Tuesday 31st of December 2024

blaster race .....

blaster race .....

How can a government that maintains more than 800 military facilities in more than 140 different foreign countries be anything other than an imperial power?  

The hundreds of thousands of troops who operate those bases and conduct operations from them, not to mention the approximately 125,000 sailors and Marines aboard the U.S. warships that cruise the oceans, are not going door to door selling Girl Scout cookies.  

United States of America is the name; intimidation is the game. 

Of course, the kingpins who control this massive machinery of coercion never describe it in such terms. In their lexis, American motives and actions are invariably noble.  

Listening to these bigwigs describe what the U.S. forces abroad are doing, you would never suspect that they seek anything but "regional stability," "security," "deterrence of potential regional aggressors," and "economic development and cooperation among nations."  

Inasmuch as hardly anybody favors instability, insecurity, international aggression, economic retrogression, and mutual strife among nations, the U.S. objectives, and hence the actions taken in their furtherance, would appear to be indisputably laudable. 

CENTCOM's Master Plan & US Global Hegemony

a more democratic, just and secure world...

July 23, 2008
Russia and Venezuela Will Coordinate Energy Policies
By ANNE BARNARD

MOSCOW — President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela and President Dmitri A. Medvedev of Russia declared Tuesday that their countries would more closely coordinate their actions on global oil and gas markets and that they would work together on foreign policy, a sphere in which both countries have sought to counter American influence.

Mr. Chávez, who was also expected to sign contracts to purchase more than $1 billion worth of Russian arms, called for the two nations to become “strategic partners” to defend against what he called an American threat to his country.

“That will guarantee the sovereignty of Venezuela, which the United States is now threatening,” Mr. Chávez said, according to the official Russian news agency RIA-Novosti, at the start of two days of planned meetings.

Mr. Medvedev, who met Mr. Chávez for the first time since succeeding Vladimir V. Putin as president, stopped short of endorsing his guest’s sharp remarks about the United States. So did Russian officials, who stressed the business significance of the new cooperation, including three new deals to expand Russian oil and gas companies’ presence in Latin America, rather than its political import.

But Mr. Medvedev noted that the two countries aim to promote the United Nations as the primary venue for settling international disputes.

“We think that it is our common task to achieve a more democratic, just and secure world,” Mr. Medvedev said, according to the Interfax news agency. “We are ready to work on this, together with the Venezuelan president.”