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hermes

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O Príncipe
« em: 2013-07-20 15:44:26 »
Um artigo interessante sobre o Outono Árabe e o crescente cisma entre o tio Sam e a casa de Saud.

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Saudis’ Unprecedented Break with Washington over Egypt

By F. William Engdahl
Global Research, July 18, 2013

http://www.globalresearch.ca/saudis-unprecedented-break-with-washington-over-egypt/5343092

One of the least commented aspects of ousting Egypt’s Morsi is the defiant act of the Saudi Royal House in backing the ouster of the Brotherhood and supporting the military restoration. The Saudi move is unprecedented in its open defiance of White House declared backing for the Muslim Brotherhood. The implications of the split are huge.

Twilight in the desert?

Since the time in 1945 on his return from the fateful Yalta Conference, that US President Roosevelt met Saudi King Ibn Saud and won exclusive rights for US Rockefeller-group oil companies to Saudi Arabia’s vast oil wealth, the relationship between Saudi and US foreign policy has been one of almost satrapy status for the Saudis.[1] Following the Kissinger-orchestrated 1973 “oil shock” in which OPEC raised its price by some 400%, Washington extracted a pledge from the Saudis that they would insure that OPEC sold its oil only in dollars, thereby ensuring the continued dominance of the US dollar as world reserve currency. In return, Washington agreed to sell US arms including training the Saudi Air Force.[2]

And in 2010 just as Washington launched its Arab Spring “democracy” offensive in Tunisia, Egypt and across the Islamic arc of crisis, the Obama Administration announced the largest arms deal in US history. The US agreed to sell the Saudis 84 F-15s new and upgrade another 70 as part of a €46 billion deal, the biggest arms deal in US history, as it prepared to isolate Iran. [3]

As we reported in an earlier article, before the Egyptian military coup, the Saudis had given secret assurance to Defense Minister and Chief of the Army, General Abdul Fattah al-Sisi, that the Saudis along with other conservative Gulf oil states including Kuwait and UAE would guarantee financial support should the Obama Administration cut the €1 billion annual aid to Egypt’s military in retaliation for ousting their man, Morsi.[4]

On July 17, the newly-sworn-in Egyptian transitional government confirmed that it has received €6 billion in grants, loans and fuel from Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Saudi Arabia approved €4 billion in aid to Egypt and the UAE has offered €2 billion in desperately needed support for the economy. The Saudi funds comprise a €1.5 billion central bank deposit, €1.5 billion in energy products, and €750 million in cash, Saudi Finance Minister Ibrahim Al-Assaf said. The UAE will make a €750 million grant to Egypt and a €1.5 billion loan in the form of an interest-free deposit with Egypt’s central bank. [5]

The news is a double slap-in-the-face to Washington who had insisted that Morsi’s government buckle under to harsh IMF conditionalities as precondition for financial help

Qatar reacts dramatically

Conspicuously, one Gulf energy-rich state absent from the aid is Qatar whose Emir Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani had poured more than €6 billion in Egypt since the revolution two-and-a-half years ago and perhaps another €7 billion to bankroll Islamists in Libya, Syria and Gaza, the Palestinian enclave run by Hamas, an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood. Qataris home to the US Central Command’s Forward Headquarters and the Combined Air Operations Center. And, most notably, until the Saudi and UAE-backed military coup against Brotherhood rule in Egypt on July 3, Qatar was home to leading members of the Muslim Brotherhood and one of its major financial backers in Syria, Egypt, Libya, and across the Islamic world. [6]

Within minutes of the Saudi and UAE backed Egypt coup, the Emir of Qatar took note of the implications and announced his abdication in favor of his son, Tamim. Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani, who had shaped Qatar’s pro-Muslim Brotherhood foreign policy, has been silenced, replaced by a military man who had been serving as deputy interior minister. The new Qatar leadership is now using words like “reassessment”, “recalibration” and “corrections” to discuss their foreign policy. In brief, they dare not risk total isolation within the Saudi-dominated Gulf Arab states.[7]

The Saudi decision to take bold action to stop what it saw as a disastrous US Islamic strategy of backing Brotherhood revolutions across the Islamic world has dealt a blow to the mad US strategy of believing it can use the Brotherhood as a political force to control the Islamic world more tightly and use it to destabilize China, Russia and the Islamic parts of Central Asia.

The Saudi monarchy began to fear that the secretive Brotherhood would one day rise against their rule as well. They never forgave George W. Bush and Washington for toppling the Baath Party secular dictatorship of Saddam Hussein in Iraq that brought a majority Shi’ite to power there, nor the US decision to topple close Saudi ally Mubarak in Egypt. America’s dutiful “vassal state” in the Middle East, Saudi Arabia, revolted on July 3 by backing and supporting the military coup in Egypt.

Aside from loudly protesting the Egyptian generals’ coup against their Brotherhood allies, Washington so far has been able to do little, an indication of the declining US global power. The Pentagon has sent two amphibious assault ships carrying 2,600 Marines to the southern Egyptian Red Sea coast. The huge USS Kearsarge with 1,800 Marines and the USS San Antonio with 800 Marines, “moved up into the Red Sea and parked off Egypt, because we don’t know what’s going to happen,” stated General James Amos, commandant of the Marine Corps.

Washington is suddenly in a major foreign policy disarray as the new Egyptian interim government is sworn in. To be continued…

Notes

[1] F. William Engdahl, Gods of Money, 2009, edition.engdahl, Wiesbaden, pp. 190-193.   

[2] F. William Engdahl, A Century of War, edition.engdahl, 2011, Wiesbaden, pp. 152-156.

[3] Ian Black, Barack Obama to authorise record $60bn Saudi arms sale, The Guardian, UK, 13 September 2010, accessed in http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/sep/13/us-saudi-arabia-arms-deal.

[4] F. William Engdahl, Washington Islamist Strategy in Crisis as Morsi Toppled, Veterans Today, 4 July, 2013, accessed in http://www.veteranstoday.com/2013/07/04/washington-islamist-strategy-in-crisis-as-morsi-toppled/.

[5] Reuters/AP, Egypt wins $ 8 billion Saudi and UAE aid names PM, 17 July, 2013, accessed in http://www.arabnews.com/news/457496.

[6] N.P., Qatar’s foreign policy: Change of tack, The Economist, UK, July 15th 2013, accessed in http://www.economist.com/blogs/pomegranate/2013/07/qatar-s-foreign-policy.

[7] Ibid.
« Última modificação: 2013-10-18 19:33:48 por hermes »
"Everyone knows where we have been. Let's see where we are going." – Another

hermes

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #1 em: 2013-10-18 19:36:01 »
Saudi Arabia rejects seat on UN Security Council

By AYA BATRAWY and EDITH M. LEDERER
1 hour ago

http://news.yahoo.com/saudi-arabia-rejects-seat-un-security-council-090849059.html

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Saudi Arabia on Friday rejected its seat on the U.N. Security Council hours after it was elected to it, in a rare and startling move aimed at protesting the body's failure to resolve the Syrian civil war.

The Saudi discontent appeared largely directed at its longtime ally, the United States, reflecting more than two years of frustration. The two are at odds over a number of Mideast issues, including how Washington has handled some of the region's crises, particularly in Egypt and Syria. It also comes as ties between the U.S. and Iran, the Saudi's regional foe, appear to be tepidly improving.

Saudi Arabia showed its displeasure last month when Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal declined to address the General Assembly meeting. Days later, the kingdom's unease with Washington appeared to manifest when President Barack Obama spoke to Iran's new President Hassan Rouhani in a groundbreaking telephone call.

The kingdom was given one of the rotating seats on the 15-member council in a vote Thursday.

On Friday, the Saudi Foreign Ministry issued a statement rejecting the seat, saying the U.N. Security Council had failed in multiple cases in the Middle East. Particularly, it said U.N. failure to act has enabled Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime to perpetrate the killings of its people, including the use of chemical weapons. The Syrian regime denies using chemical weapons.

"Allowing the ruling regime in Syria to kill its people and burn them with chemical weapons in front of the entire world and without any deterrent or punishment is clear proof and evidence of the U.N. Security Council's inability to perform its duties and shoulder its responsibilities," the ministry said in the statement carried on the state news agency.

Saudi Arabia backs the rebels fighting to overthrow Assad in a war that has killed some 100,000 people since early 2011. Repeated attempts by the U.N. Security Council to address the conflict have fallen apart, usually because Assad's ally Russia has blocked strong resolutions. Still, in a rare consensus, the council passed a resolution on destroying Syria's chemical arsenal after an Aug. 21 chemical attack.

Saudi Arabia and other Sunni Arab leaders have backed the Syrian rebels with weapons and financing in part to counter their regional rival Iran, which has strongly thrown its weight behind its ally, Assad. At the same time, the friendly gestures between the U.S. and Iran's new government have made Saudi Arabia uneasy.

Russia said it was "surprised" and "baffled by the reasons that the kingdom gave to explain its position" — particularly after the chemical weapons resolution. That resolution was passed after Russia brokered Damascus' consent to surrender its chemical arsenal, which it had long kept secret.

There appear to be some efforts under way to get the Saudis to recant. Britain's deputy U.N. ambassador Peter Wilson told reporters his team is looking at what precisely the Saudis meant by their statement and are talking to them "to get a little bit more background on what lies behind this."

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he has "taken note" of the media reports of the Saudi rejection, "but I would like to caution you that I have received no official notification in this regard."

"We also are looking forward to working very closely in addressing many important challenges with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia," particularly the Syrian war and other issues, including combatting "terrorism and nuclear proliferation," he said.

He said member states are holding discussions on how to deal with the Saudi move. Ban talked to a senior official in the Saudi government after the news broke, a U.N. official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the discussion was private.

U.N. diplomats and officials said the Saudi rejection of the seat appears to be unprecedented. U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said U.N. officials were going back through Security Council records to check whether this was the first time a nation rejected a seat.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry statement was a sharp change in tone from comments by the kingdom's U.N. ambassador the day before. At the time, Abdallah Al-Mouallimi said his country's election to the council was "a reflection of a longstanding policy in support of moderation and in support of resolving disputes by peaceful means."

He also said his country takes its election "very seriously as a responsibility."

The Saudi statement Friday also blamed the Security Council for failing to transform the Middle East into a zone free of weapons of mass destruction — a reference to Israel, which has never confirmed or denied possession of nuclear weapons. It also said the Council has not been able to resolve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict over the past six decades.

While Saudi Arabia and the United States share core strategic interests regarding mutual worries over Iran, cooperation in counter-terrorism and support for Syria's rebels, they have differed in their approach.

Most recently Saudi Arabia's leaders were furious when the United States pulled back from possible military action against the Syrian regime in exchange for the Russian plan to dismantle Syria's chemical arsenal.

Editorials in Arabic newspapers over the past several weeks have reflected the Gulf's concerns. In an opinion piece published in the Al-Hayat daily Arabic newspaper, columnist George Samaan wrote that if the Gulf states feel Washington is turning its back on them by improving ties with Iran, the Arab states could always look east to other countries.

Another columnist, Abdel-Rahman el-Rasahd, wrote in Al-Sharq Al-Awsat daily that rather than Obama striking the Syrian regime, he struck U.S. allies by calling Iran's president and pushing Gulf states to pursue their own defense policies.

Washington-based analyst Frederic Wehrey said the recent U.S.-Iranian overtures were a "shock" to Saudi rulers..

"It's not really a question that the U.S. is pursuing relations with Iran, but that Saudi Arabia feels left out in the cold," said Wehrey of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. They felt "the rug had been pulled out from under them" and saw it as American "betrayal."

The kingdom easily won the Security Council seat in Thursday's vote in New York, facing no opposition because there were no contested races for the first time in several years. The Council seats are highly coveted because they give countries a strong voice in matters dealing with international peace and security, in places like Syria, Iran and North Korea, as well as the U.N.'s far-flung peacekeeping operations.

Saudi Arabia was nominated by the Asia group for an Arab seat on the council, so Asian nations would have to select a new candidate — or candidates. The entire 193-member General Assembly would then have to hold another election to choose a new council member.

The 15-member council includes five permanent members with veto power — and 10 nonpermanent members elected for two-year terms.
"Everyone knows where we have been. Let's see where we are going." – Another

hermes

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #2 em: 2013-10-24 11:00:59 »
O Príncipe já tem uma resposta a dar.

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Saudi Arabia severs diplomatic ties with US over response to conflict in Syria

  • Saudi Arabia is an important ally to the U.S. as it provides a secure source of oil
  • Saudi diplomats now promise a 'major shift' in relations with the U.S. over inaction in the conflict in Syria
  • Secretary of State John Kerry says he is committed to keeping a good relationship with the Saudis

By Reuters Reporter
PUBLISHED: 00:27 GMT, 23 October 2013 | UPDATED: 17:01 GMT, 23 October 2013

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2472680/Saudi-Arabia-severs-diplomatic-ties-US-response-conflict-Syria.html

Upset at President Barack Obama's policies on Iran and Syria, members of Saudi Arabia's ruling family are threatening a rift with the United States that could take the alliance between Washington and the kingdom to its lowest point in years.

Saudi Arabia's intelligence chief is vowing that the kingdom will make a 'major shift' in relations with the United States to protest perceived American inaction over Syria's civil war as well as recent U.S. overtures to Iran, a source close to Saudi policy said on Tuesday.

Prince Bandar bin Sultan told European diplomats that the United States had failed to act effectively against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, was growing closer to Tehran, and had failed to back Saudi support for Bahrain when it crushed an anti-government revolt in 2011, the source said.

'The shift away from the U.S. is a major one,' the source close to Saudi policy said. 'Saudi doesn't want to find itself any longer in a situation where it is dependent.'

It was not immediately clear whether the reported statements by Prince Bandar, who was the Saudi ambassador to Washington for 22 years, had the full backing of King Abdullah.

The growing breach between the United States and Saudi Arabia was also on display in Washington, where another senior Saudi prince criticized Obama's Middle East policies, accusing him of 'dithering' on Syria and Israeli-Palestinian peace.

In unusually blunt public remarks, Prince Turki al-Faisal called Obama's policies in Syria 'lamentable' and ridiculed a U.S.-Russian deal to eliminate Assad's chemical weapons. He suggested it was a ruse to let Obama avoid military action in Syria.

'The current charade of international control over Bashar's chemical arsenal would be funny if it were not so blatantly perfidious. And designed not only to give Mr. Obama an opportunity to back down (from military strikes), but also to help Assad to butcher his people,' said Prince Turki, a member of the Saudi royal family and former director of Saudi intelligence. 

The United States and Saudi Arabia have been allies since the kingdom was declared in 1932, giving Riyadh a powerful military protector and Washington secure oil supplies.

The Saudi criticism came days after the 40th anniversary of the October 1973 Arab oil embargo imposed to punish the West for supporting Israel in the Yom Kippur war.

That was one of the low points in U.S.-Saudi ties, which were also badly shaken by the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States. Most of the 9/11 hijackers were Saudi nationals.

Saudi Arabia gave a clear sign of its displeasure over Obama's foreign policy last week when it rejected a coveted two-year term on the U.N. Security Council in a display of anger over the failure of the international community to end the war in Syria and act on other Middle East issues.

Prince Turki indicated that Saudi Arabia will not reverse that decision, which he said was a result of the Security Council's failure to stop Assad and implement its own decision on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

'There is nothing whimsical about the decision to forego membership of the Security Council. It is based on the ineffectual experience of that body,' he said in a speech to the Washington-based National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations.

In London, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said he discussed Riyadh's concerns when he met Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal in Paris on Monday.

Kerry said he told the Saudi minister no deal with Iran was better than a bad deal. 'I have great confidence that the United States and Saudi Arabia will continue to be the close and important friends and allies that we have been,' Kerry told reporters.

Prince Bandar is seen as a foreign policy hawk, especially on Iran. The Sunni Muslim kingdom's rivalry with Shi'ite Iran, an ally of Syria, has amplified sectarian tensions across the Middle East.

A son of the late defense minister and crown prince, Prince Sultan, and a protégé of the late King Fahd, he fell from favor with King Abdullah after clashing on foreign policy in 2005.

But he was called in from the cold last year with a mandate to bring down Assad, diplomats in the Gulf say. Over the past year, he has led Saudi efforts to bring arms and other aid to Syrian rebels.

'Prince Bandar told diplomats that he plans to limit interaction with the U.S.,' the source close to Saudi policy said.

This happens after the U.S. failed to take any effective action on Syria and Palestine. Relations with the U.S. have been deteriorating for a while, as Saudi feels that the U.S. is growing closer with Iran and the U.S. also failed to support Saudi during the Bahrain uprising," the source said.

The source declined to provide more details of Bandar's talks with the diplomats, which took place in the past few days.

But he suggested that the planned change in ties between the energy superpower and the United States would have wide-ranging consequences, including on arms purchases and oil sales.

Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, ploughs much of its earnings back into U.S. assets. Most of the Saudi central bank's net foreign assets of $690 billion are thought to be denominated in dollars, much of them in U.S. Treasury bonds.

'All options are on the table now, and for sure there will be some impact,' the Saudi source said.

He said there would be no further coordination with the United States over the war in Syria, where the Saudis have armed and financed rebel groups fighting Assad.

The kingdom has informed the United States of its actions in Syria, and diplomats say it has respected U.S. requests not to supply the groups with advanced weaponry that the West fears could fall into the hands of al Qaeda-aligned groups.

Saudi anger boiled over after Washington refrained from military strikes in response to a poison gas attack in Damascus in August when Assad agreed to give up his chemical weapons arsenal.

Representative Chris Van Hollen, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives' Democratic leadership, told Reuters' Washington Summit on Tuesday that the Saudi moves were intended to pressure Obama to take action in Syria.

'We know their game. They're trying to send a signal that we should all get involved militarily in Syria, and I think that would be a big mistake to get in the middle of the Syrian civil war,' Van Hollen said.

'And the Saudis should start by stopping their funding of the al Qaeda-related groups in Syria. In addition to the fact that it's a country that doesn't allow women to drive,' said Van Hollen, who is close to Obama on domestic issues in Congress but is less influential on foreign policy.

Saudi Arabia is concerned about signs of a tentative reconciliation between Washington and Tehran, something Riyadh fears may lead to a 'grand bargain' on the Iranian nuclear program that would leave Riyadh at a disadvantage.

Prince Turki expressed doubt that Obama would succeed in what he called an 'open arms approach' to Iran, which he accused of meddling in Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq and Bahrain.

'We Saudis observe President Obama's efforts in this regard. The road ahead is arduous,' he said. 'Whether (Iranian President Hassan) Rouhani will succeed in steering Iran toward sensible policies is already contested in Iran. The forces of darkness in Qom and Tehran are well entrenched.'

The U.N. Security Council has been paralyzed over the 31-month-old Syria conflict, with permanent members Russia and China repeatedly blocking measures to condemn Assad.

Saudi Arabia backs Assad's mostly Sunni rebel foes. The Syrian leader, whose Alawite sect is derived from Shi'ite Islam, has support from Iran and the armed Lebanese Shi'ite movement Hezbollah. The Syrian leader denounces the insurgents as al Qaeda-linked groups backed by Sunni-ruled states.

In Bahrain, home of the U.S. Fifth Fleet, a simmering pro-democracy revolt by its Shi'ite majority has prompted calls by some in Washington for U.S. ships to be based elsewhere.

Many U.S. economic interests in Saudi Arabia involve government contracts in defense, other security sectors, health care, education, information technology and construction.
"Everyone knows where we have been. Let's see where we are going." – Another

Asgard

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #3 em: 2013-11-03 22:36:52 »
http://www.lavanguardia.com/magazine/20131018/54392096873/en-portada-el-nuevo-imperio-arabe-reportaje-magazine-20-octubre-2013.html
El nuevo imperio árabe

Qatar posee el rascacielos más alto de la Unión Europea (la torre Shard) y el templo mundial de las compras ­(Harrods), ambos en Londres. El minúsculo país del Golfo es el mayor accionista individual del gigante mediático francés Lagardère y de la mítica joyería Tiffany de Estados Unidos. Y tiene participaciones significativas en las firmas alemanas Volkswagen-Porsche y Siemens.
Emiratos Árabes ha comprado el 100% de la española Cepsa y ha trenzado alianzas con General Electric, Airbus y Boeing para consolidar su floreciente industria aeroespacial. Kuwait acaba de adquirir la sede en Europa del Bank of America y está invirtiendo en el mayor proyecto urbanístico de Manhattan, en Nueva York, el Hudson Yards… Además, los estados del Golfo, ricos en hidrocarburos, están prácticamente apoderándose del fútbol mundial.
De unos años a esta parte, la 'cesta de la compra' de los países árabes con petrodólares está llenándose de las más vistosas y onerosas adquisiciones de productos occidentales. En principio parece lógico. El boom en los precios del petróleo iniciado con el nuevo siglo –el tercero tras las subidas de 1973-74 y 1979-81– proporcionó la liquidez idónea para regar, aliviar y sacar jugo a las economías de un primer mundo cuyas fuentes financieras tradicionales se hallan exhaustas, cuando no fosilizadas.
Pero la ecuación no es tan simple. Para los que mueven ese dinero no se trata sólo de aprovechar gangas o especular en terreno barato, ni mucho menos de comprar por comprar, como algunos hicieron en el pasado con resultados a veces catastróficos; por el contrario, los planteamientos inversores de los señores del Golfo se cifran hoy en la planificación a largo plazo, la prevención y la construcción de estructuras productivas y financieras más perdurables que el propio maná de sus gigantes bolsas de hidrocarburos. Pues el cajero automático del petróleo también tiene los billetes y los días contados.
No es que exista un plan concertado entre los emires y los sultanes de Arabia Saudí, Qatar, Kuwait o Abu Dabi, que compiten entre ellos y hasta se miran de reojo, como reconoce el agregado económico de la embajada de Emiratos en Madrid, Mohamed Abdel. “Cuando Abu Dabi lanza un proyecto, enseguida Qatar anuncia otro parecido”, dice con una sonrisa. Esta competencia arrastra en cierta medida a la gigante Arabia Saudí, mientras que Kuwait “va más a su aire”, añade el agregado. También el profesor Haizam Amirah Fernández, investigador principal del mundo árabe en el Real Instituto Elcano, descarta la hipótesis de una “trama” árabe para conquistar occidente. “Cada país va a la suya”, coincide, aunque con un objetivo común a sus diferentes clanes y familias dominantes: perpetuarse en el poder.
Pero, aunque cada cual defienda sus intereses, las ricas naciones árabes sí comparten estrategias y mandatos con vistas a reorganizar, ampliar y fortalecer sus respectivas posiciones en el mundo. La consigna general, al menos sobre el papel, es garantizar el futuro de las generaciones venideras para cuando los pozos de petróleo y gas empiecen a secarse. La idea pasa por asegurarse un crecimiento sano y hacerse competitivos mediante la creación de buenas infraestructuras; por asegurar las pensiones de los hijos y los nietos; por controlar posibles espirales de inflación y vacunarse contra la 'enfermedad holandesa' (impacto negativo de una excesiva acumulación de divisas).
¿Cómo? Sobre todo, colocando los huevos en canastos diversos, rentables y sin riesgos excesivos; combinando las garantías y el saber hacer de las empresas del mundo desarrollado con el dinamismo de las potencias emergentes, y revirtiendo réditos en la región y el país propios. Los patriarcas están volcándose asimismo en la formación de técnicos y directivos mediante la fundación de campus locales de prestigiosas universidades internacionales. La receta se adereza con unas colosales inversiones en imagen de marca, propaganda y seducción a través de la diplomacia suave, los patrocinios deportivos o la televisión.
Una de las claves del giro estratégico en las inversiones de los estados y los príncipes más acaudalados del Golfo está en su obsesión y consiguiente esmero en no repetir errores del pasado. Todos tienen muy presentes las millonarias pérdidas que algunos de ellos sufrieron tras su entrada en la recapitalización de Merrill Lynch, Citibank o Morgan Stanley en los años 2007 y 2008. Tampoco han olvidado cómo Kuwait se pilló los dedos con su exagerada apuesta española de la mano de Torras KIO a principios de los noventa.
Los fondos soberanos, pujantes vehículos de inversión de reservas estatales, son el gran ariete de penetración exterior de las naciones petroleras del Golfo. Según las últimas estimaciones, de los 20 primeros fondos de este tipo en el planeta, nueve son árabes. Y de los 4,5 billones de dólares que esa veintena de fondos gestionaron el año pasado, 1,7 billones pertenecían a los petroestados de aquel área. Estas cifras, recogidas en un reciente estudio del 'think tank' español Esade Geo, deben tomarse, no obstante, a título orientativo. Sobre todo, porque una de las características y de los peros de los fondos soberanos emergentes está en su falta de transparencia sobre tamaño, criterios de manejo y propósitos. Las críticas y reservas del mundo empresarial y financiero ante tal opacidad han llevado a una treintena de estados, algunos árabes, a mejorar la información al respecto y empezar a rendir cuentas sobre sus fondos, lo que de paso ha ido facilitando su entrada en la economía real, es decir, más allá de los territorios especulativos.
Siempre bajo ese objetivo de crear un tejido económico más allá del petróleo, considerado una “bendición de Alá” pero al fin al cabo perecedero, los países del Golfo parecen haber dado con la fórmula perfecta, casi mágica, para expandir sus inversiones de la manera más segura, sostenible y rentable. Se trata de entretejer consorcios y construir triángulos en los que ellos ponen gran parte del dinero, las naciones desarrolladas aportan las empresas y la tecnología y los países de crecimiento rápido ofrecen la demanda.
Los qataríes, de largo los más activos de la región en los últimos años, destacan dentro esta modalidad de apuesta. Brilla la irrupción del fondo Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) en el mercado del lujo, a partir de empresas muy enfocadas en la expansión hacia los mercados de los nuevos ricos del globo, léase China, Rusia o Brasil. En esta clave, y no sólo en la de su propia querencia por todo aquello que resplandece –con obligada mención especial a la hasta hace poco jequesa Mozah bint Naser–, hay que entender la compra de Valentino, la toma de un 8,7% de Tiffany & Co. y un 1,03% de la francesa LVMH y el interés mostrado por Versace.
En ámbitos menos glamurosos pero igual de suculentos, Qatar Holding –subsidiario de QIA– busca los mismos efectos de triangulación empresarial con la adquisición del 5% del Banco Santander Brasil. O con la del 6,16% de Iberdrola y el 2,27% de Energías de Portugal, compañías que desarrollan importantes operaciones en América Latina.
La elección instrumental de empresas occidentales con buena entrada en los mercados emergentes denota, por pasiva, una cierta reticencia del nuevo capital árabe hacia el porvenir y los potenciales de demanda de los países desarrollados del norte. Como expone el estudio de Esade Geo sobre los fondos soberanos, las fuertes inversiones realizadas desde estas plataformas en la Unión Europea (UE) “no suponen un voto de confianza para la economía europea”. Sobre todo, en vista de “la incapacidad mostrada por la zona del euro para dar una solución creíble a la crisis de la deuda soberana”. Eso explicaría el que los fondos en cuestión estén limitando sus operaciones directas en la UEa productos básicos y activos muy seguros –como por ejemplo algunos servicios públicos y bienes inmuebles en el Reino Unido–, al tiempo que buscan firmas europeas con fuerte presencia en economías más pujantes que las suyas; unas compañías “que les proporcionan exposición a los mercados emergentes, pero con los escasos riesgos políticos y regulatorios dela UE”.
Aun con esas limitaciones, el 'hambre' de los inversores árabes es más que notorio en ciertos puntos y sectores de Europa. La palma se la lleva esa vieja potencia colonial tan conocida en la zona que es Gran Bretaña, consolidada como cuartel occidental del inquieto capital petrolero procedente de la península Arábiga. Y no sólo a través de adquisiciones emblemáticas. Los emporios financieros árabes buscan colocarse en lo más alto y lo más vistoso de la nación británica, como muestran la compra por Qatar del 95% de la empresa que controla el Shard –rascacielos con oficinas, un hotel, restaurantes...– o la adquisición de la sede de la embajada de Estados Unidos en Londres. Pero también ansían participar en servicios básicos del antiguo imperio. El fondo soberano kuwaití, KIA, lleva meses tanteando ese terreno. Junto con la canadiense Borealis y un fondo de pensiones para los trabajadores de las universidades del país, KIA intentó en junio hacerse con la compañía de aguas del Midlands y parte de Gales, Severns Trens. No salió bien, pero los kuwaitíes no tiran la toalla y, según desvelaba en julio el 'Financial Times', planean gastarse 5.000 millones de dólares en redes de saneamiento y de generación y distribución de energía en los próximos cinco años. Qatar posee, por su parte, el 20% de la firma que controla el aeropuerto de Heathrow.
El caso del Reino Unido es asimismo paradigmático en cuanto a la reciprocidad de la relación de Occidente con el nuevo capital árabe, al que los centros financieros del norte cortejan ya sin disimulo desde el batacazo del 2008. Después de un decenio de recelos a raíz de los atentados del 11-S en el 2001, y pese a la réplica del 7 de julio del 2005 en Londres, los señores de la túnica blanca han pasado en pocos años de villanos a caballeros. Los británicos –como el resto de los países occidentales, pero más– no han dudado en ponerles la alfombra roja sin hacer ascos al carácter no precisamente democrático de sus regímenes. En marzo del 2011, el Ejecutivo de David Cameron aprobó una nueva regulación sobre visados de inversor y empresario que facilitaba la obtención del permiso de residencia en las islas a quienes contribuyeran a su crecimiento con desembolsos de más de cinco millones de libras. Este estímulo, unido a los temores que la 'primavera árabe' despertó entre los príncipes y los emires de la zona, incrementó rápidamente el número de solicitudes de 'investor visas' por parte de potentados procedentes de la que los anglosajones llaman la zona de MENA ('Middle East and North Africa', es decir, Oriente Medio y Norte de África).
Gran Bretaña es, además, pionera en la incorporación a su sistema bancario de los instrumentos financieros bajo la prohibición de la usura y demás reglas económicas de la charia, otro aspecto esencial de la expansión del nuevo capital árabe. Desde el punto de vista occidental, se trata de no dejar pasar una fórmula de gran aceptación entre ahorradores e inversores musulmanes y de sorprendente éxito objetivo en tiempos de crisis; máxime en comparación con el desempeño de la banca convencional.
Aparte de los seis bancos con bandera de países musulmanes que ya existen en el Reino Unido, 17 entidades británicas entre las que destacan el HSB y el Lloyds han abierto “ventanillas islámicas”. Una modalidad en la que los intereses bancarios quedan sustituidos por tasas y contratos de mediación en inversiones e intercambios comerciales, con participación en los riesgos y los rendimientos. A la zaga de los británicos, casi todos los países europeos y sus sistemas bancarios van comprendiendo la conveniencia de no perderse este nicho de mercado. Francia, Suiza, Alemania y Holanda están en ello desde hace años: Deutsche Bank, Banque Nationale de Paris, ABM Amro yla Unionde Bancos Suizos (UBS) también han incorporado dichas ventanillas.
La predilección del capital del Golfo por Gran Bretaña y la Citylondinense, por delante de Estados Unidos y Wall Street, no se explica sólo por razones históricas y geográficas. Tampoco se debe a los rescoldos del 11-S, como lo demuestran los miles de millones de dólares con que KIA, Abu Dhabi Investment y el príncipe saudí Al Ualid bin Talal salieron al rescate de Citigroup y Merrill Lynch tras el descalabro de Lehman Brothers en el 2008. Como señala el especialista en el mundo árabe de la escuela de negocios Iese Alberto Ribera, los árabes sienten que en Londres pueden actuar “más abiertamente”. Y aunque mantengan fuertes vínculos con Estados Unidos, la superpotencia norteamericana no deja de ser para ellos “el gran amigo de Israel”, lo que constituye un obstáculo no menor a la hora de presentar internamente según qué alianzas, señala.
La explosión del nuevo capital árabe tiene su faceta más visible en dos sectores completamente distintos que Qatar y Emiratos Árabes han decidido enlazar en sus operaciones de expansión, exhibición de poderío y difusión de imagen a escala planetaria: el transporte aéreo y el fútbol. “El Golfo está convirtiéndose en un hub o núcleo de negocios y comunicaciones entre Europa, Estados Unidos y Asia”, dice la economista e historiadora Olivia Orozco, del consorcio institucional Casa Árabe. A juicio de esta especialista, ese nuevo rol internacional encuentra su mejor exponente en el impulso que los países árabes más prósperos dan a sus aerolíneas y aeropuertos. Doha, Dubái y Abu Dabi se han embarcado en la construcción de imponentes terminales internacionales con una lujosa oferta comercial y hotelera a su alrededor. Las instalaciones son tan costosas y de tal calibre que algunos analistas temen que quizá a sus promotores se les haya ido la mano con los cálculos de demanda potencial.
Pero, de momento, el negocio aéreo de Emiratos y Qatar tiene el viento de cola. Sus aerolíneas estatales no paran de crecer y abrir nuevas rutas en Estados Unidos, Asia y África, además de Oriente Medio. Hoy están consideradas las dos mejores líneas aéreas del mundo, según la última macroencuesta de los Sky World Airline Awards. La carrera que ambas compañías protagonizan desde hace algunos años
–ejemplo claro de esa competencia de la que hablaba el agregado económico de Abu Dabi– resulta casi insultante para las grandes y veteranas empresas del sector en Occidente, todas en apuros. Y los flamantes líderes del transporte aéreo no muestran recato en la ostentación de su triunfo: “Una vez más, Qatar Airways rompe la tendencia general en la industria al demostrar su resistencia en tiempos de austeridad económica global; mientras otros recortan, nosotros vemos la oportunidad de expandir nuestra presencia en el mundo”, decía el hombre fuerte de la compañía qatarí, Akbar al Baker, cuando anunció sus últimos planes de expansión en mayo.
Los patrocinios del Real Madrid y el FC Barcelona por la línea aérea Emirates y su competidora de Qatar, respectivamente, materializan desde esta temporada la fusión de dos poderosos vehículos de propaganda dentro de una inteligente operación encanto que, en el caso del fútbol, tendría su remate final en el mundial de Qatar 2022.
Y todo ello, con el inestimable empuje de ese gigante mediático que ya es la renovada cadena Al Yazira, a la que muchos cuestionaban hace años por supuestos vínculos con Al Qaeda y hoy todos consideran una respetable televisión internacional a la altura dela CNN o la BBC. Todo un síntoma.
La ofensiva del nuevo capital de los árabes del Golfo se viene intensificando en paralelo a las 'primaveras' de algunos países hermanos, al complicado invierno en que desembocan y a la guerra en Siria, donde sobre todo la monarquía saudí y el emirato de Qatar han dejado sentir su influencia mediante controvertidos apoyos a la causa suní y a grupos rebeldes más o menos radicalizados. El tiempo precisará qué implicaciones y consecuencias tienen tales apoyos en las calles y los frentes bélicos. Más claras son ya las intenciones de esa otra batalla que los ricos de la zona están librando a golpe de talonario, mucho más allá de sus fronteras, desde sus opulentos palacios y despachos.



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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #5 em: 2013-11-07 22:28:46 »
mais um toque para a imagem  ::)

Amos Yadlin, a former head of Israeli military intelligence, told a conference in Sweden that if Iran got the bomb, "the Saudis will not wait one month. They already paid for the bomb, they will go to Pakistan and bring what they need to bring."


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-24823846

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #6 em: 2013-11-23 21:40:49 »
Tudo indica que o Príncipe planeou / planeia com décadas de antecedência e dá os devidos avisos.

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Saudi nuclear weapons 'on order' from Pakistan

By Mark Urban
On 6 November 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-24823846

Saudi Arabia has invested in Pakistani nuclear weapons projects, and believes it could obtain atomic bombs at will, a variety of sources have told BBC Newsnight.

While the kingdom's quest has often been set in the context of countering Iran's atomic programme, it is now possible that the Saudis might be able to deploy such devices more quickly than the Islamic republic.

Earlier this year, a senior Nato decision maker told me that he had seen intelligence reporting that nuclear weapons made in Pakistan on behalf of Saudi Arabia are now sitting ready for delivery.

Last month Amos Yadlin, a former head of Israeli military intelligence, told a conference in Sweden that if Iran got the bomb, "the Saudis will not wait one month. They already paid for the bomb, they will go to Pakistan and bring what they need to bring."

Since 2009, when King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia warned visiting US special envoy to the Middle East Dennis Ross that if Iran crossed the threshold, "we will get nuclear weapons", the kingdom has sent the Americans numerous signals of its intentions.

Gary Samore, until March 2013 President Barack Obama's counter-proliferation adviser, has told Newsnight:

"I do think that the Saudis believe that they have some understanding with Pakistan that, in extremis, they would have claim to acquire nuclear weapons from Pakistan."

The story of Saudi Arabia's project - including the acquisition of missiles capable of delivering nuclear warheads over long ranges - goes back decades.

In the late 1980s they secretly bought dozens of CSS-2 ballistic missiles from China.

These rockets, considered by many experts too inaccurate for use as conventional weapons, were deployed 20 years ago.

This summer experts at defence publishers IHS Jane's reported the completion of a new Saudi CSS-2 base with missile launch rails aligned with Israel and Iran.

It has also been clear for many years that Saudi Arabia has given generous financial assistance to Pakistan's defence sector, including, western experts allege, to its missile and nuclear labs.

Visits by the then Saudi defence minister Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz al Saud to the Pakistani nuclear research centre in 1999 and 2002 underlined the closeness of the defence relationship.


Defence and security intelligence provider IHS Jane’s revealed the existence of Saudi Arabia’s third and undisclosed intermediate-range ballistic missile site, approximately 200 km southwest of Riyadh

In its quest for a strategic deterrent against India, Pakistan co-operated closely with China which sold them missiles and provided the design for a nuclear warhead.

The Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan was accused by western intelligence agencies of selling atomic know-how and uranium enrichment centrifuges to Libya and North Korea.

AQ Khan is also believed to have passed the Chinese nuclear weapon design to those countries. This blueprint was for a device engineered to fit on the CSS-2 missile, i.e the same type sold to Saudi Arabia.

Because of this circumstantial evidence, allegations of a Saudi-Pakistani nuclear deal started to circulate even in the 1990s, but were denied by Saudi officials.

They noted that their country had signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty, and called for a nuclear-free Middle East, pointing to Israel's possession of such weapons.

The fact that handing over atom bombs to a foreign government could create huge political difficulties for Pakistan, not least with the World Bank and other donors, added to scepticism about those early claims.

In Eating the Grass, his semi-official history of the Pakistani nuclear program, Major General Feroz Hassan Khan wrote that Prince Sultan's visits to Pakistan's atomic labs were not proof of an agreement between the two countries. But he acknowledged, "Saudi Arabia provided generous financial support to Pakistan that enabled the nuclear program to continue."

Whatever understandings did or did not exist between the two countries in the 1990s, it was around 2003 that the kingdom started serious strategic thinking about its changing security environment and the prospect of nuclear proliferation.

A paper leaked that year by senior Saudi officials mapped out three possible responses - to acquire their own nuclear weapons, to enter into an arrangement with another nuclear power to protect the kingdom, or to rely on the establishment of a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East.

It was around the same time, following the US invasion of Iraq, that serious strains in the US/Saudi relationship began to show themselves, says Gary Samore.

The Saudis resented the removal of Saddam Hussein, had long been unhappy about US policy on Israel, and were growing increasingly concerned about the Iranian nuclear program.

In the years that followed, diplomatic chatter about Saudi-Pakistani nuclear cooperation began to increase.

In 2007, the US mission in Riyadh noted they were being asked questions by Pakistani diplomats about US knowledge of "Saudi-Pakistani nuclear cooperation".

The unnamed Pakistanis opined that "it is logical for the Saudis to step in as the physical 'protector'" of the Arab world by seeking nuclear weapons, according to one of the State Department cables posted by Wikileaks.

By the end of that decade Saudi princes and officials were giving explicit warnings of their intention to acquire nuclear weapons if Iran did.

Having warned the Americans in private for years, last year Saudi officials in Riyadh escalated it to a public warning, telling a journalist from the Times "it would be completely unacceptable to have Iran with a nuclear capability and not the kingdom".

But were these statements bluster, aimed at forcing a stronger US line on Iran, or were they evidence of a deliberate, long-term plan for a Saudi bomb? Both, is the answer I have received from former key officials.

One senior Pakistani, speaking on background terms, confirmed the broad nature of the deal - probably unwritten - his country had reached with the kingdom and asked rhetorically "what did we think the Saudis were giving us all that money for? It wasn't charity."

Another, a one-time intelligence officer from the same country, said he believed "the Pakistanis certainly maintain a certain number of warheads on the basis that if the Saudis were to ask for them at any given time they would immediately be transferred."

As for the seriousness of the Saudi threat to make good on the deal, Simon Henderson, Director of the Global Gulf and Energy Policy Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told BBC Newsnight "the Saudis speak about Iran and nuclear matters very seriously. They don't bluff on this issue."

Talking to many serving and former officials about this over the past few months, the only real debate I have found is about how exactly the Saudi Arabians would redeem the bargain with Pakistan.

Some think it is a cash-and-carry deal for warheads, the first of those options sketched out by the Saudis back in 2003; others that it is the second, an arrangement under which Pakistani nuclear forces could be deployed in the kingdom.

Gary Samore, considering these questions at the centre of the US intelligence and policy web, at the White House until earlier this year, thinks that what he calls, "the Nato model", is more likely.

However ,"I think just giving Saudi Arabia a handful of nuclear weapons would be a very provocative action", says Gary Samore.

He adds: "I've always thought it was much more likely - the most likely option if Pakistan were to honour any agreement would be for be for Pakistan to send its own forces, its own troops armed with nuclear weapons and with delivery systems to be deployed in Saudi Arabia".

This would give a big political advantage to Pakistan since it would allow them to deny that they had simply handed over the weapons, but implies a dual key system in which they would need to agree in order for 'Saudi Arabian' "nukes" to be launched.

Others I have spoken to think this is not credible, since Saudi Arabia, which regards itself as the leader of the broader Sunni Islamic 'ummah' or community, would want complete control of its nuclear deterrent, particularly at this time of worsening sectarian confrontation with Shia Iran.

And it is Israeli information - that Saudi Arabia is now ready to take delivery of finished warheads for its long-range missiles - that informs some recent US and Nato intelligence reporting. Israel of course shares Saudi Arabia's motive in wanting to worry the US into containing Iran.

Amos Yadlin declined to be interviewed for our BBC Newsnight report, but told me by email that "unlike other potential regional threats, the Saudi one is very credible and imminent."

Even if this view is accurate there are many good reasons for Saudi Arabia to leave its nuclear warheads in Pakistan for the time being.

Doing so allows the kingdom to deny there are any on its soil. It avoids challenging Iran to cross the nuclear threshold in response, and it insulates Pakistan from the international opprobrium of being seen to operate an atomic cash-and-carry.

These assumptions though may not be safe for much longer. The US diplomatic thaw with Iran has touched deep insecurities in Riyadh, which fears that any deal to constrain the Islamic republic's nuclear program would be ineffective.

Earlier this month the Saudi intelligence chief and former ambassador to Washington Prince Bandar announced that the kingdom would be distancing itself more from the US.

While investigating this, I have heard rumours on the diplomatic grapevine, that Pakistan has recently actually delivered Shaheen mobile ballistic missiles to Saudi Arabia, minus warheads.

These reports, still unconfirmed, would suggest an ability to deploy nuclear weapons in the kingdom, and mount them on an effective, modern, missile system more quickly than some analysts had previously imagined.

In Egypt, Saudi Arabia showed itself ready to step in with large-scale backing following the military overthrow of President Mohammed Morsi's government.

There is a message here for Pakistan, of Riyadh being ready to replace US military assistance or World Bank loans, if standing with Saudi Arabia causes a country to lose them.

Newsnight contacted both the Pakistani and Saudi governments. The Pakistan Foreign Ministry has described our story as "speculative, mischievous and baseless".

It adds: "Pakistan is a responsible nuclear weapon state with robust command and control structures and comprehensive export controls."

The Saudi embassy in London has also issued a statement pointing out that the Kingdom is a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty and has worked for a nuclear free Middle East.

But it also points out that the UN's "failure to make the Middle East a nuclear free zone is one of the reasons the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia rejected the offer of a seat on the UN Security Council".

It says the Saudi Foreign Minister has stressed that this lack of international action "has put the region under the threat of a time bomb that cannot easily be defused by manoeuvring around it".

Watch more from Mark Urban on Saudi Arabia on Newsnight on Wednesday 6 November 2013 at 2230 on BBC Two, and then afterwards on the BBC iPlayer and Newsnight website.


Ps. Vejo que o roymio já cá tinha colocado o link, mas a notícia é muito mais rica que o resumo colocado.
« Última modificação: 2013-11-23 21:47:35 por hermes »
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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #7 em: 2013-12-02 11:35:26 »
Uma guerra é feita de várias batalhas, principalmente de um povo que conhece bem a metáfora do nariz do camelo e da tenda do beduino.

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Four GCC countries to announce common currency by end-December

Staff Report
Published: 19:12 December 1, 2013

http://gulfnews.com/business/economy/four-gcc-countries-to-announce-common-currency-by-end-december-1.1262037

Dubai: Four Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries will announce the introduction of a common currency by the end of December, a Bahraini daily reported on Sunday.

The common currency to be announced by Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia will be pegged to the dollar, a source told Akhbar Al Khaleej.

“The decision to peg the Gulf currency to the dollar is political and is not related to the economy,” the source said.

“From an economic point of view, it would have been better to peg the new currency to a basket of currencies because the volume of trade of the Gulf states with the countries of the European Union is much larger than that of their commerce with the United States. Gulf exports of oil to the European Union are estimated to constitute about 70 per cent of European imports,” the source said.

The daily did not identify the sources, but said it was close to Gulf decision-making circles.

Oman and the UAE, the other two members of the six-country Gulf council set up in 1981, are not likely to join the common currency in the near future, the source added, without divulging the reasons for the same.

 “I do not see any need for a common Gulf currency if it is not sovereign. Even though the GCC states have huge financial reserves, their currencies are not listed on the world’s reserve currency list because they are not producing states,” the source said.

Flexible exchange

The GCC countries have been discussing a currency union similar to the Eurozone for more than 15 years.

Several economists in the Gulf have been calling for dropping the GCC countries’ long-entrenched peg to the dollar and consider moving to a more flexible exchange rate that will help them better face highly possible inflation risks and economic crises.

In September, an official of the European Central Bank (ECB) said that the GCC should not introduce a common currency before its members have a clear common objective.

Yves Mersch, an executive board member of the ECB, reportedly said at a global financial summit that no union of states would be ready for a common currency if there was no political consensus.
"Everyone knows where we have been. Let's see where we are going." – Another

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #8 em: 2013-12-02 11:52:47 »
parece uma vitória do dólar sobre o euro, não?

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #9 em: 2013-12-02 12:48:48 »
Sim, parece, mas é uma vitória agridoce. Vejamos o antes e o depois.

Antes: 4 países com moedas independentes, divididos nas políticas monetárias e mais a jeito da diplomacia do tio Sam.

Depois: "4" países com uma moeda comum, unidos, com uma política monetária comum e menos a jeito da diplomacia do tio Sam, pois ajoelharam em comum e por isso têm de rezar em comum.

Mais ainda se tentassem 1.º fazer um peg contra um cabaz de moedas, provavelmente nem conseguiriam unir-se monetariamente, pois era uma ameaça mais óbvia contra o tio Sam. Assim, tornaram-se uma ameaça mais forte à hegemonia do tio Sam a prazo e fornece-lhes alavancagem para forçar o tio Sam a proteger o rei ou a enfrentar as consequências e a mandá-lo passear, quando o casamento de conveniência deixar de ser conveniente.
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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #10 em: 2013-12-11 19:21:29 »
Interessante a jogada do Príncipe, até parece que o escarcel todo foi para desviar as atenções da transformação do concelho [GCC] numa união, quando afinal há uma continuidade entre a moeda única árabe atrás mencionada e formação de uma união. Veremos como falarão a uma só voz.

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GCC states hope Iran deal will end tension

Gulf states express comfort with preliminary deal on Iran's nuclear programme agreed by Tehran and six world powers.

By: Dahlia Kholaif
Last updated: 10 Dec 2013 19:47 

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2013/12/gcc-states-hope-iran-deal-will-end-tension-20131210191314641802.html

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) has welcomed the preliminary landmark deal between Iran and the P5+1 (United States, Russia, United Kingdom, France, China and Germany), further depicting that a fresh leaf is turned over in the relationship between the Sunni monarchies of the Gulf region that make up the GCC and their Shia neighbour.

"The GCC states have expressed their comfort towards the preliminary Geneva agreement pertaining to the Iranian nuclear programme, and we look forward to its success to lead to a permanent pact, that drives away the specter of tension from our region," Emir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, the Emir of Kuwait, said on Tuesday at the opening session of the 34th summit in Kuwait City.

This is the first such summit since Iran struck a deal with the P5+1 in late November, to curb its controversial nuclear activity in exchange for partial easing of sanctions that have exhausted Tehran’s economy. The interim agreement is seen as a step towards concluding a final deal over Iran's nuclear programme.

The six members of the GCC, that include Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and Oman, have responded in different ways to Iran since relatively moderate Iranian President Hassan Rouhani took on a task of amending damages caused by his predecessor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, especially with the West and their Arab allies.

Javad Zarif, the foreign minister of Iran, has paid visits to four of the six states, excluding Riyadh and Manama, who accuse the Shia powerhouse of inciting a three-year revolt by the Shia majority in Bahrain against the Sunni ruling family.

Washington has been trying to reassure its Gulf allies of their security following the deal reached with Iran.

Syria on agenda

The GCC summit, which will conclude its talks on Wednesday, will also discuss developments in war-torn Syria, as well as a Saudi proposal to transfer the council into a union.

Speaking at the summit, the head of the Syrian National Council, the umbrella organisation of Syrian rebels, called on the Gulf states to send aid to war-hit Syrians.

"The first drop of aid to support our nation's resistance is through a humanitarian fund" that is "under the supervision and management of the SNC as you know the big size the catastrophe we face," Al-Jarbi said.

Thousands have been killed since the civil war first broke out in Syria between rebel fighters battling against the regime troops, strongly supported by Iran and Russia, while about seven million have been displaced.
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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #11 em: 2013-12-14 17:25:56 »
Eis o que vem agarrado ao fim das sanções ao Irão... e tão amigos que os EUA e o Paquistão eram...

Iran Cancels Pakistan Gas Pipeline Loan

TEHRAN, Iran December 14, 2013 (AP)

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/iran-cancels-pakistan-gas-pipeline-loan-21218219

Iran has canceled a planned $500 million loan to Pakistan to build part of a pipeline to bring natural gas from the Islamic Republic.

Deputy Oil Minister Ali Majedi said Iran has no obligation to finance the Pakistani side of the project and also doesn't have the money.

Iran has already invested over $2 billion to construct the Iranian side of the pipeline. But there are serious doubts about how Pakistan could finance the $2 billion needed to construct the pipeline on its territory. Iran's former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had pledged the loan.

Pakistan has welcomed an Iranian offer to approach third parties, including European companies, to finance the project.

"Pakistani officials were told in recent talks that, given the sanctions, Iran is not able to finance construction of the pipeline (in Pakistan) and has no obligation to do so," he said. His comments were posted on the oil ministry's website, shana.ir, Saturday.

Majedi complained that Pakistan has done little to construct its own section of the project. Under a valid contract, Pakistan is required to finish construction of the pipeline on its territory by the end of 2014.

"If a contractor is chosen today and pipeline construction begins today, it will take four years to complete it. Should Pakistan fail to take gas by the end of next year, Iran will demand compensation under the terms of the contract," he said.

The Iran-Pakistan pipeline is designed to help Pakistan overcome its mushrooming energy needs. Pakistanis experience frequent blackouts.

The U.S. has opposed the project but leaders of both Iran and Pakistan have vowed to implement what they refer to as the "peace pipeline."
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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #12 em: 2014-06-18 18:29:47 »
Qatari: U.S. intervention in Iraq would be seen as war on Sunni Arabs

By: Mohamed Salman (McClatchy Foreign Staff)
Published: Monday, Jun. 16, 2014 - 1:48 pm
Last Modified: Monday, Jun. 16, 2014 - 4:49 pm

http://www.sacbee.com/2014/06/16/6487754/qatari-us-intervention-in-iraq.html

 DOHA, Qatar -- A former Qatari ambassador to the United States offered up a warning to the Obama administration Monday that any military intervention on behalf of the government of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki would be seen as an act of “war” on the entire community of Sunni Arabs.

Sheikh Nasser bin Hamad al Khalifa also warned against the United States working with Iran to repulse the advance by the radical Sunni group the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, something that Secretary of State John Kerry said Monday the United States would be willing to consider.

“For the West or Iran or the two working together to fight beside Maliki against Sunni Arabs will be seen as another conspiracy against Sunni,” Khalifa tweeted.

Khalifa’s comments via Twitter (@NasserIbnHamad) show the complicated calculations the Obama administration faces as it considers whether to come to Maliki’s aid while insurgents from ISIS consolidate their gains over much of northern and central Iraq and menace the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.

Maliki’s Shiite Muslim government has angered Sunnis across the Arab world for being close to Shiite-ruled Iran and for what Sunnis describe as widespread mistreatment of their co-religionists in Iraq.

Khalifa retired from Qatar’s diplomatic service in 2007, but he remains an influential voice in Qatari foreign-policy circles.

The sentiments behind his warning were reflected in remarks that Qatar’s foreign minister, Khalid bin Mohammed al Attiyah, made Sunday in Bolivia and that were distributed Monday by Qatar’s official news service.

Attiyah stopped far short of Khalifa’s suggestion that airstrikes would be seen as an act of war by Sunnis outside Iraq, and he didn’t mention Sunnis specifically in the comments released Monday. But he laid blame for the rapid advance of ISIS squarely on Maliki’s rule. He said Maliki had deliberately excluded “large groups of Iraqis” from sharing in power.

“While we strongly condemn terrorism and violence in all its forms and manifests,” Attiyah said, “we must, however, take into account the fact that injustice, exclusion, marginalization and use of security and military solutions exclusively to suppress popular demands can . . . fuel violence and contribute to its expansion.”

He added, “We swiftly urge those concerned to pay attention to the demands of large segments of the population who only seek equality and participation, away from all forms of sectarian or denominational discrimination.”

President Barack Obama made similar demands Friday, saying he’d asked the Pentagon to draw up a list of possible options to stop the ISIS advance but that the United States would consider taking those steps only if Iraq’s feuding politicians could resolve their differences _ something few observers believe is possible.

Khalifa’s warning about how Sunnis elsewhere in the Arab world would view American military intervention draws attention to other concerns that might influence U.S. actions on Maliki’s behalf.

The split between the Sunni and Shiite interpretations of Islam date to the seventh century, but it drives modern rivalries between Shiite-led Iran and Sunni-led Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf monarchies. Qatar has been a close collaborator with the United States in Syria and elsewhere and it’s home to the U.S. Central Command’s forward Air Force detachment at al Udeid Air Base outside Doha.

In his comments, Khalifa noted that Maliki has ruled Iraq for more than eight years, longer than Obama has been the U.S. president, and that in that time Maliki had squandered “any chance” to build a nonsectarian, stable and all-inclusive country.

“Gulf states should inform the West any intervention in Iraq or military cooperation with Iran to prop up al Maliki will be considered unfriendly,” he tweeted.

“Any intervention in Iraq by the West to prop up criminal al Maliki in Iraq will be seen by the whole Sunni Arabs and Muslims as war against them.”

The Qatari diplomat accused Maliki of going on a “crusade against Iraqi Sunni Arabs, killing them and bombing their cities.”

He called the ISIS advance the “logical outcome” and said it was “no surprise to any observer of Iraq’s politics.”

“ISIS is a tiny element in the bigger revolt by Iraq’s Arab Sunni tribes who suffered so much under Maliki sectarian regime. . . . Maliki has been bombing&destroying Sunni Arabs cities and killing them for the past six month,” he said.
"Everyone knows where we have been. Let's see where we are going." – Another

hermes

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #13 em: 2014-11-02 21:03:26 »
The Saudis have the staying power to undercut the competition

Sunday, October 26, 2014

http://soberlook.com/2014/10/the-saudis-have-staying-power-to.html?utm_source=BP_recent

According to Deutsche Bank, the Saudi government can sustain itself for almost 8 years with Brent crude at $83/bbl. The nation's government has accumulated sufficient "rainy day funds" to withstand a prolonged period of budget deficits driven by low oil prices.

Source: DB

Armed with such staying power, Saudi Arabia is undercutting the competition in order to expand market share. They know they have the funds to outlast most of the competitors. The goal is to pressure OPEC cheaters as well as to shake out US "tight oil" producers. The Saudis could presumably deal with the notion of US "energy independence", but having Americans export large amounts of crude (currently being debated in the US) and compete head on with OPEC is not acceptable. While Saudi Arabia cannot entirely stop the growth of North American production, it is going to try slowing it.

The Saudis launched their attack with the comment that the nation "will accept oil prices below $90 per barrel, and perhaps down to $80, for as long as a year or two". With energy markets already soft, the selloff acceleration ensued.

Another recent development shows that the Saudis are also willing to back their statement with action. With OPEC already producing 700-900K bbl/d above its quota, Saudi Aramco started undercutting the competition by lowering prices.

Citar
Deutsche Bank: - ... we can observe that the differential of Saudi Arabia’s Arab Light blend versus the Oman/Dubai average for Asian deliveries has fallen sharply from a premium of USD1.65/bbl for September loadings to a discount of USD1.05/bbl for November loadings. This suggests that Saudi Aramco is determined to maintain current levels of exports at the expense of sales prices achieved. This represents the sharpest discount since the -USD1.25/bbl level observed in December 2008, during a quarter in which global oil demand contracted by 3.0 mmb/d, in contrast to the current quarter when we still expect oil demand to grow by 0.8 mmb/d.


Source: DB

The November OPEC meeting is expected to be tense, with a number of nations pushing for production cuts. But ultimately the Saudis will prevail and the pressure on high-cost crude producers will continue. Pain will be felt in Iran, Russia, Venezuela, as well as across the North America's energy sector.
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hermes

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #14 em: 2014-11-06 18:20:33 »
How The Petrodollar Quietly Died, And Nobody Noticed

by Tyler Durden
on 11/03/2014 15:42 -0500

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-03/how-petrodollar-quietly-died-and-nobody-noticed

Two years ago, in hushed tones at first, then ever louder, the financial world began discussing that which shall never be discussed in polite company - the end of the system that according to many has framed and facilitated the US Dollar's reserve currency status: the Petrodollar, or the world in which oil export countries would recycle the dollars they received in exchange for their oil exports, by purchasing more USD-denominated assets, boosting the financial strength of the reserve currency, leading to even higher asset prices and even more USD-denominated purchases, and so forth, in a virtuous (especially if one held US-denominated assets and printed US currency) loop.

The main thrust for this shift away from the USD, if primarily in the non-mainstream media, was that with Russia and China, as well as the rest of the BRIC nations, increasingly seeking to distance themselves from the US-led, "developed world" status quo spearheaded by the IMF, global trade would increasingly take place through bilateral arrangements which bypass the (Petro)dollar entirely. And sure enough, this has certainly been taking place, as first Russia and China, together with Iran, and ever more developing nations, have transacted among each other, bypassing the USD entirely, instead engaging in bilateral trade arrangements, leading to, among other thing, such discussions as, in today's FT, why China's Renminbi offshore market has gone from nothing to billions in a short space of time.

And yet, few would have believed that the Petrodollar did indeed quietly die, although ironically, without much input from either Russia or China, and paradoxically, mostly as a result of the actions of none other than the Fed itself, with its strong dollar policy, and to a lesser extent Saudi Arabia too, which by glutting the world with crude, first intended to crush Putin, and subsequently, to take out the US crude cost-curve, may have Plaxico'ed both itself, and its closest Petrodollar trading partner, the US of A.

As Reuters reports, for the first time in almost two decades, energy-exporting countries are set to pull their "petrodollars" out of world markets this year, citing a study by BNP Paribas (more details below). Basically, the Petrodollar, long serving as the US leverage to encourage and facilitate USD recycling, and a steady reinvestment in US-denominated assets by the Oil exporting nations, and thus a means to steadily increase the nominal price of all USD-priced assets, just drove itself into irrelevance.

A consequence of this year's dramatic drop in oil prices, the shift is likely to cause global market liquidity to fall, the study showed.

This decline follows years of windfalls for oil exporters such as Russia, Angola, Saudi Arabia and Nigeria. Much of that money found its way into financial markets, helping to boost asset prices and keep the cost of borrowing down, through so-called petrodollar recycling.

But no more: "this year the oil producers will effectively import capital amounting to $7.6 billion. By comparison, they exported $60 billion in 2013 and $248 billion in 2012, according to the following graphic based on BNP Paribas calculations."

In short, the Petrodollar may not have died per se, at least not yet since the USD is still holding on to the reserve currency title if only for just a little longer, but it has managed to price itself into irrelevance, which from a USD-recycling standpoint, is essentially the same thing.



According to BNP, Petrodollar recycling peaked at $511 billion in 2006, or just about the time crude prices were preparing to go to $200, per Goldman Sachs. It is also the time when capital markets hit all time highs, only without the artificial crutches of every single central bank propping up the S&P ponzi house of cards on a daily basis. What happened after is known to all...

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"At its peak, about $500 billion a year was being recycled back into financial markets. This will be the first year in a long time that energy exporters will be sucking capital out," said David Spegel, global head of emerging market sovereign and corporate Research at BNP.

Spegel acknowledged that the net withdrawal was small. But he added: "What is interesting is they are draining rather than providing capital that is moving global liquidity. If oil prices fall further in coming years, energy producers will need more capital even if just to repay bonds."


In other words, oil exporters are now pulling liquidity out of financial markets rather than putting money in. That could result in higher borrowing costs for governments, companies, and ultimately, consumers as money becomes scarcer.

Which is hardly great news: because in a world in which central banks are actively soaking up high-quality collateral, at a pace that is unprecedented in history, and led to the world's allegedly most liquid bond market to suffer a 10-sigma move on October 15, the last thing the market needs is even less liquidity, and even sharper moves on ever less volume, until finally the next big sell order crushes the entire market or at least force the [NYSE|Nasdaq|BATS|Sigma X] to shut down indefinitely until further notice.

So what happens next, now that the primary USD-recycling mechanism of the past 2 decades is no longer applicable? Well, nothing good.

Here are the highlights of David Spegel's note Energy price shock scenarios: Impact on EM ratings, funding gaps, debt, inflation and fiscal risks.

Whatever the reason, whether a function of supply, demand or political risks, oil prices plummeted in Q3 2014 and remain volatile. Theories related to the price plunge vary widely: some argue it is an additional means for Western allies in the Middle East to punish Russia. Others state it is the result of a price war between Opec and new shale oil producers. In the end, it may just reflect the traditional inverted relationship between the international value of the dollar and the price of hard-currency-based commodities (Figure 6). In any event, the impact of the energy price drop will be wide-ranging (if sustained) and will have implications for debt service costs, inflation, fiscal accounts and GDP growth.

Have you noticed a reduction of financial markets liquidity?

Outside from the domestic economic impact within EMs due to the downward oil price shock, we believe that the implications for financial market liquidity via the reduced recycling of petrodollars should not be underestimated. Because energy exporters do not fully invest their export receipts and effectively ‘save’ a considerable portion of their income, these surplus funds find their way back into bank deposits (fuelling the loan market) as well as into financial markets and other assets. This capital has helped fund debt among importers, helping to boost overall growth as well as other financial markets liquidity conditions.

Last year, capital flows from energy exporting countries (see list in Figure 12) amounted to USD812bn (Figure 3), with USD109bn taking the form of financial portfolio capital and USD177bn in the form of direct equity investment and USD527bn of other capital over half of which we estimate made its way into bank deposits (ie and therefore mostly into loan markets).







The recycling of petro-dollars has benefited financial markets liquidity conditions. However, this year, we expect that incremental liquidity typically provided by such recycled flows will be markedly reduced, estimating that direct and other capital outflows from energy exporters will have declined by USD253bn YoY. Of course, these economies also receive inward capital, so on a net basis, the additional capital provided externally is much lower. This year, we expect that net capital flows will be negative for EM, representing the first net inflow of capital (USD8bn) for the first time in eighteen years. This compares with USD60bn last year, which itself was down from USD248bn in 2012. At its peak, recycled EM petro dollars amounted to USD511bn back in 2006. The declines seen since 2006 not only reflect the changed  global environment, but also the propensity of underlying exporters to begin investing the money domestically rather than save. The implications for financial markets liquidity - not to mention related downward pressure on US Treasury yields – is negative.

* * *

Even scarcer liquidity in US Capital markets aside, this is how BNP sees the inflation and growth for energy exporters:

Household consumption benefits: While we recognise that the relationship is not entirely linear, we use inflation basket weights for ‘transportation’ and ‘household & utilities’ (shown in the ‘Economic components’ section of Figure 27) as a means to address the differing demand elasticities prevalent across countries. These act as our proxy for consumption the consumption basket in order to determine the economic benefit that would result as lower energy prices improve household disposable income. This is weighted by the level of domestic consumption relative to the economy, which we also show in the ‘Economic components’ section of Figure 27.

Reduced industrial production costs: Outside the energy industry, manufacturers will benefit from falling operating costs. Agriculture will not benefit as much and services will benefit even less.

Trade gains and losses: Lost trade as a result of lower demand from oil-producing trade partners will impact both growth and the current account balance. On the other hand, better consumption from many energy-importing trade partners will provide some offset. The percentage of each country’s exports to energy producing partners represents relative to its total exports is used to determine potential lost growth and CAR due to lower demand from trade partners.

Domestic FX moves are beyond the scope of our analysis. These will be tied to the level of openness of the economy and the impact of changed demand conditions among trade partners as well as dollar effects. Neither do we address non-oil related political risks (eg sanctions) or any fiscal or monetary policy responses to oil shocks.

GDP growth

The least impacted oil producing country, from a GDP perspective, is Brazil followed by Mexico, Argentina, Tunisia and Trinidad & Tobago. The impact on fiscal accounts also appears lower for these than most other EMs.

Remarkably, the impact of lower oil for Russia’s economic growth is not as severe as might be expected. Sustained oil at USD80/bbl would see growth slow by 1.8pp to 0.6%. This compares with the worst hit economies of Angola (where growth is nearly 8pp lower at -2%), Iraq (GDP slows to -1.6% from 4.5% growth), Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan (growth falls to -0.9% from 5.8%).

For a drop to USD 80/bbl, it can be seen (in Figure 27) that, in some cases, such as the UAE, Qatar and Kuwait, the negative impact on GDP can be comfortably offset by fiscal stimulus. These economies will probably benefit from such a policy in which case our ‘model-based’ GDP growth estimate would represent the low end of the likely outcome (unless a fiscal policy response is not forthcoming).





Global growth in 2015? More like how great will the hit to GDP be if oil prices don't rebound immediately?

On the whole, we can say that the fall in oil prices will prove negative, shaving 0.4pp from 2015 EM GDP growth. The collective current account balance will fall 0.58pp to 0.6% of GDP, while the budget deficit will deteriorate by 0.61pp to -2.9%. This probably has the worst implications for EM as an asset class in the credit world.

Energy exporters will fare worst, with growth falling by 1.9pp and their current account balances suffering negative pressure to the tune of 2.69pp of GDP. Budget balances will suffer a 1.67pp of GDP fall, despite benefits from lower subsidy costs. The impact of oil falling USD 25/bbl will be likely to put push the current account balance into deficit, with our analysis indicating a 0.3% of GDP deficit from a 2.4% surplus before. Fortunately, the benefit to inflation will be the best in EM and could help offset some of the political risks from reduced growth.

As might be expected, energy importers will benefit by 0.4pp better growth in this scenario. Their collective current account will improve by 0.6pp to 1.1% of GDP.

The regions worst hit are the Middle East, with GDP growth slowing to 0.3%, which is 3.8pp lower than when oil was averaging USD105/bbl. The regions’ fiscal accounts will also suffer most in EM, moving from a 1.7% of GDP surplus to a 1.8% deficit. Meanwhile, the CAB will drop 5.3pp, although remain in surplus at 3.9%. The CIS is the next-worst hit, from a GDP perspective, with regional growth flat-lined versus 1.91% previously. The region’s fiscal deficit will worsen from 0.7% of GDP to -1.8% and CAB shrink to 0.7% from 3% of GDP. Africa’s growth will come in 1.4pp slower at 2.8% while Latam growth will be 0.4pp slower at 2.2%. For Africa, the CAB/GDP ratio will fall by 2.4pp pushing it deep into deficit (-2.9% of GDP).

Some regions benefit, however, with Asia ex-China growing 0.45bpp faster at 5.5% and EM Europe (ex-CIS) growing 0.55pp faster at 3.9%, with the region’s CAB/GDP improving 0.69pp, although remain in deficit to the tune of -2.4% of GDP.



* * *

And so on, but to summarize, here are the key points once more:

  • The stronger US dollar is having an inverse impact on dollar-denominated commodity prices, including oil. This will affect emerging market (EM) credit quality in various ways.
  • The implications of reduced recycled petrodollars has significant ramifications for financial markets, loan markets and Treasury yields. In fact, EM energy exporters will post their first net drain on global capital (USD8bn) in eighteen years.
  • Oil and gas exporting EMs account for 26% of total EM GDP and 21% of external bonds. For these economies, the impact will be on lost fiscal revenue, lost GDP growth and the contribution to reserves of oil and gas-related export receipts. Together, these will have a significant effect on sustainability and liquidity ratios and as a consequence are negative for dollar debt-servicing risks and credit ratings.
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vbm

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #15 em: 2014-11-06 19:34:22 »
Ainda não li nada do que aqui há. Mas avanço este "dogma": - O Egipto, no mundo árabe, é uma coisa muito séria. Há uma reverência absoluta de todos os estados árabes em relação ao  Egipto. Porquê, não sei. Mas é a noção que apreendi entre eles (mais precisamente, em Marrocos).

D. Antunes

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #16 em: 2014-11-07 00:46:59 »
Ainda não li nada do que aqui há. Mas avanço este "dogma": - O Egipto, no mundo árabe, é uma coisa muito séria. Há uma reverência absoluta de todos os estados árabes em relação ao  Egipto. Porquê, não sei. Mas é a noção que apreendi entre eles (mais precisamente, em Marrocos).

Talvez por ser o país árabe mais populoso. E por teólogos influentes.
“Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.”
“In the short run the market is a voting machine. In the long run, it’s a weighting machine."
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“O bom senso é a coisa do mundo mais bem distribuída: todos pensamos tê-lo em tal medida que até os mais difíceis de contentar nas outras coisas não costumam desejar mais bom senso do que aquele que têm."
René Descartes

vbm

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Re:O Príncipe
« Responder #17 em: 2014-11-07 09:13:39 »
Sim. O ser o mais populoso é talvez decisivo.
Por ser o mais influente em teologia, não imaginava.
Mas culturalmente, talvez de facto seja o mais importante.
Alexandria e Cairo superam as outras metrópoles. Também,
no canto e na dança são influentes em todos os outros.

E tiveram Nasser, e a barragem do Assuão,
e um estado laico e um entendimento
com Israel, e ao contrário do que
se imagina, os judeus são árabes,
e os palestinos etnicamente
os verdadeiros judeus!