Over 4000 dead keep on thinking we are fighting for the Iraq's freedom

The Sponge

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What a waste of human life but we have some in here still thinking going into Iraq was the right thing to do. Looks like the oil companies won another one as they are getting their greedy hands in Iraq as kids die fighting for this bullshit lie of a war. What a way to use 9/11 to your advantage these no good greedy fukers.

U.S. role questioned in oil deal with Iraqi Kurds

U.S. companies are forbidden to cut deals in Iraq until an oil law is passed, but a Texas firm did so with State Department knowledge, a House committee charges.
By JAMES GLANZand RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr., New York Times
Last update: July 2, 2008 - 11:20 PM

Administration officials knew that a Texas oil company with ties to President Bush was planning to sign an oil deal with the regional Kurdistan government that ran counter to U.S. policy and undercut Iraq's central government, a congressional committee has concluded.
The conclusions were based on e-mail messages and other documents that the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform released Wednesday.
U.S. policy is to warn companies that they incur risks in signing contracts until Iraq passes an oil law. The Kurdistan deal, by ceding responsibility for writing contracts directly to a regional government, infuriated Iraqi officials. But State Department officials did nothing to discourage the deal and in some cases appeared to welcome it, the documents show.
The company, Hunt Oil of Dallas, signed the deal with Kurdistan's semi-autonomous government last September. Its chief executive officer, Ray Hunt, a political ally of President Bush, briefed an advisory board to Bush on his contacts with Kurdish officials before the deal was signed.
In an e-mail message released by the committee, a State Department official in Washington, briefed by a colleague about the impending deal with the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), wrote: "Many thanks for the heads up; getting an American company to sign a deal with the KRG will make big news back here."
No-bid oil contracts
The document release comes as the administration is defending help that U.S. officials provided in drawing up a separate set of no-bid contracts, still pending, between Iraq's Oil Ministry in Baghdad and five major Western oil companies to provide services at other Iraqi oil fields.
Iraq's oil minister, Hussain al-Shahristani, condemned the Kurdistan deal as illegal because it was not approved by the central government and was struck without an oil law.


After the deal was signed last year, a senior State Department official in Baghdad criticized it, saying, "We believe these contracts have needlessly elevated tensions between the KRG and the national government of Iraq."
The State Department said Wednesday that it had discouraged the deal. Hunt officials declined to comment, and KRG officials said there was no impropriety.
In a letter to the House committee, whose chairman is Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., a State Department official wrote that the department had strongly discouraged Hunt from signing the deal until an oil law had been passed.
The State Department told Hunt that "we continue to advise all companies that they incur significant political and legal risk by signing contracts" before then, wrote Jeffrey Bergner, an assistant secretary for legislative affairs.
But in a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Waxman wrote that the documents his committee collected "tell a different story about the role of administration officials." In letters obtained by the committee, Hunt informed the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, of which he was a member, last July and August that he was pursuing serious deals in Kurdistan.
Flurry of messages
In August 2007, Hunt informed State Department officials directly of his intentions in Kurdistan, and on Sept. 5, three days before the deal was signed, a flurry of e-mail messages among Hunt and State Department officials make clear that the department was aware of what was in the works.
In a message to a colleague with the subject line "Hunt Oil to Sign Contract With KRG," one State Department official gives a highly detailed summary of the deal. "Hunt would be the first U.S. company to sign such a deal," the official wrote, suggesting that the news should be rushed onto the State Department's internal distribution network as quickly as possible.
Despite those exchanges, a State Department official said the company was in fact discouraged from completing its deal.
After the deal was signed last year, a senior State Department official in Baghdad criticized it, saying, "We believe these contracts have needlessly elevated tensions between the KRG and the national government of Iraq."
The State Department said Wednesday that it had discouraged the deal. Hunt officials declined to comment, and KRG officials said there was no impropriety.
In a letter to the House committee, whose chairman is Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., a State Department official wrote that the department had strongly discouraged Hunt from signing the deal until an oil law had been passed.
The State Department told Hunt that "we continue to advise all companies that they incur significant political and legal risk by signing contracts" before then, wrote Jeffrey Bergner, an assistant secretary for legislative affairs.
But in a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Waxman wrote that the documents his committee collected "tell a different story about the role of administration officials." In letters obtained by the committee, Hunt informed the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, of which he was a member, last July and August that he was pursuing serious deals in Kurdistan.
Flurry of messages
In August 2007, Hunt informed State Department officials directly of his intentions in Kurdistan, and on Sept. 5, three days before the deal was signed, a flurry of e-mail messages among Hunt and State Department officials make clear that the department was aware of what was in the works.
In a message to a colleague with the subject line "Hunt Oil to Sign Contract With KRG," one State Department official gives a highly detailed summary of the deal. "Hunt would be the first U.S. company to sign such a deal," the official wrote, suggesting that the news should be rushed onto the State Department's internal distribution network as quickly as possible.
Despite those exchanges, a State Department official said the company was in fact discouraged from completing its deal.
U.S. role questioned in oil deal with Iraqi Kurds
 

Agent 0659

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Sponge, you might as well bang your head against a brick wall. If anyone is dumb enough to still support this war, administration, or believe anything that comes out of their mouth is beyond help.

Nice article though!
 

StevieD

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Great post Sponge. Sad but true. Notice how the media has made everybody who was right about Iraq into a nutcase and everybody who was wrong is still somehow considered smart? The Dixie Chick was more right about Iraq than Cheney!!!!! Yet the dopes in here still make fun of her while kissing Cheneys fat a$$.
 

The Sponge

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Great post Sponge. Sad but true. Notice how the media has made everybody who was right about Iraq into a nutcase and everybody who was wrong is still somehow considered smart? The Dixie Chick was more right about Iraq than Cheney!!!!! Yet the dopes in here still make fun of her while kissing Cheneys fat a$$.

Stevie in Cheneys defense he was right in 94. You ever see that you tube video with that crook? Every thing that has gone bad he said would go bad in 94. Boy are these oil companies licking there chops to get into Iraq. There is a reason Saddam threw their greedy asses out and guess what? He ended up dead.
 
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The Sponge

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Sponge, you might as well bang your head against a brick wall. If anyone is dumb enough to still support this war, administration, or believe anything that comes out of their mouth is beyond help.

Nice article though!

Yeah maybe a few in here can post another article about how things are improving in a place that we shouldn't be to begin with and is only helping out a select few while our country goes to shit financially.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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Hmmm your a day off on post aren't you.

I thought today (Independence Day) was official day for liberal's to bash anyones efforts for independence? :SIB

Stars & Swipes

The Fourth of July is again proving to be a difficult time for some on the American left who are uncomfortable with the flag-waving of those, who unlike them, admire America.

Robert Scheer at The Nation ? the self described "flagship of the left" ? calls Independence Day "Oil Dependence Day" saying, "Only in an America dumbed down by constant propaganda about our innate moral superiority will anyone any longer believe that we didn't invade Iraq for the oil."

And Matthew Rothschild, editor of the left-wing magazine The Progressive, says he's no patriot because, "Patriotism has done more to stack the corpses millions high in the last 300 years than any other factor."

And columnist Chris Satullo, former editorial page editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer, writes in that paper, "This year America doesn't deserve to celebrate its birthday. This Fourth of July should be a day of quiet and atonement. For we have sinned."
 
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