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    Full endorsement on this opportunity - but it's limited, so get in while you can!

Adam Montana Weekly 29 May 2019


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Thanks Adam,  

Yes, Yes, Yes, 

crypto is beginning an upswing that in my opinion will make 2017 look like a training camp. Which for me it was. :lol:

People seriously consider jumping in if you can afford to, you are not going to see VALUES this low ever again. 

:pirateship::bagofmoney:

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52 minutes ago, ladyGrace'sDaddy said:

Thanks Adam,  

Yes, Yes, Yes, 

crypto is beginning an upswing that in my opinion will make 2017 look like a training camp. Which for me it was. :lol:

People seriously consider jumping in if you can afford to, you are not going to see VALUES this low ever again. 

:pirateship::bagofmoney:

Yes! And don’t be shy to take profits on the way up! At least get your initial investment back ;) And have fun, bull runs are really fun lol..... unlike watching paint dry like the Dinar lol 

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3 hours ago, Adam Montana said:

OIL - saw a little dip, but still stable and trending solid. No worries there. :twothumbs:

 

LINK

Oil prices rise after OPEC cuts

%D8%A7%D8%B1%D8%AA%D9%81%D8%A7%D8%B9-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%86%D9%81%D8%B7-696x435.jpg

 

[size=5[28th May, 2019


World oil prices rose on Tuesday, based on cuts led by the OPEC Plus alliance, as well as US sanctions on supplies to Iran and Venezuela.

By 09:55 GMT, US crude rose to $ 59.30 a barrel from the opening level of $ 59.20, recording a high of $ 59.32 and a low of $ 58.75.

Brent crude rose to $ 70.50 a barrel from the opening level of $ 69.97, and recorded a high of $ 70.57 and a low of $ 69.68.

Prices are currently supported by OPEC-Plus cuts of about 1.2 million bpd, which began in January and will last until the end of June. [/size]

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It Looks Like After Deducting The Lowest In The World Costs - There’s More Than Plenty Of Margin ! B) 

 

 

Even With All Of The Middle East Corruption ! :bananacamel:

:D  :D  :D 

 

 

 

LINK

$ 9.5 The cost of producing a barrel of oil in Iraq


11032.jpg

 

29th May, 2019

Al-Iktissad News received special documents relating to the oil sector in Iraq

The documents confirm that the cost of producing a barrel of oil in Iraq for 2019 estimated at 9.5 dollars, the lowest in the world after Kuwait

The cost of production was estimated at $ 10.7 in 2017

With regard to «service contracts for licensing tours», the documents indicate that the profitability of companies engaged for each additional barrel product ranging from $ 1.15 to $ 7.5

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LINK

80% of Iraqi labor in the oil fields


4431.jpg

 

29th May, 2019

 

A document obtained by "Economy News" on the number of Iraqis working in the oil fields compared to their foreign counterparts, noting that the fields of Wasit province is the lowest in terms of employment of Iraqi workers

The total number of Iraqis working in the oil fields is estimated at 16766 compared to 4325 foreign workers. In terms of statistics, the percentage of Iraqi workers in the oil fields is estimated at 80% compared to the species

Al-Ahdab (180 km southeast of Baghdad), which is occupied by the Chinese company Al Waha, is considered the lowest in terms of the number of Iraqi workers, 1194 foreign workers compared to 1125 Iraqis

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Iran, Iraq, & The Axis Of Sanity

 

No other country in the Middle East is as important in countering America’s rush to provide Israel with another war than Iraq. Fortunately for Iran, the winds of change in Iraq and the many other local countries under similar threat, thus, make up an unbroken chain of border to border support. This support is only in part due to sympathy for Iran and its plight against the latest bluster by the Zio-American bully.

In the politics of the Middle East, however, money is at the heart of all matters. As such, this ring of defensive nations is collectively and quickly shifting towards the new Russo/ Sino sphere of economic influence. These countries now form a geo-political defensive perimeter that, with Iraq entering the fold, make a US ground war virtually impossible and an air war very restricted in opportunity.

 

image.png.b4d7a1b961821f5a8cf63d2094338990.png

 

In the last two months, Iraq parliamentarians have been exceptionally vocal in their calls for all foreign military forces- particularly US forces- to leave immediately. Politicians from both blocs of Iraq’s divided parliament called for a vote to expel US troops and promised to schedule an extraordinary session to debate the matter. “Parliament must clearly and urgently express its view about the ongoing American violations of Iraqi sovereignty,” said Salam al-Shimiri, a lawmaker loyal to the populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

Iraq’s ambassador to Moscow, Haidar Mansour Hadi, went further saying that Iraq “does not want a new devastating war in the region.” He told a press conference in Moscow this past week, “Iraq is a sovereign nation. We will not let [the US] use our territory,” he said. Other comments by Iraqi Prime Minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi agreed. Other MPs called for a timetable for complete US troop withdrawal.

Then a motion was introduced demanding war reparations from the US and Israel for using internationally banned weapons while destroying Iraq for seventeen years and somehow failing to find those “weapons of mass destruction.”

As Iraq/ Iran economic ties continue to strengthen, with Iraq recently signing on for billions of cubic meters of Iranian natural gas, the shift towards Russian influence- an influence that prefers peace- was certified as Iraq sent a delegation to Moscow to negotiate the purchase of the Russian S-400 anti-aircraft system.

To this massive show of pending democracy and rapidly rising Iraqi nationalism, US Army spokesman, Colonel Ryan Dillon, provided the kind of delusion only the Zio-American military is known for, saying,

Our continued presence in Iraq will be conditions-based, proportional to need, in coordination with and by the approval of the Iraqi government.”

US influence in Iraq came to a possible conclusion this past Saturday, May 18, 2019, when it was reported that the Iraqi parliament would vote on a bill compelling the invaders to leave. Speaking about the vote on the draft bill, Karim Alivi, a member of the Iraqi parliament’s national security and defense committee, said on Thursday that the country’s two biggest parliamentary factions — the Sairoon bloc, led by Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, and the Fatah alliance, headed by secretary general of the Badr Organization, Hadi al-Ameri — supported the bill.

Strangely, Saturday’s result has not made it to the media as yet, and American meddling would be a safe guess as to the delay, but the fact that this bill would certainly have passed strongly shows that Iraq well understands the weakness of the American bully: Iraq’s own US militarily imposed democracy.

Iraq shares a common border with Iran that the US must have for any ground war. Both countries also share a similar religious demographic where Shia is predominant and the plurality of cultures substantially similar and previously living in harmony. Both also share a very deep seeded and deserved hatred of Zio- America. Muqtada al-Sadr, who, after coming out first in the 2018 Iraqi elections, is similar to Hizbullah’s Hassan Nasrallah in his religious and military influence within the well trained and various Shia militias. He is firmly aligned with Iran as is Fattah Alliance. Both detest Zio- America.

A ground invasion needs a common and safe border. Without Iraq, this strategic problem for US forces becomes complete. The other countries also with borders with Iran are Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Turkey, Afghanistan and Pakistan. All have several good reasons that they will not, or cannot, be used for ground forces.

With former Armenian President Robert Kocharian under arrest in the aftermath of the massive anti-government 2018 protests, Bolton can check that one off the list first. Azerbaijan is mere months behind the example next door in Armenia, with protests increasing and indicating a change towards eastern winds. Regardless, Azerbaijan, like Turkmenistan, is an oil producing nation and as such is firmly aligned economically with Russia. Political allegiance seems obvious since US influence is limited in all three countries to blindly ignoring the massive additional corruption and human rights violations by Presidents Ilham Aliyev and Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow.

However, Russian economic influence pays in cash. Oil under Russian control is the lifeblood of both of these countries. Recent developments and new international contracts with Russia clearly show whom these leaders are actually listening to.

Turkey would appear to be firmly shifting into Russian influence. A NATO member in name only. Ever since he shot down his first- and last- Russian fighter jet, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan has thumbed his nose at the Americans. Recently he refused to succumb to pressure and will receive Iranian oil and, in July, the Russian S-400 anti-aircraft/missile system. This is important since there is zero chance Putin will relinquish command and control or see them missiles used against Russian armaments. Now, Erdogan is considering replacing his purchase of thirty US F-35s with the far superior Russian SU- 57 and a few S-500s for good measure.

Economically, America did all it could to stop the Turk Stream gas pipeline installed by Russia’s Gazprom, that runs through Turkey to eastern Europe and will provide $billions to Erdogan and Turkey. It will commence operation this year. Erdogan continues to purchase Iranian oil and to call for Arab nations to come together against US invasion in Iran. This week, Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar renewed Turkey’s resolve, saying his country is preparing for potential American sanctions as a deadline reportedly set by the US for Ankara to cancel the S-400 arms deal with Russia or face penalties draws near.

So, Turkey is out for both a ground war and an air war since the effectiveness of all those S-400’s might be put to good use if America was to launch from naval positions in the Mediterranean. Attacking from the Black Sea is out since it is ringed by countries under Russo/ Sino influence and any attack on Iran will have to illegally cross national airspace aligned with countries preferring the Russo/ Sino alliance that favours peace. An unprovoked attack would leave the US fleet surrounded with the only safe harbours in Romania and Ukraine. Ships move much slower than missiles.

Afghanistan is out, as the Taliban are winning. Considering recent peace talks from which they walked out and next slaughtered a police station near the western border with Iran, they have already won. Add the difficult terrain near the Iranian border and a ground invasion is very unlikely

Although new Pakistani President Imran Khan has all the power and authority of a primary school crossing guard, the real power within the Pakistani military, the ISI, is more than tired of American influence. ISI has propagated the Taliban for years and often gave refuge to Afghan anti-US forces allowing them to use their common border for cover. Although in the past ISI has been utterly mercenary in its very duplicitous- at least- foreign allegiances, after a decade of US drone strikes on innocent Pakistanis, the chance of ground-based forces being allowed is very doubtful. Like Afghanistan terrain also increases this unlikelihood.

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-05-28/iran-iraq-axis-sanity

Edited by Charlie Echo
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