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There's not much foreign policy talk on the campaign trail except for one issue - Iran. Everyone is talking about Iran's new strength and assertiveness - its missile tests, its progress on the nuclear program, its moves in Iraq. Mitt Romney, the Republican front-runner, describes Iran as "the greatest threat that the world faces over the next decade." Newt Gingrich has compared the Iranian challenge to the rise of Hitler’s Germany. More measured commentators also see Iran’s rising influence and power across the Middle East.
In fact, the real story on the ground is that Iran is weak and getting weaker. Sanctions have pushed the economy into a nose-dive. The political system is fractured and fragmenting. Abroad, its closest ally and the regime of which it is almost the sole supporter - Syria - is itself crumbling. The Persian Gulf monarchies have banded together against Iran and shored up their relations with Washington. Last week, Saudi Arabia closed its largest-ever purchase of U.S. weaponry.
Why is Iran’s threat to shut down the Strait of Hormuz attracting so much attention? Because as the chart above shows, the strait really is a choke point when it come to the transportation of oil. Only the Strait of Malacca, which runs between Indonesia and Malaysia, comes close in its importance to world shipping.
Nearly sixteen million barrels of oil move through the Strait of Hormuz each day. That translates to nearly twenty percent of all the oil moved daily.
Now for the good news. The odds that Tehran could shut down the strait are close to nil. Iran’s naval capabilities are mediocre at best, blocking a twenty-mile wide stretch of navigable waters is hard, oil tankers don’t burn or sink easily, and the U.S. Navy has enormous capabilities to keep the strait open. And in the highly unlikely scenario in which the Iranians succeeded in shutting down the strait, they would be the biggest losers. They depend on oil exports to keep their economy running. What the Iranians can accomplish with their saber rattling is to make the markets nervous, drive up the price of oil, and test Washington’s will.
Originally posted by DaarkSyde2012
CNN, ok, I will wait for further conformation on this issue, looks like more Iran bashing to me. Do you have any other sources than cough,cough, CNN?
Originally posted by CALGARIAN
Originally posted by DaarkSyde2012
CNN, ok, I will wait for further conformation on this issue, looks like more Iran bashing to me. Do you have any other sources than cough,cough, CNN?
Fareed, regardless of the broadcasting station, has always gone against the typical grain of CNN... IMO
Originally posted by randomname
zakaria is their token muslim.
it looks less racist to have another muslim bash and incite war and hatred against other muslims than say piers morgan.
this guy can't even leave america, because he'll end up in an al qaeda decapitation video.
the way he has that bugged out blank look on his face makes me believe he is under mk ultra control.
he never blinks either.
one time we played a drinking game during his show. one shot of jack for every time he blinks. 3 hrs later we were stone sober.
that guy is possessed, and it doesn't look like anything good. he doesn't even look real. i bet they film his segment and he just vanishes.
i believe the reptilians haven't mastered cloning humans other than white.
nothing he says can be taken as truth. he is a propaganda tool.
edit on 8-1-2012 by randomname because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by angeldoll
?
Fareed has become my favorite on CNN. He is a straight shooter, and calls it as he's sees it. He also has a variety of interesting guests he interviews. For example, he interviewed a Republican party member today who commented on how ridiculous it is for the GOP to continue to intrude into people's personal lives by trying to pass laws concerning abortion and sexual preference. So true, as he indicated the GOP is supposedly so
BIG on reducing government intervention, and yet here they insist on involving themselves in the most private areas of people's lives. He's right. It doesn't make sense anymore.