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Politics : Idea Of The Day -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (24652)3/24/1999 12:53:00 AM
From: Bull RidaH  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 50167
 
Iqbal,

<<My longs were only initiated for MER.>>

You SAID you were buying back some of your tech sweethearts "even if 1993 NDX was taken out"... What happened?

<<I feel sorry for open smouching of ego's with no money on the
table.>>

Going back to your old standby attack line I see. Well it didn't work with Tom Trader, and it won't work now. You're barking up the wrong tree this time. But it is amusing nonetheless.

<<I assure you that this 'exported shit' spewed on this thread is a contrary indicator,
'nothing more nothing' less>>

So we should assume that it is your prediction that these "bear raids" on the idea thread marked the end of the move down. OK... Let's reexamine this prediction in a week or so. Today's close on the SPM is 1272.30 for the record.

<<we don't even visit any otehr threads or read other gurus,
thier stories are the same from 1997 ... >>

How disingenious and contradictory... How could you know about our "nowhere to nowhere posts" unless you were hanging on our every word? <g>

<<I welcome you all, lets have some real discusison
and lets go back to bear gurus posts.... buried in darkness of time and cyber space..>>

I (we) appreciate the welcome... and don't worry.. You'll probably be seeing more of us than you'll really like over the next few weeks. As for recounting past posts and predictions... That would be a riot!! I've gone back over some of my posts from the last year and laughed my head off at how off track i was... But then I see many others where I made astoundingly accurate predictions. You don't get to 300 personal bookmarks with only 650 public posts made being wrong all the time.

As for your record, I am often impressed by the accuracy of your calls, and some of your "bhumbo" calls resulted in agony for me when i was out of position. But you let a few stinkers out there yourself, which I would be happy to remind you of if you are inclined to make a contest out of this. <g>

As you probably remember, I started on your thread back in '96-'97, and grew and prospered there for quite a while. At the time, I found you were the only one (besides myself) who knew how to use the secret projection techniques for projecting tops, bottoms, supports and resistance. I was much impressed by all your work, and never ventured off the thread... Until the Tom Trader fiasco... Until you paid the $75 and got an alias "cousin/nephew" name, and unduly attacked Tom.

You guys have probably made up since then, and I certainly don't have any grudges about that incident. However, you insulted the intelligence of the people on the thread at that time by pulling that stunt, and never apologized. That i still have a problem with... But I am by no means perfect, and will throw no stones. I was only one of many who headed for the exits at that time. But what can i say... I guess i'm still a fan of yours, or i wouldn't still be reading you.. right? <ggg>

Regards,

David

P.S. But i will be getting some jabs in from time to time... you know... payback!! <g>



To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (24652)3/24/1999 12:58:00 AM
From: IQBAL LATIF  Respond to of 50167
 
Russian Arms Shipment Signals Deteriorating Relations with West
Alert.com
Summary:

A shipment of Russian jet fighters, intercepted in Azerbaijan,
may have been intended to send a final message to NATO regarding
Russia's views on the Kosovo crisis. NATO air strikes against
Yugoslavia, appearing more likely with each passing moment, will
mark a fundamental turning point in relations with Russia.

Analysis:

Events surrounding the Kosovo crisis are overtaking us, even as
this report takes shape. U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke's
11th hour mission to Belgrade failed to convince Yugoslav
President Slobodan Milosevic to accept the Kosovo peace
agreement. Belgrade has declared a state of emergency, citing an
"imminent threat of war." NATO Secretary General Javier Solana
announced he has ordered air strikes. And Russian Prime Minister
Yevgeny Primakov canceled a visit to the U.S. en route, with his
aircraft reversing course over the mid-Atlantic, after receiving
a briefing on NATO intentions by U.S. Vice President Al Gore.
Earlier in the day, before boarding his abortive flight, Primakov
reiterated Russia's firm opposition to air strikes, a position
that increasingly appears likely to be ignored.

Russia has been consistent in its opposition to the use of
military force against Yugoslavia, particularly by NATO, since
the crisis emerged. Primakov argued on March 23 that such an
attack would fundamentally change "the nature of international
order," as Yugoslavia was not an aggressor against foreign
countries. "Maybe someone would like to make an air strike
against Turkey because the Kurdish problem hasn't been solved
yet," he mused, "Or maybe against Spain because the Basque
problem has not been solved." Primakov insisted that all
diplomatic options had not been exhausted, while Russian Foreign
Ministry spokesman Vladimir Rakhmanin repeated the argument that,
"One cannot use force in international relations without the
agreement of the UN Security Council."

The Kosovo crisis strikes a deep chord in Moscow, and has been
the exceptional case uniting Russia's contentious political
factions [http://www.stratfor.com/services/giu/101598.asp].
Moscow not only opposes the use of force against its traditional
Slavic ally, but also sees NATO action as a dangerous precedent,
furthering the encirclement of and threat to Russia itself.
Already incensed at the geographic expansion of NATO, Russia is
fiercely opposed to the expansion of NATO's mission. In October
1998, the last time NATO aircraft prepared to carry out strikes
against Yugoslavia, Russian Defense Ministry main directorate for
international military cooperation chief Leonid Ivashov warned
that, "The operation which is being prepared against the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia is a provocation by the alliance's
military forces against Russia, too. Yes, this will only create
a precedent. Other countries in Europe, the CIS and Russia
included, could find themselves the next targets of NATO action."

During last October's escalation, as Russian concerns appeared to
be having no effect on NATO decision-making, word leaked out that
Russia had supplied surface-to-air missile components and
possibly entire state of the art SAM systems to Yugoslavia, in
violation of an arms embargo. Moscow denied the rumors, though
it threatened that Russia would sever relations with NATO and
contemplate arming Belgrade if air attacks were carried out.
Allegations of Russian and Belarusian military assistance to
Belgrade have persisted, as have the threats. On March 23,
Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said in an interview on
Russian television that NATO military action would jeopardize the
arms embargo against Yugoslavia. The Russian Duma's references
to arming the Serbs have been phrased as threatening certainties.

Also on March 23, Vafa Goulizade, senior foreign policy advisor
to Azerbaijani President Heydar Aliyev, announced that a Russian
cargo plane carrying six MiG fighters and 30 pilots and
technicians had been detained at Baku's Bina airport on March 18.
According to Goulizade, the Antonov An-124's crew had admitted
that the plane was bound for Yugoslavia. According to
Azerbaijani authorities, the crew later repeatedly changed their
story, claiming to be bound alternatively for North Korea or the
Czech Republic. Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Vladimir
Rakhmanin denied that the MiGs were destined for Yugoslavia,
claiming instead that the cargo aircraft belonged to the private
Russian company Polyot, and was transporting Kazakh aircraft to
Slovakia. Slovak Defense Ministry spokesmen, in turn, denied
knowledge of any expected MiG shipments.

The Antonov incident is odd on several counts. First, it has
more to do with Russia's deteriorating relations with Azerbaijan
than with Russian aid to Yugoslavia. A quick look at a map will
show that Baku is not on the flight path from Russia to Belgrade,
Pyongyang, Bratislava, or Prague. Moreover, even if the Antonov
was taking a circuitous route to one of these destinations,
Azerbaijan was not a wise choice for overflight. Baku is at odds
with Moscow over Russia's support for Armenia, and recently
appealed to NATO to establish a base on Azerbaijani territory.

While the Antonov was detained on March 18, Baku withheld the
announcement until it could have maximum effect. Not only does
the announcement coincide with NATO and Russia's end game over
Yugoslavia, but it was also made the day Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Leonid Drachevsky was due to arrive in Baku to discuss
Azerbaijan's complaints about Russian arms deliveries to Armenia.
Azerbaijan's timing was marvelous. The Antonov's route over Baku
is still in question. It is possible that Russia intended the
aircraft to be intercepted, to once again raise the specter of a
resumption of Russian aid to Yugoslavia. If that was the case,
Baku's decision to withhold announcement must have been
particularly galling to Moscow. Alternatively, if Russia
intended the aircraft to reach its destination, just what was
that destination? Two candidates leap immediately to mind, Iran
and Iraq. Iraq seems the most likely candidate, as detailed
allegations surfaced last month in the British press that Russia
was violating the arms embargo against Iraq.

Whichever proves to be the real story, the implications are the
same. It is important not to underestimate Moscow's resentment
of the way in which Russia has been marginalized in international
affairs. And deeper still is Russia's opposition to what it sees
as the tightening noose being drawn around it by the U.S. and
NATO. As we have argued previously, air strikes against
Yugoslavia have little chance of forcing Belgrade to surrender
its fundamental national interests. What they will certainly
succeed in doing, however, is to mark the beginning of a new
pattern of relations between Russia and the West -- relations
rooted in mistrust and animosity.

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