View Full Version : CNN Segment On Libya Titled The New World Order
shiva777
29th March 2011, 19:19
the agenda rolls on
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5sWjaJbU3pU
Ouroboros
29th March 2011, 19:48
Incredible given all that is going on the "Libyan?" people have so quickly got this complex banking system set up! You reckon some outside bankers may be offering their help with this?
"The rebels in Libya are in the middle of a life or death civil war and Moammar Gadhafi is still in power and yet somehow the Libyan rebels have had enough time to establish a new Central Bank of Libya and form a new national oil company"
http://beforeitsnews.com/story/516/283/&FB
seko
29th March 2011, 20:48
the agenda rolls on
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5sWjaJbU3pU
you couldn't have said better shiva 777 although the conversation is boring like always
cheers
seko
Rocky_Shorz
29th March 2011, 21:07
actually, they Nationalized all the oil fields and needed somewhere to put the money...
The people owned central bank was under a freeze and now that the Patriots of Libya have taken over, the bank is no longer under sanction...
all of you seem to forget one very important fact of people in the middle east...
they are educated and smart...
why the surprise?
I am Demanding the State Bank of Alabama stops the 5 offshore contracts for deep water drilling allowing them, the only state over the oil to build a land based operation that won't destroy our oceans...
BP/ROYAL OIL YOU HEAR ME?
we the people are taking back our world...
Rocky_Shorz
29th March 2011, 21:27
PTB tosses out an idea to get all of you afraid and everyone posts it across like it is fact...
Stop working for the PTB and start thinking for yourselves...
What just happened is TPB's biggest nightmare...
they wanted Kathafi out of power so they could take over banking but instead lost the oil fields, yep we'll be hearing from the whiners forever over this one...
Trump has 8 Billion and they are playing him like a fool right now...
big egos are so easy to manipulate...
Hey Don...
did you forget how pissed you were at Banks when they wouldn't give "YOU" money... lol
how quickly we forget...
Lord Sidious
29th March 2011, 21:38
the agenda rolls on
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5sWjaJbU3pU[/url]
There ya go.
Rocky_Shorz
29th March 2011, 22:04
We are the New World Order, the old world order is so yesterday...
eGadds has a whole new meaning to the one who wrote the green book on peaceful revolutions...
Isn't technology great!!!
Rocky_Shorz
29th March 2011, 22:37
Libyan central bank chief surfaces
By REUTERS
03/09/2011 06:07
SINGAPORE - Libya's central bank governor has surfaced to confirm he has been in Istanbul, but did not reveal whether he remained loyal to Muammar Gaddafi or was siding with the opposition, the Financial Times reported.
The Libyan government said on Tuesday that Finance Minister Abdulhafid Zlitni had taken over temporarily as head of the central bank because Governor Farhat Omar Bengdara was abroad. Bengdara's whereabouts had been unclear for the past two weeks.
The FT's website said Bengdara, whom it described as "the man who holds the keys to the Gaddafi regime's finances", had contacted the paper by email late on Tuesday to say that he had been informed of the move and that he had been in Turkey.
But he insisted that he was doing his job and was abroad because it was easier to conduct business there than in Tripoli, the FT said.
He said he would resign after the current crisis, adding that he had been working over the past two weeks to explain the central bank's position and clarify the effect of the international effort to freeze Libyan assets, the FT said...link (http://www.2space.net/news/article/341935-1299642010/)
U.S. Treasury OKs Libyan rebel oil sales...
story link (http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2011/03/28/pm-us-treasury-oks-libyan-rebel-oil-sales/)
A Treasury official says rebel oil sales will not be subject to U.S. sanctions if made through bodies unconnected with the Gaddafi regime.
Stephen Beard: Buoyed up by military success, the rebels are expanding into the oil business. They say they've done a deal to export more than 100,000 barrels of crude a day to the Gulf state of Qatar. Qatar won't confirm the story, but Julian Lee of the Centre for Global Energy Studies says the rebels' claim is feasible.
Julian Lee: They are now apparently in control of most of Libya's export terminals. Some of them may have been damaged in the fighting, but certainly I think from a physical point of view, it's probably possible for them to start exporting oil.
Some oil traders said they wouldn't touch this rebel crude. They fear it might break the international embargo. But the U.S. Treasury said American sanctions do not apply. And George Joffe of Cambridge University says U.N. and EU sanctions don't either.
George Joffe: The sanctions are against the Gaddafi regime, and it's quite clear from the whole tenor of the way in which the sanctions resolutions have operated, that their aim was to be targeted at that regime.
If an oil deal with Qatar does go ahead, it will be good for the rebels. But Joffe says it won't make much difference to the global price of oil. It will be a long time before Libyan production is back to normal.
Joffe: Foreign personnel have got to return. Foreign companies have got to take up their concessions again.
And, he says, it will be many months before Libya is exporting the usual 1.6 million barrels a day.
In London, I'm Stephen Beard for Marketplace.
Why do you think a British reporter tied to banking is calling for Oil companies to run back to take care of their oil wells?
Rocky_Shorz
29th March 2011, 22:53
Beard: That's right. But there's always money there somewhere, lurking in the background. No, it was, you're right, mainly political. It was about stiffening the coalition's resolve and planning for Libya's future, trying to avoid what the coalition partners think was the problem with Iraq: Not enough forward thinking before the conflict. They talked about things like what to do with Gaddafi when they've ousted him. Should he be tried as a war criminal or would it spare a lot of bloodshed and cost to persuade him to retire gracefully? So it was basically political, but there was some discussion of money. The Gulf state of Qatar confirmed that it will be selling Libya's oil on behalf of the rebels and that money will fund the considerable humanitarian effort in Libya.
Ryssdal: Well as long as we're talking about money and funding, what about once the violent stops, once the military campaign is over and the cost of rebuilding comes to mind, any discussion of that?
Beard: No, not at all. This is the great unmentionable. The assumption seems to be, first of all, on the military costs, that the coalition partners are going to shoulder their own military costs -- that in the case of the U.S., by the way, is $550 million and rising. But the cost of reconstruction, the assumption again is that Libya will pay for its own reconstruction. It has, after all, one of the biggest reserves of oil and gas in Africa. Last year it generated more than $30 billion in oil revenues for a country of only 6 million people. So the argument is Libya can easily afford its own reconstruction...
http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2011/03/29/pm-coalition-forces-meet-to-talk-about-next-steps-for-libya/
Libya, rebuild as you can, do not accept easy money...
Rocky_Shorz
29th March 2011, 23:07
here is the financial leader of the Libyan Patriots...
Ali Tarhouni, who is in charge of the rebels' economic, financial and oil matters in Benghazi said the fields were capable of pumping 100,000 to 130,000 barrels per day of crude, and most of this would be exported because of low refining capacity in eastern Libya. Before the crisis began, Libya was producing about 1.6 million barrels per day.
"We hope they will be lifted for the liberated areas as quickly as possible," Tarhouni said of the sanctions. "Not with everybody, but with some countries."
link (http://www.realclearworld.com/news/reuters/international/2011/Mar/28/u_s__says_libyan_rebels_may_sell_oil.html)
UW faculty member Ali Tarhouni named finance minister by Libyan opposition
Ali A. Tarhouni, a senior lecturer in the Foster School of Business at the University of Washington, has been named finance minister by the Libyan opposition national council. The group is arranging a transitional government in the event Moammar Gadhafi is ousted from power.
“Tarhouni understands the Western mentality,” opposition spokeswoman Iman Bugaighis told Reuters. Rita Zawaideh, owner of Caravan-Serai Tours in Seattle and a friend of Tarhouni, confirmed that he has been named to the post.
“We hope Ali and his relatives are safe and not in harm’s way. We're also proud to have one of our longtime faculty members playing a significant role in Libya’s transitional government,” said James Jiambalvo, dean of the Foster School.
Tarhouni, 60, holds a doctorate in economics and finance from Michigan State University.
A native of Libya who for 40 years has opposed Gadhafi, Tarhouni returned to Libya in early March. He has taught at the UW since 1985.
In a Voice of America interview published March 16, Tarhouni urged the United States and the United Nations to establish a no-fly zone over Libya.
“Trust me,” Tarhouni said. “There’s no fear of Gadhafi and his forces. We know he’s gone. It’s just a question of hours, days, maybe months. The question is how many innocent lives he’s going to take with him.”
Tarhouni is married to Mary Li, a lawyer for the Washington Attorney General’s office.
link (http://www.washington.edu/news/articles/uw-faculty-member-ali-tarhouni-named-finance-minister-by-libyan-opposition-1)
Etherios
3rd April 2011, 11:52
this from RT has a similar exposure that all these are planned events for something totally different that the good of the Libya public...
War for Libyan oil planned long ago (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fUxVgxj0vc)
0fUxVgxj0vc
Circe
5th April 2011, 07:56
Former CIA Officer Schools CNN Hosts on Libya (video)
When CNN invited former CIA officer Michael Scheuer to discuss the CIA’s involvement in Libya, I am pretty sure they did not expect this kind of interview. Instead of justifying the presence of the CIA in Libya, Scheuer went off-script and told the truth about the Libyan invasion. He negated the false “Democrats versus Republicans” debate and rather mentioned Bilderberg attendees Hilary Clinton and John McCain as important actors. He also described the futility of this war in America’s economic context and predicted the inevitability of a land invasion. To finish it off, he accused the distraught “news chicks” (giving propaganda a sexy image) of “carrying the water for Mr. Obama”. Nice.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDVt_hSo_EU&feature=player_embedded
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