready……. maliki is just the scapegoat till they are ready to rv

[WCW] dinardiamonds yes and could happen at any giving time

Hub shares intel from his contact.

Hub …i have three close very close people [that] know more than we do…real…time business currency business info and they were in on the kuwait rv and they know the talk and talk the walk…the real information is the dinar has been revalued. [contact says it RV?] two major contacts, yes. …some of my people are all oil people in iraq, iran, kuwait, saudi, and the other mid east oil people…these people are a special breed…my contact which is a currency broker, made a killing on the revaluation of the kuwait dinar.

 

Thoughts from Nova at KTFA: ” Following the Money”

NOVA » July 6th, 2014, 2:49 pm 

Good Afternoon All,

Below you will find a article from the NY Times dated September 1, 2012.

Why should we care about something from 9/01/2012?

Well Let’s Look At Why.

IMO in any investment we should follow the Money, Because everything follows it. Excluding Politics/Governments !

Because A Government With No Money Is No Government At All !!!!

IMO we as investors tend to loss focus on why/what we are investing in and what will Bring Value To Our Investment.
….

So What Am I Trying To Say?

If you look at the the parts below in purple you will see something Quite Telling !!!!!

Look At The Players In This Deal. Could It Be Some Of The Same Players That Will Say Ok To What We All Want?

Yes You Will!!

Look At Who Controls The OIL Coming Out Of Northern Iraq, Not The Kurds They Have Only A 30% Voting Right. The Other 70% Is With The Same Players That Will Say OK To What We All Want!

I could fill the page with article after article about this. That These Same Players Control The Pipeline Into Turkey, The Storage Tanks In Turkey And Yes The Central Banking System That Controls The Settlement And Movement Of Any Money From This Oil !!!!!!!!

These Players Could Have Pull The Tiger On Oil Shipments At Anytime This Year (2014) Why June 2014 ???

Because There The Ones That Say OK Its Time and Yes It Time.

Time For What?

Time For The Dinar To Have International Status ! Why, Because These Same Players Say It’s Time To Get Paid. And When They Get Paid You And I Get Paid!!

So Back To The Chicken Or The Egg?

Money Always Comes First and Everything Else Follows!!

Nova

***********

Tony Hayward Gets His Life Back

Genel Energy
Tony Hayward, left, with Genel Energy’s chairman, Rodney Chase, at a site in the Taq Taq oil field of northern Iraq.

By STANLEY REED    Published: September 1, 2012    LONDON

Sean Gardner/Reuters
Mr. Hayward in 2010 on a beach in Port Fourchon, La., during the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

Andrew Parsons/Parsons Media/Finsbury, via Bloomberg News
Mr. Haywood, center, with Mehmet Sepil, left, and Nathaniel Rothschild.
Enlarge This Image

Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters
These are happier days for Mr. Hayward, who was vilified for his handling of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill in 2010.
IF there’s a public villain of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill — one person who, rightly or not, will be remembered for the deadly blowout, the black slick and all that followed — it’s probably Tony Hayward.

On television screens and in the pages of magazines, bewildered Americans saw oil plumes rising, livelihoods crumbling and seabirds dying in the viscous crude. And for many of them, Mr. Hayward, the man who was running BP, came to personify the catastrophe.

And yet here he is now, looking so cool and relaxed, so unlike the Tony Hayward we know. He’s sitting, open-collar casual, in a comfortable corner office here in Mayfair, not far from his old headquarters at BP.

Could this possibly be that Tony Hayward — the pinched, sweaty chieftain of British Big Oil? The Englishman whom Americans derided as an insensitive buffoon — and whom President Obama said he would have fired? The man who sailed his yacht off the Isle of Wight as the tar balls washed up on the Gulf Coast? Who, in the middle of it all, delivered that crisis-P.R. sound bite from hell: “I’d like my life back.”

Yes, this is that Tony Hayward, looking his elfin, curly haired self and sounding more upbeat than he has in a long time.

Mr. Hayward, it turns out, has his life back.

Two years after being shown the door at BP, in one of the most ignominious corporate exits in recent memory, Mr. Hayward is back in the oil game. Not at an oil major like BP nor, for that matter, in the gulf, where oil rigs and refineries were being tested anew last week, this time by Hurricane Isaac. No, Tony Hayward is hoping to strike it rich in, of all places, the oil fields of northern Iraq.

He has some deep pockets behind him. They include a scion of the Rothschild banking dynasty, a former dealmaker at Goldman Sachs and two Turkish tycoons with a foothold in the wild and wildly contentious world of Iraqi oil. It’s a dangerous game, financially and otherwise. But despite sectarian bombings and political deadlock, Iraq’s crude oil production is soaring. In July, the nation produced more than three million barrels of oil a day, the most in a decade, eclipsing Iran and shaking up the old order in OPEC.

Yet oil has also brought its share of problems in Iraq, breeding corruption and aggravating tensions with the Kurdish minority in the north. And Kurdistan is precisely where Mr. Hayward and his partners are making their play.

The Kurdish region has vast, virtually untapped reserves, and its oil minister is carrying out plans to export oil and gas directly to Turkey, just to the north. But Baghdad’s central government maintains that it alone has the right to negotiate contracts and exports. The rivalry between Baghdad and Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, has nerves on edge throughout the region.

“It is a question of sovereignty, not money,” says David L. Goldwyn, who served as special envoy for international energy affairs for Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Whatever the risks, oil majors like Chevron and Exxon Mobil are rushing into Kurdistan, too. But Mr. Hayward isn’t running an oil giant like BP anymore. He’s running an oil pipsqueak. From his offices here on Grafton Street, he leads a company called Genel Energy. It is hardly a household name. On the London stock market, the company is currently worth about $3 billion. BP, known the world over is worth about 44 times that.

Yet for Mr. Hayward, Genel is more than a business opportunity. It is also a shot at redemption — a venture that, if it succeeds, could help bind up the psychic wounds of the gulf spill. Whatever his reputation in the United States, Mr. Hayward is regarded by many in the British business community as a solid C.E.O. who was dealt a bad hand. Many here insist that he was unfairly criticized, by Mr. Obama on down, for an environmental disaster that no one could have foreseen or prevented.

Whatever the case, Mr. Hayward declines to discuss the spill publicly. Friends and business associates say privately that he remains embittered by how he was vilified and then pushed out at BP.

He hardly comes across as angry. To the contrary, he looks unusually chipper on this July afternoon in Mayfair.

“I have been lucky,” Mr. Hayward says. “Having the opportunity to do something like this is fantastic.”

He continues: “It is fair to say I wanted to recover some of my self-esteem.”

ON the night of April 20, 2010 — the early morning hours of April 21 in London — the Macondo well erupted below the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico, ripping through the rig, killing 11 people and creating one of the worst environmental catastrophes in United States history. Tony Hayward was having breakfast in a London hotel when he got the news.

By now the events that followed are well known: the desperate efforts to cap the gushing well; the harrowing collapse in BP’s share price; the government inquiries; the multibillion-dollar cleanup. On July 27, BP said that Mr. Hayward was out. He was replaced by Robert Dudley, the first American chief executive in BP’s history.

Mr. Hayward was poleaxed. He’d spent his entire career at BP, slowly working his way up only to lose it all after three short years as chief executive.

He took several months off to think. He climbed Mount Kilimanjaro, skied in the French Alps and, at 53, concluded that he was too young to retire. He initially thought about going into private equity, one of the iconic Wall Street businesses of the boom years, but then ruled that out. It takes many billions to make a mark in the oil and gas industry, and few corporate buyout specialists, rich as they are, have the wherewithal or the patience.

So Mr. Hayward turned to Nathaniel Rothschild, of the great European banking family, who had established a company, now called Bumi, to acquire stakes in Indonesian coal mines and place them under a listing on the London stock market.

Bankrolled in part by Mr. Rothschild, Mr. Hayward now hopes to make a new fortune in small oil. He and his business partner, Julian Metherell, the former head of energy investment banking at Goldman Sachs, have joined forces with a pioneer in Kurdish oil investment, Mehmet Sepil, and Mr. Sepil’s business partner, Mehmet Karamehmet, a media and telecom mogul and the chairman of Turkey’s Cukurova Group conglomerate.

Mr. Hayward, Mr. Metherell and Mr. Rothschild tried to replicate Bumi in the oil business. They set up what is known as a cash shell, a company with no business, just a promise that it will find one. It was called Vallares. Mr. Hayward then spent weeks in New York, London, Abu Dhabi and beyond, drumming up investors. Vallares eventually went public on the London Stock Exchange, raising $2.1 billion. That money, Vallares said, would be used to buy unspecified oil and gas assets in emerging markets, although Mr. Hayward hinted that he was interested in Kurdistan.

It might be surprising to Americans who watched the gulf spill unfold on TV, but Mr. Hayward’s new investors tend to shrug off the disaster and his inglorious end at BP. After all, they have entrusted him with a lot of money. His backers include Paulson & Company, the New York hedge fund firm run by John A. Paulson, as well as government investment funds in Kuwait and Abu Dhabi.

“I think he probably got a bad press,” Richard Buxton, a portfolio manager at the big British asset management firm Schroders, says of Mr. Hayward.

“In a way he has something to prove,” Mr. Buxton continues. “From an investor’s point of view, that is not a bad thing.”

It also helps that Mr. Hayward and Mr. Metherell each invested £4 million ($6.3 million) in their venture. Mr. Rothschild invested £90 million ($143 million).

AFTER its initial stock offering, Vallares had a lot of money but it didn’t have that much time. If Mr. Hayward didn’t find suitable investments within two years, he would have to return the money to shareholders. So he asked bankers at Credit Suisse, the big Swiss bank, to draw up a list of investment ideas. The most attractive was Mr. Sepil’s Turkish company, Genel Energy International, which was then private.

Mr. Sepil was not originally in the oil business. He was mostly involved in construction engineering. But in 2002, shortly before the United States invaded Iraq, he was working as a contractor in Kurdistan. It was there that he was approached by Jalal Talabani, a leading Kurdish politician and now Iraq’s president, about developing an oil field called Taq Taq. Mr. Sepil found a rig and put it to work.

“I didn’t know anything about oil but the tank of my car,” Mr. Sepil recalls.

Taq Taq turned out to be a field with billion-barrel potential. Eventually Mr. Sepil assembled stakes in various Kurdistan oil fields. When he heard that Mr. Hayward had raised so much money, he decided to get in touch.

One July evening in 2011, Mr. Hayward, Mr. Sepil and Mr. Metherell dined at a private club off Berkeley Square in London. Mr. Sepil and Mr. Hayward hit it off, and a business alliance was forged. Because of Kurdistan’s precarious political situation, Genel’s oil came very cheap — $1.50 a barrel for reserves and prospective oil. “It was unusual to find assets of this quality that hadn’t been bagged by the majors,” Mr. Metherell says.

Mr. Sepil was looking for someone to bring capital and better technology to Genel, and he says he found that someone in Mr. Hayward. “I always admired Tony,” he says. The gulf spill, he says, was “something that could have happened to anyone in the world.”

Before long Genel and Vallares merged, leaving the combined company, called Genel Energy and listed in London, with a pile of cash. The Turkish side owns about 45 percent of the company, although its voting rights are limited to just under 30 percent. Mr. Sepil is not on the board, in part as a result of a previous scrape with British securities regulators that resulted in a stiff fine. The board is headed by Rodney F. Chase, a former deputy chief executive of BP, and is composed mostly of veteran London business figures.

For the moment, things seem to be going relatively smoothly. Mr. Hayward travels to Kurdistan about six times a year and often visits Ankara, Turkey’s capital, where Genel’s management headquarters for Kurdistan is based. In Ankara, he typically stays in Mr. Sepil’s home.

“Tony is running the whole company,” Mr. Sepil says. “I am helping him with the politics — to understand the region.”

Mr. Sepil says that Mr. Hayward makes a good impression in Turkey by making occasional use of the Turkish he learned while doing field work there as a graduate student in geology. “He is the golden boy here,” Mr. Sepil says. In Kurdistan, Mr. Hayward spends much of his time pressing Genel’s interests with senior government officials.

Today Genel is the leading oil producer in Kurdistan. It produces 40,000 barrels a day, but it could be pumping twice that if it could export. The oil can be exported through a Baghdad-controlled pipeline from Kirkuk to Ceyhan in Turkey, and in smaller amounts by truck. But pipeline exports have been sporadic because of disputes between the Kurds and Baghdad. Unless the oil can be exported, it goes to Kurdish refineries for a price of about $60 per barrel — well below that on world markets.

Yet despite the obstacles, Genel is generating most of the cash needed to pay for its $200-million-to-$250-million-a-year exploration and development program in Kurdistan. It is also sitting on about $1 billion for acquisitions.

Mr. Hayward, who has a Ph.D. in geology, often pores over seismic images, looking for the next big find. In August, Genel announced a flurry of deals, spending about $860 million to strengthen its position in Kurdistan. Mr. Hayward has also been trying to diversify Genel’s sources of oil. The company recently acquired a small enterprise called Barrus Petroleum, which explores off the coast of Morocco, as well as acreage off Malta and in Somalia.

The Kurdistan Regional Government is gradually persuading the oil majors to defy Baghdad and invest in Kurdistan. Recently Chevron, Total of France and Gazprom, the Russian giant, have signed deals, despite Baghdad’s threat to bar them from new contracts in Iraq. Mr. Hayward argues that the Kurds will eventually win.

“You can’t have one million barrels a day of oil shut in,” he says, speaking of Kurdistan’s eventual production target. The region’s capacity is now around 250 thousand barrels per day.

So far that calculation has not been reflected in Genel’s share price, which has fallen by about 30 percent since the company went public. But some analysts are optimistic.

“The situation between Baghdad and Erbil could be at an inflection point,” says Phil Corbett, an analyst at Deutsche Bank in London. With a secure pipeline to world markets, he says, Genel could realize the potential of its fields. If that happens, its share price, which closed at 689.50 pence on Friday, could easily double, he says.

Mr. Hayward, for his part, seems as excited as ever about oil exploration, not just in Iraq but also in Africa, where he is hunting for another acquisition. He points out that many recent discoveries in Africa have been made by relatively small companies, rather than by the majors. Energy exploration is a risky, expensive business. But Mr. Hayward, the face of the gulf spill, is unbowed.

“People are only beginning to wake up to look at the world of exploration,” he says. “If the world stays as open as it is, the little guy will be able to make a difference.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/02/business/tony-hayward-former-bp-chief-returns-to-oil.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

NOVA

Tidbits from Frank26 and KTFA Members Sunday Morning

KTFA:

backdoc :Great input Frank, Nova, and Sager. I agree the only thing we seek is functional… not who is PM. Great job Guys !! Inclusiveness will eventually rule the day. Power is ultimately balanced nicely if it is formed correctly and completely. What im comfortable with is we will not see maliki run the table ! Doc

Frank26:   M had the world in his hands …….. Us ……… The USA!

Then The Bozo decided to bite that Hand that fed him ………. For so many years!!

Now ……… Like a disgraced soldier ………. M is stripped of most of his former Powers!!!

But fascinating to me is how a cockroach can even survive …….. WMD.

God bless ……. Us all.     KTFA,   Frank
….

bullet » July 6th, 2014,   Frank, WS, Nova, or…….?

IMO SOMETHING ELSE MAY BE IMPORTANT.

I think the 2010 IMF Reform extension C. Lagarde gave the US until Jan 1st 2015 is the hold up. US didnt sign it because Republicans dont want to lose veto control of the IMF by adding M.E. and Communist countries. Obama doesnt want it because it means US currency may lose 30-40% in value and that will cost him many democratic seats in Nov. midterm elections.

So we may have to wait until after midterm elections. This info is per my investment news letter UNCOMMON WISDOM. (This news letter does not teach currency investing.)
IMO,   bullet

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drdinar » July 6th, 2014, The international community and PTB want Maliki gone. Delta told us many times that the US is in control of the Rv, not Iraq. I believe he is correct.

Maliki is already wanted for crimes against humanity on the international front. In the end, they can and will not let someone with that rap sheet run one of the richest countries in the world, it makes absolutely no sense.

 Maliki was put in his position years ago by the US/UN because they controlled him and with the understanding that he would step down when the time came for him to do so. The reason why he can’t step down now is that once his immunity runs out, he is a dead man walking, whether he goes down in international court or more likely, by the same means the Libyans “terminated” Qaddafi.

Way too much has come to light over the past year about the atrocities that Maliki has committed to allow him to stay in office. Once all this was exposed, the blame was squarely placed on the US/UN for putting him in power. We started seeing this blame stated publicly in articles, from politicians in the US and Europe.

IMO, there is absolutely NO WAY Maliki is allowed to stay in power. For the AoP’s plan for Iraq to work, it needs a stable Iraq. If Maliki is PM once again, the Sunnis will begin a civil war against him in earnest, joining the ISIS and the Kurds will continue down the road to independence, both of which will destroy the 10 year plan….all of this, IMO.

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JJONESMX”    

International Monetary Fund” is expected acceleration of global recovery


06-07-2014 01:26 PM

Free – The Director of the ‘IMF’ Christine Lagarde said on Sunday that she expected to accelerate global economic activity in 2015 after a gloomy picture at the beginning of the year 2014, adding that the Fund does not expect a sharp slowdown in China.

 Lagarde explained that ‘there are limits to the impact of the policy of the central banks, which aims to support demand’, adding that States must also work to promote growth, especially through investment in infrastructure, education and health as long as it is able to carry the debt.

She said expectations ‘IMF’ for the global economy, which will be updated later this month, will be slightly different from the expectations published in April, pointing to the possibility that the range of growth in China this year, between seven and 7.5 per cent   LINK

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walkingstick » July 6th, 2014, 10:25 am 

Anbar Tribal Leader: Maliki Is ‘More Dangerous’ Than ISIS


By Omar al-Mansuri

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman, 43, is one of Anbar province’s most influential tribal sheikhs and is chief of the powerful Dulaim tribe in Ramadi.

Suleiman is founding member of the Anbar Salvation Council, a key group in the Sunni Awakening that collapsed after Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki refused to include the group in state and military institutions. As the leader of Anbar’s Tribes Revolutionary Council, he is a key leader in the Anbar insurgency and a sharp critic of Maliki. As early as 2006, he became a leader in mobilizing Sunni Arab rebels against Al-Qaeda.

In an exclusive interview with Rudaw, Suleiman claimed the Islamic State (formerly the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS) and Iraq’s Sunni Arab tribes have drastically different philosophies.

He says that armed tribes can easily push out ISIS but that Maliki must first leave office.

Rudaw: How will things pan out with the Islamic State (formerly the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS) if Nouri al-Maliki is no longer in power?

I believe that Maliki is responsible for ISIS coming to Iraq.

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: I’m very surprised by the media attention the so-called Islamic State has received. We don’t care if ISIS scares other nations. Our experience in Anbar with Al-Qaeda in 2006 is a perfect example of our ability to deal with ISIS. We’ve postponed fighting ISIS until we get rid of Nouri al-Maliki. As for the Anbar tribes, we consider Maliki to be more dangerous than ISIS.

I believe that Maliki is responsible for ISIS coming to Iraq; the evidence is that he freed scores of detainees in Abu Ghraib and Badush prisons.

Rudaw: Is it true that ISIS in Mosul asked the rest of the armed groups to join them and operate under their sole command?

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: ISIS’s growth in Iraq is very dangerous and they don’t believe in the political process. Iran contributed to and has supported ISIS’s expansion in Iraq; Iran’s intelligence has clearly played a role in promoting ISIS.

Rudaw: In an alliance between the rebel tribes and ISIS, who then makes the decisions or gives military orders: you or ISIS?

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: Rebel tribes have no alliance with ISIS because they don’t believe in the concept of tribes. ISIS only tries to exploit the name of the tribes because of our revolution. We fundamentally disagree with ISIS’s military vision. For example we have in the past released many of Maliki’s soldiers and prisoners. We helped shelter and treat the wounded and opened the door for dialogue with everyone. This isn’t ISIS’s philosophy, as it doesn’t believe in any kind of dialogue.

Rudaw: Who leads the military operations on the ground: the tribes or ISIS?

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: ISIS has created a successful media campaign and even took advantage of social networking sites to promote themselves as if they’re in control on the ground. But this isn’t the case: we have control of the land. We have a quite different policy and approach from that of ISIS.

The rebels are the ones who started the revolution, and then ISIS came in to take advantage of those victories on the ground. This is what happened in Mosul.

Maliki’s unjust policies forced people to accept ISIS. The point is that Maliki’s tyranny and the lack of strong leadership forced ​​some Sunni cities to accept ISIS over Maliki’s sectarian government.

Rudaw: Do you think that in the future fighting will break out between the tribes and ISIS?

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: As we have stated to the international community and the United Nations, we’re opposed to terrorism and won’t accept it. If it comes from ISIS, we will confront them in the future. We just want the revolution’s international support and recognition; it was a popular revolution led by Arab tribes that came out against the tyrant (Maliki) who has fueled injustices against a particular group of people: the Sunni Arabs of Iraq. As for ISIS, as time will show they aren’t any match against rebel tribes.

Rudaw: What about the next stage of this war, especially given that rebels are threatening to take the battle to Baghdad?

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: Obama, in one of his recent speeches, spoke about protecting Baghdad as if Baghdad is currently the only place under threat. Maliki also said that Baghdad was a red line. We say that there is no red line for tribal rebels. However, we don’t want Baghdad nor do we want to threaten security. We just want our rights, and if we attain them all of this will end.

We call on Obama and the international community to remove Maliki in order to form a government that represents all people, without discrimination.

Rudaw: What are the goals of the revolution?

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: We want to remove Maliki and form a national salvation government to administer the country until elections are held. Of course, this isn’t in line with Maliki’s vision — he recently said a national salvation government would be a coup against the constitution. Maliki has forgotten that he is the one who turned on the constitution. Ayad Allawi won the previous election but Maliki manipulated the constitution and became prime minister. The other important issue is that Maliki isn’t only the prime minister; he is the minister of defense, interior, the federal court and all state agencies are under his command and authority.

As for the revolution’s objectives: we wanted to achieve our goals constitutionally and in a civilized manner through our yearlong sit-ins and without inciting violence. But Maliki didn’t acknowledge our demands and this forced us to take up arms. Now we have more than 2 million displaced families; our homes and cities have been destroyed by explosives; and Maliki has brought militias who are flooding our cities and country and don’t even speak Arabic.

Another one of our goals is to establish a federal state, which is part of our platform and isn’t a new idea.

Our primary goals are regaining our civic rights and to not be treated like a minority. We didn’t approve the current constitution and it needs to be changed and amended. We want anti-terrorism laws to be absolved, including article 4. (Article 4 is an anti-terror clause under which many Sunnis have been imprisoned.) We also want detainees released and a fair share of ministerial posts, given that Maliki only wants Sunni Arabs as slaves.

We must ask the question: why is there a revolution and why did we take up arms? It’s because Maliki robbed us of our rights. Also, Sunni Arab politicians failed to represent the people, so we are going to form a political interface, a real representation, and participate effectively in the political process.

Nouri al-Maliki always twists the constitution as he wants. Initially we rejected forming regions or federal states, but the Shiites were the ones who wrote the constitution and put the federal paragraph. Now we ask for federalism to protect our rights.

Rudaw: What is the strength of the private Shiite militia group, particularly Asaib Ahl al-Haq?

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: These militias are deliberately threatening people; they commit treachery and kidnap innocent people. Their leader Qais al-Khazali’s threat against Iraqi sects doesn’t even deserve a response.

Rudaw: Who are the rebel tribes or armed groups fighting now?

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: First they are the sons of true tribes and their affiliates, including many armed factions. For example the Islamic Army, the Naqshbandi Army, police officers who defected and stood alongside their people, and former experienced army officers who train and lead attacks and military operations.

Rudaw: How confident are you that you can stop ISIS?

Sheikh Hatem al-Suleiman: Our experience in expelling Al-Qaeda in 2006 is the best evidence. The ISIS issue will end easily once we get rid of Nouri al-Maliki.

Incidentally, ISIS doesn’t even represent 7 or 10 percent of the fighters. The only thing ISIS has ownership of is suicide bombers.

The goal of this revolution isn’t to have the Baath Party return to power. We do not aspire to be a Sunni government and a regime.

In addition, ISIS can’t be allowed to become a tool for avenging Sunni injustices because sooner or later ISIS will brutalize Sunnis as well. We won’t give up on our cause, as we just want our stolen rights back.

http://rudaw.net/english/interview/06072014