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Raceman
03-13-2003, 01:24 PM
SEVERE EARTHQUAKE IN FRANCE


Today it was reported that severe earthquakes have occurred in
10 different locations in France.
The severity was measured in excess of 10 on the Richter Scale.
The cause was the 56,681 dead American soldiers buried in French soil rolling over in their graves.
According to the American Battle Monuments Commission there are 26,255 Yankee dead from World War I buried in 4 cemeteries in France.
There are 30,426 American dead from World War II buried in 6 cemeteries in France.
These 56,681 brave American heroes died in their youth to liberate a country which is guilty of shameful unspeakable behavior in the 21st century.
May the United States of America never forget their sacrifice as we find ways to forcefully deal with the Godforsaken unappreciative, forgetful country of France!


(this is from another E mail I rec'd this morning)

Firestarter
03-13-2003, 02:47 PM
A column in the New York Times dated
March 13 makes reference to a contract supposedly signed by SNPE for the
delivery to Iraq of five tons of UDMH (unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine),
and
also claims that discussions are in progress for the delivery of ammonium
perchlorate.
The management of SNPE categorically denies that there have been any
commercial relations whatsoever between the SNPE group and Iraq.
Any exports of these types of products require prior authorization
from
French authorities (authorization for export of military materials) and
all
exports of military materials to Iraq are strictly prohibited by France.

The French Connection

Firestarter
03-13-2003, 02:48 PM
France, China and Syria all have a common reason for keeping American and
> British troops out of Iraq: the three nations may not want the world to
> discover that their nationals have been illicitly supplying Saddam Hussein
> with materials used in building long-range surface-to-surface missiles.
>
> We're not talking about short-range Al Samoud 2 missiles, which Saddam is
> ostentatiously destroying to help his protectors avert an invasion, nor
> his old mobile Scuds. The delivery system for mass destruction warheads
> requires a much more sophisticated propulsion system and fuels.
>
> If you were running the Iraqi ballistic missiles project, where in the
> world would you go to buy the chemical that is among the best binders for
> solid propellant?
>
> Answer: to 116 DaWu Road in Zibo, a city in the Shandong Province of
> China, where a company named Qilu Chemicals is a leading producer of a
> transparent liquid rubber named hydroxy terminated polybutadiene,
> familiarly known in the advanced-rocket trade as HTPB.
>
> But you wouldn't want the word "chemicals" to appear anywhere on the
> purchase because that might alert inspectors enforcing sanctions, so you
> employ a couple of cutouts. One is an import-export company with which
> Qilu Chemicals often does business.
>
> To be twice removed from the source, you would turn to CIS Paris, a
> Parisian broker that is active in dealings of many kinds with Baghdad. Its
> director is familiar with the order but denies being the agent.
>
> A shipment of 20 tons of HTPB, whose sale to Iraq is forbidden by U.N.
> resolutions and the oil-for-food agreement, left China in August 2002 in a
> 40-foot container. It arrived in the Syrian port of Tartus (fortified by
> the Knights Templar in 1183, and the Mediterranean terminus for an Iraqi
> oil pipeline today) and was received there by a trading company that was
> an intermediary for the Iraqi missile industry, the end user. The HTPB was
> then trucked across Syria to Iraq.
>
> Syria has no sophisticated missile-building program. What rocket weaponry
> it has comes off the shelf (and usually on credit) from Russia, so it
> therefore has no use for HTPB. But cash-starved Syria is the conduit for
> missile supplies to cash-flush Saddam, as this shipment demonstrates. We
> will have to wait until after the war to find out how much other weaponry,
> for what huge fees, Saddam has stored in currently un-inspectable Syrian
> warehouses.
>
> The French connection - brokering the deal among the Chinese producer, the
> Syrian land transporter and the Iraqi buyer - is no great secret to the
> world's arms merchants. French intelligence has long been aware of it. The
> requirement for a French export license as well as U.N. sanctions approval
> may have been averted by disguising it as a direct offshore sale from
> China to Syria.
>
> I'm also told that a contract was signed last April in Paris for five tons
> of 99 percent unsymmetric dimethylhydrazine, another advanced missile
> fuel, which is produced by France's Société Nationale des Poudre et
> Explosifs. In addition, Iraqi attempts to buy an oxidizer for solid
> propellant missiles, ammonium perchlorate, were successful, at least on
> paper. Both chemicals, like HTPB, require explicit approval by the U.N.
> Sanctions Committee before they can be sold to Iraq.
>
> Perhaps a few intrepid members of the Chirac Adoration Society, formerly
> known as the French media, will ask France's lax export-control
> authorities about these shipments. U.N. inspectors looking at Iraq's El
> Sirat trading company might try to follow its affiliate, the Gudia Bureau,
> to dealings in Paris.
>
> Is this account what journalists call a "keeper," one held back for
> publication at a critical moment, made more newsworthy by the Security
> Council debate? No; I've been poking around for only about a week,
> starting with data originating from an Arab source, not from the C.I.A.
> (Anti-Kurdish analysts at Langley have it in for me for embarrassing them
> for 18 months on Al Qaeda's ties to Saddam, especially in the terrorist
> Ansar enclave in Iraqi Kurdistan.)
>
> This detail about the France-China-Syria-Iraq propellant collaboration
> makes for dull reading, but reveals some of the motivation behind the
> campaign of those nations to suppress the truth. The truth, however, will
> out.