Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Colonialism 2.0: How US and UK take (STEAL) what they want from 'lesser powers'

1 view
Skip to first unread message

FBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer

unread,
Aug 22, 2022, 4:38:24 AM8/22/22
to


BLOODTHIRSTY RACIST "THIEVERY" never disappeared from WESTERN WHITE
CHRISTIAN DNA.


London is SHAMELESSLY "ROBBING Venezuelan GOLD"
https://groups.google.com/g/uk.sport.cricket/c/Go5EWN0YA98/m/sz5OEcJyBAAJ




There is an old joke which still has resonance. A child asks his parent,
“Why are there pyramids in Egypt?” The parent answers, “Because they
were too big to take to Britain.”



=========================================================================



https://www.rt.com/news/561171-us-uk-empires-stealing/

Colonialism 2.0: How US and UK take what they want from 'lesser powers'

In the name of sanctions, geopolitical interests or the so-called
“rules-based order”, colonial powers do what they do best – plunder
those they see as weak and insubordinate

Daniel Kovalik teaches International Human Rights at the University of
Pittsburgh School of Law, and is author of the recently-released No More
War: How the West Violates International Law by Using “Humanitarian”
Intervention to Advance Economic and Strategic Interests.

There is an old joke which still has resonance. A child asks his parent,
“Why are there pyramids in Egypt?” The parent answers, “Because they
were too big to take to Britain.” Of course, many a true word is spoken
in jest. Indeed, there is an apocryphal story that back in the day when
Vladimir Lenin was in exile in London, he would enjoy taking friends to
the British Museum and explaining to them how and from what far-flung
lands all the antiquities there were stolen.

One might have thought that these days of colonial plunder had ended,
but one would be very wrong. Current examples abound. A notable one is,
of course, the freezing by the US of $7 billion from the Afghanistan
treasury – monies the US continues to hold even as it watches Afghans
begin to die from starvation. Apparently, the US believes that, after
laying waste to Afghanistan through 20 years of war and, even before
that by supporting the mujahideen terrorists, it is entitled to some
compensation. This upside-down type of reasoning abounds in the minds of
those in the West who simply believe they can take whatever they wish.

Similarly, the US is now plundering Syria – another country utterly
devastated in no small part by Washington-backed militants in a campaign
to overthrow the elected president – of most of its oil, even as Syria
suffers from severe energy blackouts. Thus, according to the Syrian Oil
Ministry, “US occupation forces and their mercenaries,” referring to the
US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), “steal up to 66,000 barrels
every single day from the fields occupied in the eastern region,”
amounting to around 83 percent of Syria’s daily oil production.
Experts call for US to release frozen Afghan funds

According to the ministry’s data, the Syrian oil sector has incurred
losses of “about $105 billion since the beginning of the war until the
middle of this year” as a result of the US oil theft campaign.

Additionally, the statement added that alongside the financial losses
incurred by the oil sector were “losses of life, including 235 martyrs,
46 injured and 112 kidnapped.”

One of the biggest heists the US has carried out is against Russia.
After the launch of Russia’s military operation in Ukraine, the US
seized an incredible $300 billion of Russian treasury funds which were
deposited abroad. This was done, of course, without any due process, and
to the great detriment of the Russian people – and with barely a
critical word from Western pundits.

The US treatment of Venezuela abounds with other examples. As I write
these words, the US is maneuvering to seize a commercial 747 airliner
from Venezuela on the grounds that it once belonged to an Iranian
airline which had some connection to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps
(which Washington has designated as terrorists) – which might sound like
a tenuous justification, but the US really needs no reason. And this is
simply the tip of the iceberg. The US has already seized Venezuela’s
biggest single source of revenue – its US-based oil company CITGO – and
is now in the process of selling off this company in pieces, even as
Washington lifts restrictions on Venezuelan oil to shore up its own
economy. The UK, meanwhile, has decided to keep over $1 billion in gold
which Venezuela naively deposited in the Bank of England for
safe-keeping. To add insult to injury, the US continues to criticize
Venezuela for the hardships its people endure as a direct consequence of
this plunder.

Meanwhile, the US continues to persecute Colombian businessman Alex Saab
for trying to obtain food and medicine for the Venezuelan people ,
denied such amenities by US sanctions. Saab was captured at the behest
of the US in Cabo Verde in 2020 as he was flying to Iran to negotiate a
deal for humanitarian supplies, including medicine to confront the
coronavirus pandemic, on a mission he was employed to perform by
Caracas. Saab has since been removed to a federal prison in Miami,
Florida, despite the lack of an extradition treaty between the US and
Cabo Verde, and he continues to languish in prison as the wheels of US
“justice” turn at a snail’s pace to resolve his case. In short, not only
has the US freely stolen from Venezuela, but it is also going to great
lengths to stop those who try to acquire the basic necessities for the
Venezuelan people.

All of this illustrates that colonial habits die hard, and the US is
always ready to turn to the tried and trusted traditions of plunder –
whether to dig itself out of one of the worst economic crises in years,
or to coerce other nations to serve its own geopolitical interests. The
fact that the US is allowed to get away with this demonstrates that in
the Washington-imposed “rules-based order” rule of law is nothing but a
tool employed by the mighty to keep the weak down.
0 new messages