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. The argument is that American children would be frightened by the appearance of strange looking foreigners from another planet. Thus keep that matter a secret, and spin it as a Soviet plot to take over the wholesome American way of life.(anti-Communist propaganda from the 1950's) The more plausible explanation is that of the Roman Catholic church, and keeping knowledge restricted and opaque so that the masses could be confused and CONTROLLED by the Plutocractic elite. Martian technology after all gives the USA military a military edge as it did the Nazis, before mass production and Hitlers utter stupidity generously interpreted as mistakes over whelmed the initial advantage. Fiber opitics Extreme high speed vehicles Lasers Are just some of the alleged Martian technology, and Donald Trump has talked about yet more secret technology which would make America even richer again, and help humanity in the process. That the corrupted Globalist elite have held such technology back.....or have squandered them in their selfish bizarre Globalist objectives.
'And ofcourse the biggest pushers of CONSPIRACY THEORY are the establishment news and the USA government. Right now they are pushing the conspiracy news that Iran bombing Saudi Arabia....didn't happen (no evidence provided by the USA government as with 9/11 and the complicity of OBL, and Afghans....no evidence) ..............Russiagate....that our President is a Manuchurian candidate...working in secret with another power.....thats their assertion'
The Saudis and the U.S. accuse Iran of being behind the "act of war" as Secretary of State Pompeo called it. The Saudis have bombed Yemen with U.S. made bombs since 2015. One wonders how Pompeo is calling that.
The Yemeni forces aligned with the Houthi Ansarallah do not deny that their drones and cruise missiles are copies of Iranian designs. But they insist that they are built in Yemen and fired from there.
President Trump will not launch a military attack against Iran. Neither will the Saudis or anyone else. Iran has deterred them by explaining that any attack on Iran will be responded to by waging all out war against the U.S. and its 'allies' around the Persian Gulf.
Trump sent Pompeo to Saudi Arabia to hold hands with the Saudi gangster family who call themselves royals. Pompeo of course tried to sell them more weapons. On his flight back he had an uncharacteristically dovish Q & A with reporters. Pompeo said:
I was here in an act of diplomacy. While the foreign minister of Iran is threatening all-out war and to fight to the last American, we’re here to build out a coalition aimed at achieving peace and a peaceful resolution to this. That’s my mission set, what President Trump certainly wants me to work to achieve, and I hope that the Islamic Republic of Iran sees it the same way. There’s no evidence of that from his statement, but I hope that that’s the case.
The crisis is over and we are back to waiting for the next round. A few days or weeks from now we will see another round of attacks on oil assets on the western side of the Persian Gulf.
The Houthi will continue to attack the Saudis until they end their war on Yemen and pay reparations.
As long as no U.S. forces get killed the U.S. will not hit back because Trump wants to be reelected.
An all out war around the Persian Gulf would drive energy prices into the stratosphere and slump the global economy.
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. There are many Yemenis living in Saudi Arabia, some in high positions. The Bin Ladens were originally from Yemen, a generation back. It is these people who are helping the Yemenis fight the USA backed invasion of their country.
On 14 September 2019, there was a major attack on the Saudi Aramco oil production facilities at Abqaiq and Khurais in eastern Saudi Arabia.
A senior US official said the attack involved some dozen cruise missiles and more than 20 drones. (10)
The direction and extent of the attacks cast doubt on Houthi involvement.
Unnamed US officials have been speaking to the New York Times, ABC and Reuters.
One official said the attacks had come from the west and north-west - not Houthi-controlled territory in Yemen, which lies to the south-west of the Saudi oil facilities.
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. The UK assisted in the creation of Saudi Arabia, and thus has very close ties to the Kingdom. The USA thus should not jump to any early conclusions this side of Netanyahu's elections, based on the USA ISRAELI false flag in Saudi Arabia. The UK presumably will not participate any such attack on Iran, if due process of International law is not carried out in such a grave and sensitive matter.
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By Reuters and antiwar.com Britain on Monday said an attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil facilities was serious and outrageous but that the full facts were needed on who was responsible before making a response. The attack “was a wanton violation of international law,” Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said, adding that the United Kingdom stood firmly behind Saudi Arabia.
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. Only such swarm attacks this deep inside Saudi Arabia can only be organised by the USA and Israel, as they have already done so in Syria against Russian military bases in North West Syria, via NATO Turkey. The Houthis don't have that capability. Arab GCC sources saying the Iranians did it isn't credible, as they have accused many times before in the Persian Gulf and else where (as the financial backers of ISIS/'al-Qaeda') This conflict goes well beyond 2015 and Saudi Arabia. When the official statement was made by the Houthis claiming responsibility for the attacks they included a statement that it could not have taken place without "honorable assistance from within the Kingdom" meaning ... what? Do we have CIA assets "within the Kingdom"? Will this strike have an effect on the Aramco IPO negotiations that started just two days before they took place? All wars are banker wars boys and girls and this one is no different. SCOTT CREIGHTON AMERICAN EVERYMAN Another plausible motivation for the FALSE FLAG attack would be to keep Saudi Arabia in the Yemen war, where there has been talk that Saudi Arabia might finally pull out. The UAE, announced it would pull its troops out of Yemen, before they were persuaded by the USA to stay in the war. Yet another reason for the FALSE FLAG attack could simply be a MIC weapons sales pitch of AIR DeFENSE equipment to the GCC, 'You guys need our equipment to protect ALL your oil installations which the Iranians keep saying they will destroy completely........FORGET RUSSIAN S-400--- takes too long to deliver.' Another plausible reason for the FALSE FLAG by the USA ISRAEL would be as a distraction exercise from the recent significant revelations that Israel is the number 1 spying nation against the USA. Another plausible reason for the FALSE FLAG by the ISRAELIS would be to prevent President Trump meeting with Rohani in NY LATER THIS MONTH.
Israel Bombed Gaza Israel Bombed Lebanon Israel Bombed Syria Israel Bombed Iraq Israel bombed Saudi Arabia (without killing anyone--civilian or military) The New York Times commented: “The satellite photographs released on Sunday did not appear as clear cut as officials suggested, with some appearing to show damage on the western side of facilities, not from the direction of Iran or Iraq.” ISRAEL is to the West of Saudi Arabia.
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. Communications between the Mullahs and the CIA take place mostly in Europe, but on the surface poor relations exist. Nobody in Iran supports MEK, and the killing of A FEW HAPLESS scientists in Iran by MEK for the Israelis/CIA does not in any way prove their popularity as a MARXIST CULT.
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. By 1945 the USA represented 50% of the worlds REAL GDP, and the most powerful nation on earth with 12 million men and women under arms, and ofcourse with that the most powerful navy. It produced 81 million tons of steel, and obviously the biggest manufacturer in the world, and technologically ahead of every other nation. Without these things you really can't call the shots around the world. Under FDR, a real visionary leader elected 4 times by the popular vote he used a combination and CREATIVE mix of hard and soft power to make the USA the center and leader of the world which almost every nation looked up to without the need for any dirty back hand coercion. It most definitely did not envision NEOCON type brute force and forever MEANINGLESS FAKE WAAAAHS for Israel. ......and the MIC (A souless EVIL lopsided faggotty pursuit that benefits nobody, least of all the USA and Israel. Unless you seriously think that yet another Gungho Marvel/DC WAR MOVIE from Hollywood and Netanyahu is good for Israel and the world) NOT far from the Gay nightclub where Netanyahu, and Epstein frequented watching live GAY sex shows. Bolton was the bitch butt buddy of Netanyahu(spy) sucking up all the intelligence in Washington and then rushing off to Israel to off load the information, and where he seemed to spend most of his time learning his lines and talking points. Appalling traitor. His penchant for cocaine and peculiar sex seems to have been the means by which the Israelis controlled him. A glazed eyed Israeli mutt. The question is why did Trump choose him and 'Rapture' Pompeo......Christian Zionists are not the vast majority of his base. Had FDR lived on instead of being killed by the Brtish (He insisted on decolonisation during the war as a condition for American support over extremely heated exchanges in the White House---USA taking the moral high ground, as well as the possibility of access to new markets for American goods....with the CIA going to work installing American puppets in these decolonised states soon there after...... Egypt 1948, Iraq 1958, Pakistan 1958, Lebanon 1958, Iran 1953, Cuba 1959, Indonesia 1965, Libya 1969 and so forth)......there would have been no Korean war, and certainly no Cold War, taking the world towards near complete annihilation in 1962, and in many other ocassions 1983??? FDR was probably working towards some kind of Marshal plan for the Soviet Union on top of the strategic aid the USA had already given during WWII. But Churchills Iron Curtain speech amongst many other events forestalled that. The Russiagate hoax with its links to the UK base is thus also NOW attempting to prevent a closer alliance between Russia and Trumps USA. Under the GLOBALIST DNC Carter administration, and American financial recession, defeat in Vietnam....and uncertainty over Watergate, the Carter administration chose to forget ALL the above, and instead chose to follow the dicates of the Globalists and the ROTHSCHILDS OF LONDON, AND we can take a detailed inventory of ALL the Carter administrations FOREIGN and Domestic policies in DETAIL, and see how the decline of the USA really started. One of which was the bright idea of destabilising and toppling the Shah of Iran, and putting radical mullahs into power in Iran 1977--79. The other the sponsorship of Islamic rebels in Afghanistan from July 1979, whilst talking Detente with the Soviet Union.
Bolton and the Neocons want to install Cultist Marxists into power in Tehran (whose Baptism of fire was killing American servicemen in Iran in the 1970's as part of the process of destabilising the Shah) CAPITALIST AMERICA BACKING MARXIST REVOLUTIONARIES.........where have we heard this before? Oh yes NY funded the Bolsheviks into power, and Leon Bronstein and a whole gaggle of Jewish revolutionaries went to Imperial Russia to do their good lord work in 1916, on a ship.
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. WHY? 1. To manage and control American politics 2. Manage and control American bureaucracy 3. To manage and DIRECT American security---Also via joint cooperation..'we're in this together, we have a shared interest'....joint training. 4. To manage American False Flag terrorism 5. To STEAL (3) American military/security technology 6. Conduct Industrial espionage and sell to other countries like North Korea, Russia, Iran......and so on worth about $40 billion annually to Israel. http://mostaqueali.blogspot.com/2010/03/hustling-for-justice.html . Mostaque Ali: Hustling for justice. 7. Weaponise ISRAEL'S technology industry so that it replaces Silicon Valley by coopting it and managing it through trained security personnel invested there.....a la 'Invasion of the Body Snatchers' style. 8. Jesus ordained ISRAEL to spy on its $141 billion benefactor and protector of 50 years, from the 1960's starting with crypto-Jew LBJ, and the Jewey DNC.....and aided by the GLOBALIST CIA, and James Jesus Angleton AND SO.....as with any thief given free rein, the LOGIC .....and the MATRIX determines that this will get worse and more brazen until a WASP saviour with absolutely no guilt or weakness for the Jew deals with this TRUE Russiagate collusion'.
Trump Mulls $15 Billion Iran Bailout, May Lift SanctionsBolton's firing may signal willingness to offer concessions
Saying he believes that the US sanctions and pressure have put Iran in a very tough position, President Trump continued to suggest that talks could be held soon. Interestingly, reports also suggest he may be considering some concessions. A $15 billion EU line of credit to Iran in return for oil sales, an effort to get them around near-term economic problems, seems the most likely immediate move, with Trump and Mike Pompeo both considering giving France permission to do it. Iran has suggested they would only be open to talks in the event the US lifted sanctions on them. Incredibly, it does appear that this too is under consideration, as Trump is very hopeful for talks, and might actually be willing to do something to make that happen. The clearest indication of this might be the sacking of John Bolton this week. Bolton was working openly against all of these concessions, and fighting against the Iran talks in general. Trump may have believed getting Bolton out of the way was a necessary first step.
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. President Trump intends on winning the 2020 Presidential elections.
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Trump Fires Yosemite Sam
By Moon of Alabama
Donald J. Trump @realDonaldTrump - 17:58 UTC · 10 Sep 2019I informed John Bolton last night that his services are no longer needed at the White House. I disagreed strongly with many of his suggestions, as did others in the Administration, and therefore....
...I asked John for his resignation, which was given to me this morning. I thank John very much for his service. I will be naming a new National Security Advisor next week.
Oh happy day!
Bolton disagrees with Trump's tweet and he is now texting reporters to say that he wasn't fired but resigned:
Robert Costa @costareports - 18:16 UTC · 10 Sep 2019Ambassador Bolton sends me a text message just now: “Let’s be clear, I resigned, having offered to do so last night.”
John Bolton was the worst person I could think of to become National Security Advisor.
Bolton will not take his firing without some revenge. There will soon be tons of 'leaks' in which a "former senior administration official" will claim that Trump did this or that very, very bad thing.
Gabby Orr @GabbyOrr_ - 18:43 UTC · 10 Sep 2019A consistent complaint among Trump loyalists & fellow WH officials is that Bolton and his camp were extremely leaky. Doesn’t help that he’s texting every reporter in his rolodex now to clarify that he wasn’t canned
While he did not work long as Trump's NSA Bolton managed to create a lot of damage.
Michael Tracey @mtracey - 18:39 UTC · Sep 10, 2019Bolton blew up the Hanoi summit with Kim, pushed for airstrikes on Iran, completely botched the attempted Venezuela coup, undermined the Syria troop withdrawal, demanded endless war in Afghanistan. And that's just in the past 9 months. The guy is a total lunatic
We published quite a bit about John Bolton. Here is a short selection:
. . . . Let me qualify FAKE by saying that the 'enemy' has been falsely accused with FAKE evidence, or is funded by the CIA as controlled Opposition ...ISIS, 'al-CIA-duh' ......Taliban ....Mullah Iran......Arab Spring protestor and so on. ___________________________________
Veterans Reach Their Tipping Point Against Our Post-9/11 Wars
Solid majorities of veterans believe Iraq and Afghanistan were not worth fighting. It's time to heed their counsel.
By the American Conservative and antiwar.com
Members of Iraq Veterans Against the War in 2007.
Editor’s Note: This editorial was published in the September/October issue of the magazine.
An important new consensus is forming against America’s endless wars, shaped by an important constituency: the military veterans who have sacrificed so much to fight them. A Pew Research poll of veterans released contained results that contradict the cherished talking points of the bipartisan Washington foreign policy blob that sees “leadership” and “engagement” as being synonymous with bombing and regime change.
Sixty-four percent of veterans said the war in Iraq was not worth fighting when the costs to America are weighed against the ostensible benefits to the region and our national security. Just 33 percent concluded that George W. Bush’s Baghdad democracy adventure was worthwhile in retrospect.
That’s not much different than the prevailing view among the American public, where 62 percent said the Iraq war wasn’t worth it versus 32 percent who still think it should have been fought. Perhaps more surprisingly, 58 percent of veterans believe the Afghanistan war—now America’s longest, despite two consecutive presidents of both parties advocating retrenchment—wasn’t worth fighting. That’s only a point behind the 59 percent of Americans as a whole who say the same.
“Veterans who served in either Iraq or Afghanistan are no more supportive of those engagements than those who did not serve in these wars,” write Pew’s Ruth Igielnik and Kim Parker. “And views do not differ based on rank or combat experience.”
Our veterans take a similarly skeptical view of intervention in Syria, with 42 percent calling it a worthwhile military campaign to 55 percent who say it was not. All this comes on the heels of a Military Times poll in which nearly half of active duty personnel surveyed expressed concern about being drawn into another major conflict while majorities suggested neither Iraq nor Afghanistan were important threats to American national security today.
Republican military veterans are still considerably more likely to find our wars of choice worth fighting than their Democratic counterparts. But laptop bombardiers have too often hidden behind the brave men and women actually doing the fighting in far-flung places instead of justifying policies that have produced chaos and often empowered the very Islamic militants we sought to destroy.
Afghanistan morphed from a just and necessary response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks into a nation-building exercise without end. Our troops performed admirably and accomplished the part of the mission that was actually possible. But turning Afghanistan into a functioning democracy or reliable ally in the fight against terrorism was never a militarily attainable goal.
Iraq was an ill-conceived intervention from the start, diverting both our nation’s justified anger and military resources away from Osama bin Laden to Saddam Hussein, launching a preventive war to disarm the dictator of weapons he did not even have. The consequences were unintended, but predictable—and widely predicted. A war sold as necessary to prevent more Americans from being killed in the aftermath of 9/11 instead put our troops at risk preventing Iraqis from killing each other. Into the resultant political vacuum jumped ISIS, which bore a closer resemblance to our attackers than did the regime that was toppled.
Next came Libya, Syria, and a host of presidential wars Congress never even authorized in the first place, despite the unambiguous text of the Constitution. In fact, a bipartisan majority of lawmakers explicitly rejected our role in the continuing humanitarian crisis in Yemen, a ghastly policy impossible to square with “America First.”
The men and women on the frontline have seen the results of these mishaps firsthand. They know how the realities of these wars have differed from the abstract theories of the neoconservatives and liberal hawks, concocted in think tank conference rooms far removed from the real world. It’s time to heed their counsel more and the Beltway “experts’” less.
John Bolton is gone and good riddance. He was pushing Trump away from peace and diplomacy.
Bolton has advised Trump at every turn to take the most counterproductive actions. The upshot has been more risk, higher combat losses and endless war.
By Daniel L Davis at USA Today and via antiwar.com
President Donald Trump used Twitter, of course, to announcethat he had removed national security adviser John Bolton from his post. “I disagreed strongly with many of his suggestions, as did others in the Administration, and therefore I asked John for his resignation,” he wrote. It’s not entirely clear which suggestions led Trump to let Bolton go. There were many options to choose from.
In a mere year and a half, Bolton has recklessly misled the president on a number of significant foreign policy issues. In 2017, before he arrived at the White House, Bolton was urging Trump to abandon the Iran nuclear deal. Among a host of other bad decisions since he became national security adviser, Bolton has encouraged the president to abandon a positive step toward peace with North Korea in Hanoi, deal belligerently with China, and discuss stationing more troops close to Russia’s border. Bolton’s latest bad advice sank a chance to reduce the number of troops in Afghanistan.
Things could have gone very differently. Had Trump selected a national security adviser aligned with his foreign policy views, it is entirely possible that by now he or she might have accomplished a number of valuable foreign policy achievements to advance our national security. Two key examples illustrate how.
Peace with North Korea
As recently as February of this year, South Korean president Moon Jae-in was openly suggesting Trump might win the Nobel Peace Prize for the progress he was making with North Korea. Instead, Bolton led Trump away from the path toward peace. He convinced Trump to pursue a big deal, rather than realistic gains, at the summit in Hanoi, scuttling any progress and causing Trump to leave Vietnam without so much as a joint statement.
A settlement with Iran
An adviser who was aligned with Trump’s more pragmatic instincts and wanted to see the president succeed in negotiations with Iran would have sought to lower tensions with Tehran, worked with our allies to find effective ways to constrain the regime, and opened the door to genuine and constructive diplomacy.
Instead, Bolton has pushed Trump to take the most destructive course conceivable. He has virtually destroyed any chance for the president to make good on his campaign pledge to negotiate a better nuclear deal with Iran, which is a worse outcome for both the United States and our friends in the region. Worst of all, the chances for a war with Iran — which would be a far worse mistake than Iraq — are significantly higher today than when Trump took office.
These and other Bolton missteps are not minor issues. Instead of making the country safer, reducing the risk of war and ending pointless conflicts around the world, Bolton has advised Trump at every turn to take the most counterproductive actions possible. The result has been increased risk, suffering higher (and unnecessary) combat losses, and the quest for peace is now more elusive than ever. All the while, U.S. power has diminished due to overstretch. Rather than ending pointless wars, Bolton has advised the president to continue them.
Bolton's focus was not diplomacy
It is easy to destroy things. But good foreign policy demands the more difficult work of constructive, pragmatic diplomacy. Bolton has demonstrated great skill in abrogating agreements and preventing wars from ending. He has shown neither the inclination nor ability to build anything, to negotiate any new agreements, or to end unnecessary wars.
Trump has made the right decision to replace Bolton. It is critical now, however, that the next national security adviser not follow in Bolton’s footsteps. The right person for the job cannot be another in the long line of establishment figures stuck in the last two decades of foreign policy failure. Trump needs someone who is experienced in international and military affairs, understands how to use diplomacy to our advantage, and, most critically, is aligned with the president’s foreign policy intent. Possibly the best choice could be retired Army Col. Douglas Macgregor. No one is more aligned with Trump and more equipped with the requisite skills.
Whoever he selects, for America’s sake, let us hope Trump chooses well.
______________________________________________________ Daniel L. Davis is a senior fellow at Defense Priorities and a former Lt. Col. in the U.S. Army who retired in 2015 after 21 years of service, including four combat deployments. Follow him on Twitter: @DanielLDavis1
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. If you think massive herion plantations with poppies cultivated to be exported around the world, and especially the USA is a success then yes the Afghan 'War' was a 19 year success. If you think bastardising your armed forces, especially the army and 'intelligence services' and TEACHING the same with participating nations around the herion exporting industry is a success Sir, Mr. Pompeo (praying to GOD and Jesus at a good Catholic Church) then yes the Afghan war was a 19 year success. If you think conducting massive fraud into the 100's of billions using the good taxpayers money, and yet more additional Afghan 'War' appropriation bills rubber stamped by Congress.....in one year alone $74 billion spent under Obummer to sustain the disporportionate and improbable sum of a few thosuand American servicemen in a phony war for example, then yes the Afghan war of 19 years was a success. If you think paying Afghan Ghost soldiers from the American taxpayer is a success, then yes. If you think paying Taliban members not to attack American servicemen, and arming them through third parties so that the fake charade of 'war' could continue for a few years more, then yes the 19 year Afghan war is a success. All said and done, the so called Taliban set up by the CIA in 1994 to consolidate Afghanistan for the USA under the Clintons direction (Sandy Berger et al...CIA) , can now be bought and MANAGED by the current administration as obedient poodles without relying on any Quija Board channeling.
Pompeo Argues US War in Afghanistan Was ‘Successful’
Says 19 year conflict was 'a real achievement'
While the Trump Administration has yet to officially sign the peace deal with the Taliban in Afghanistan, the clearest sign yet that they’ll do so came in a new interview with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. While US officials have often been unrealistically rosy-eyed about the state of the war, Pompeo took the talking points to a new level, and now is arguing effectively that the US has won the war in Afghanistan, and “delivered” on all of its goals. The US has repeatedly redefined what the war’s goal actually was, both because stabilizing Afghanistan never really happened, and because officials wanted a metric that wouldn’t show a loss. Pompeo, however, argued that al-Qaeda is defeated and a “shadow of its former self in Afghanistan.” Pompeo said this was a “real achievement,” and that the 19 years of war had “greatly reduced the risk that an attack on the United States of America would emanate from Afghan soil.” The deal with the Taliban has as one of its centerpieces a Taliban promise to keep al-Qaeda and ISIS out of Afghanistan. Selling this not just as the best the US is going to get but a virtual victory is likely to be the administration’s talking point if they intend to advance toward finalizing the peace deal. Pompeo’s comments seem to be a first step toward exactly that.
China-Iran relations: 中国–波斯关系, Persian: [same as above]) refer to the historic diplomatic, cultural and economic relations between the cultures of China proper and Greater Iran, dating back to ancient times, since at least 200 B.C. The Parthians and Sassanid empires (occupying much of present Iran and Central Asia) had various contacts with the Han, Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming. For millennia the two ancient civilizations of Asia were further connected both economically and culturally via the Silk Road. The two were also briefly unified under the Mongol Empire.
The Han dynasty explorer Zhang Qian, who visited the neighbouring states of Bactria and Sogdiana in 126 BCE, made the first known Chinese report on Parthia. In his accounts Parthia is named "Ānxī" (Chinese: 安息), a transliteration of "Arsacid", the name of the Parthian dynasty. Zhang Qian clearly identifies Parthia as an advanced urban civilization, whose development he equates to those of Dayuan (in Ferghana) and Daxia (in Bactria).
"Anxi is situated several thousand li west of the region of the Great Yuezhi (in Transoxonia). The people are settled on the land, cultivating the fields and growing rice and wheat. They also make wine out of grapes. They have walled cities like the people of Dayuan (Ferghana), the region contains several hundred cities of various sizes. The coins of the country are made of silver and bear the face of the king. When the king dies, the currency is immediately changed and new coins issued with the face of his successor. The people keep records by writing on horizontal strips of leather. To the west lies Tiaozi (Mesopotamia) and to the north Yancai and Lixuan (Hyrcania)." (Shiji, 123, Zhang Qian quote, trans. Burton Watson).
Following Zhang Qian's embassy and report, the Han conquered Dayuan in the Han-Dayuan war and established the Protectorate of the Western Regions, thereby opening the Silk Road. Commercial relations between China, Central Asia, and Parthia flourished, as many Chinese missions were sent throughout the 1st century BCE:
"The largest of these embassies to foreign states numbered several hundred persons, while even the smaller parties included over 100 members… In the course of one year anywhere from five to six to over ten parties would be sent out." (Shiji, trans. Burton Watson).
The Parthians were apparently very intent on maintaining good relations with China and also sent their own embassies, starting around 110 BC: "When the Han envoy first visited the kingdom of Anxi (Parthia), the king of Anxi dispatched a party of 20,000 horsemen to meet them on the eastern border of the kingdom… When the Han envoys set out again to return to China, the king of Anxi dispatched envoys of his own to accompany them… The emperor was delighted at this." (Shiji, 123, trans. Burton Watson).
Parthians also played a role in the Silk Road transmission of Buddhism from Central Asia to China. An Shih Kao, a Parthian nobleman and Buddhist missionary, went to the Chinese capital Luoyang in 148 CE where he established temples and became the first man to translate Buddhist scriptures into Chinese. The Persianized kingdom of Kushan became the crossroads for Sino-Indian Buddhist transmissions, with many Iranians translating Sanskrit sutras into Chinese.[1]
Sassanian era
Like their predecessors the Parthians, the Sassanian Empire maintained active foreign relations with China, and ambassadors from Persia frequently travelled to China. Chinese documents record thirteen Sassanian embassies to China. Commercially, land and sea trade with China was important to both the Sassanian and Chinese Empires. Large numbers of Sassanian coins have been found in southern China, confirming maritime trade.[1]
On various occasions, Sassanian kings sent their most talented Persian musicians and dancers to the Chinese imperial court. Both empires benefited from trade along the Silk Road, and shared a common interest in preserving and protecting that trade. They cooperated in guarding the trade routes through central Asia, and both built outposts in border areas to keep caravans safe from nomadic tribes and bandits.
During the Liang dynasty in China, in 547 a Persian embassy paid tribute to the Liang, amber was recorded as originating from Persia by the Liang Shu (Book of Liang).[2]
There are records of several joint Sassanian and Chinese efforts against their common Hephtalite enemy. Following encroachments by the nomadic Turkic on states in Central Asia, an apparent collaboration between Chinese and Sassanian forces repelled the Turkic advances. Documents from Mount Mogh also note the presence of a Chinese general in the service of the king of Sogdiana at the time of the Arab incursion.
The last members of the Sassanian Empire's royal family fled to Tang China. Following the conquest of Iran by Muslim Arabs, Peroz III, the son of Yazdegerd III, escaped, along with a few Persian nobles and took refuge in the Chinese imperial court.[3] Both Peroz and his son Narsieh (Chinese neh-shie) were given high titles at the Tang court.[3] At least on two occasions, the last possibly in 670, Chinese troops were sent with Peroz to help him against the Arabs restore him to the Sassanian throne, with mixed results. One possibly ended up in a short rule of Peroz in Sistan (Sakestan) from which a little numismatic evidence remains. Narsieh later attained the position of commander of the Chinese imperial guards and his descendants lived in China as respected princes.[3]
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China updates deal to invest $400 billion in Iran: Report
presstv.com
Iran and China have updated a 25-year deal signed first in 2016 that foresees $400 billion of Chinese investment in the resource-rich Middle Eastern nation, well-regarded energy industry publication the Petroleum Economist reports.
The update came during a visit at the end of August by Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif to Beijing where his Chinese counterpart State Councilor Wang Yi called the two countries as “comprehensive strategic partners”.
According to the Petroleum Economist, the deal represents “a potentially material shift to the global balance of the oil and gas sector” and could mark a "seismic shift in the global hydrocarbons sector” where no US dollars will be involved in commodity transaction payments.
Investment in oil, gas, petchems projects
“The central pillar of the new deal is that China will invest $280 billion, developing Iran's oil, gas and petrochemicals sectors,” said the monthly magazine which spoke to “a senior source closely connected to Iran's Petroleum Ministry” during Zarif’s visit.
This amount may be front-loaded into the first five-year period of the deal but the understanding is that further amounts will be available in every subsequent five-year period, subject to both parties' agreement, it said.
“There will be another $120 billion investment in upgrading Iran's transport and manufacturing infrastructure, which again can be front-loaded into the first five-year period and added to in each subsequent period should both parties agree,” it added.
The Petroleum Economist has been a respected energy industry publication for decades, better known for its sophisticated analysis.
Its report follows another story last month that China had “re-engaged” Iran on three key energy projects, namely Phase 11 of the supergiant South Pars gas field, West Karoun oil fields and the Jask oil export terminal.
State-owned China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), one of the country’s “big three” producers, holds an 80% stake in Phase 11 after French major Total’s withdrawal in August 2018 in response to US sanctions.
CNPC had since made little progress in developing the flagship project, but it has agreed to step up the pace on its development after getting a 30% discount to the global market price on potential condensate and LNG exports, the Petroleum Economist said.
China has also agreed to increase production from Iran's West Karoun oil fields—including North Azadegan, operated by CNPC, and Yadavaran, operated by fellow “big three” firm Sinopec—by an additional 500,000 barrels per day by the end of 2020.
According to the source cited by the magazine, Iran hopes to increase projected recovery rates from the fields from a current 5% of reserves in place to at least 25% by the end of 2021 at the very latest.
"For every percentage point increase, the recoverable reserves figure would increase by 670 million barrels, or around $34 billion in revenues even with oil at $50 per barrel," it quoted the source as saying.
Investment in manufacturing infrastructure
China’s close involvement in the build-out of Iran's manufacturing infrastructure will be entirely in line with its mammoth One Belt, One Road initiative, the Iranian source said.
The Asian giant intends to utilize the low cost labor available in Iran to build factories, designed and overseen by large Chinese manufacturing companies, with identical specifications and operations to those in China.
The idea is to ship Chinese products to Western markets by using Iran’s transport infrastructure.
Beijing’s biggest transportation project in Iran is worth $1.5 billion to electrify the rail line from Tehran to Mashhad for a length of 926 kilometers.
There are also plans to establish a Tehran-Qom-Isfahan high-speed train line and to extend this upgraded network up to the northwest through Tabriz.
The railway is part of the 2,300-kilometer New Silk Road that will link Urumqi in China’s resource-rich Xinjiang province to Tehran, connecting Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan along the way and extending to Europe via Turkey.
Tabriz, home to a number of key oil, gas and petrochemical and other industrial sites, and the starting point for the Tabriz-Ankara gas pipeline, will be a pivot point in the route.
Among benefits, Chinese companies will be given right of the first refusal to bid on any new, stalled or uncompleted oil and gas field developments, the report said.
Chinese firms will also have right of the first refusal on opportunities to become involved with any and all petrochemical projects in Iran, including the provision of technology, systems, process ingredients and personnel required to complete such projects.
Russia tangentially involved
The agreement includes a clause allowing at least one Russian company to have the option of being involved in the projects alongside Chinese operators, the report said.
Russia, tangentially included in the agreement, is weighing a similarly all-encompassing independent deal with Iran. In June, the two countries signed a dozen cooperation agreements covering energy, railway, agriculture, pharmaceuticals and tourism.
The agreements were signed as Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak visited Iran with a delegation of 120 businesspeople, including representatives of private and public companies.
According to the Petroleum Economist, one key upside of the deals flows from the fact that both China and Russia hold seats on the UN Security Council, making it difficult for the US or any other adversary to further sanction Iran.
"In order to circumvent any further ramping up of sanctions—and over time encourage the US to come back to the negotiating table—Iran now has two out of five UNSC votes on its side,” it quoted the Iranian source as saying.
Beijing has pushed back against the United States, saying China's cooperation with Iran is legitimate under international law and should be "respected".
China imported more than 900,000 metric tons of crude oil from Iran in July, up more than 8 percent from the month before, data released last week by China's General Administration of Customs (GAC) showed.
The imports by the world’s largest oil buyer and more importantly the increase in shipments came despite Washington’s threat to punish companies after ending waivers to unilateral sanctions on Iranian oil on May 2.
Beijing has braced for any fallout from its participation in Iranian development projects and possible face-off with the US, the international energy website OilPrice.com said last month.
“If there is any further pushback from the US on any of these Chinese projects in Iran, then Beijing will invoke in full force the ‘nuclear option’ of selling all or a significant part of its $1.4 trillion holding of US Treasury bills, with a major chunk of the paper due to be sold in September on this basis,” it said.