Wednesday, April 13, 2011

What is the Obama endgame vis a vis a nuclear Iran?

Does Obama have a serious plan for Iran, is his plan to have no plan or could he have a dastardly plan?

Now while that is a little confusing, I have speculated here in the past about President Obama's true desire for the future direction and the future of the United States. At one point I went so far as to refer to him, as others also have, as the Manchurian President.


Where do I get off saying a thing like that?

Well, there is his past filled with a plethora of questionable acquaintances, his apparent disdain for Israel, the seemingly almost deliberate way he has mishandled the crisis in the Middle East and his massive expansion of our national debt spurring an even greater reliance on historic enemies such as the Chinese (who can now bring us down without ever having to fire a shot).

We have his dithering on critical military decisions, his telegraphing other military decisions to the enemy (i.e. when the U.S. will be withdrawing from conflicts), the ending of our missile defense initiative in eastern Europe and the ceding of national security matters to the United Nations as in the case of Iran's nuclear ambitions, to name just a few.

Iran, nukes and the coming on-line of Bushehr

Read the article, "Saudi Arabia: Second Fukushima if Iranian Bushehr activated in May," at Debka.com and then ask yourself, just what is the Obama endgame and is it in the best interests of the United States.

"Saudi and Kuwait officials have warned the US that if Iran activates its first nuclear reactor at Bushehr in May as planned, there is a good chance it will blow up and the entire Gulf region suffer a nuclear disaster on the scale of the misfortune at Japan's Fukushima and expose millions to radiation contamination.

This issue was urgently raised in recent Saudi-US talks – first on April 4 with US Defense Secretary Robert Gates and again Monday, April 11, with the National Security Adviser to the US President Tom Donilon.

The two high-level US official visits to Riyadh in six days attest to the fierce discord between Saudi King Abdullah and the administration - not just over Iran and its nuclear activity but the entire gamut of US Middle East policy..." Read the entire article here.



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