Saturday, January 14, 2006

Pscho Islam Affecting Peace and Markets

Nuclear proliferation in Iran is beginning to throw international co-existence into a frenzy of choices based on oil. Russia and China delight in giving tacit support to the psycho-Mohammedan's from Iran because it antagonizes American national interests, which means it strengthens Russian and Chinese national interests - at least in the short run.

The reality is that Islamofascism cares little for Russia or China. Those two nations are merely a tool for hegemonic proliferation of the Mohammedan cult of death and violence. Russia and China will be next on their agenda because the first is tacitly Christian (secular humanistic at worst) and the second is a Marxist state (overtly anti-religion). These factors in the long run of Islamofascism will make Russia and China targets of the Mohammedan venom.

When will America's competitors wake to concept of "the enemy of my enemy is my friend"? This is the case with competing markets and national interests of America, EU, Russia, China and India. These divergent competitive national interests all have one thing in common - Islamofascists ultimately hate them all. The Islamofascists have become slick playing on some to alienate America, but the Mohammedan hatred is there nonetheless.

Victor Davis Hanson says it like this:
"The Europeans and the Americans right now must accelerate their efforts and bring the crisis to a climax at the Security Council to force China and Russia publicly to take sides. India, Pakistan, and the Arab League should all be brought in and briefed on the dilemma, and asked to go on record supporting U.N. action.

The public relations war is critical. Zen-like, the United States must assure the Europeans, Russians, and Arabs that the credit for a peaceful solution would be theirs. The lunacy of the Iranian president should provide the narrative of events, and thus be quoted hourly - as we remain largely silent.

Economically, we should factor in the real possibility that Iranian oil might be off the global market, and prepare - we have been here before with the Iranian embargo of 1979 - for colossal gasoline price hikes. This should also be a reminder that Ahmadinejad, Saddam, Hugo Chavez, and an ascendant and increasingly undemocratic Putin all had in common both petrodollar largess and desperate Western, Chinese, and Indian importers willing to overlook almost anything to slake their thirst. Unless we develop an energy policy that collapses the global oil price, for the next half-century expect every few years something far creepier than the Saudi Royals and Col. Moammar Gadhafi to threaten the world order."

Read Hanson's entire article: "The Multilateral Moment."

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