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emiljoe
08-23-2007, 10:12 PM
Russian Nuclear Bombers Resume Cold War-Style Missions :fork:

http://thetrumpet.com/index.php?page=article&id=3589

Vladimir Putin and the Russian Air Force are making Washington, London and the European Union jittery.

Thirty-nine years ago Monday, Soviet forces invaded Czechoslovakia. On Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that the Russian Air Force would resume Cold War-style nuclear bomber flights into international airspace.

“Our pilots have been sitting on the ground for too long,” announced Putin (http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/08/17/europe/russia.php). “From this day on, the duty of this kind, the combat duty, will be held on a regular basis.”

Nearly 16 years after the collapse of the Soviet empire, Russia is broadcasting its resurgent military might to the world.

On Friday, 14 Russian nuclear-capable strategic bombers took to the air from seven airfields across Russia for sorties over the Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic oceans. In a scene reminiscent of Cold War tensions, nato fighter jets scrambled to shadow the Russian aircraft, according to Moscow.

In July, the British Royal Air Force launched fighters to protect its airspace as Russian bombers flew toward Scotland but reversed course before entering UK airspace.

In early August, Russian bombers also incited a jittery incident near Guam as they flew on an intercept course toward the U.S. military base in the Pacific. Russian Gen. Pavel Androsov, the commander of long-range aviation, boasted that the Russian maneuvers prompted the Americans to scramble fighter jets that flew so close to the Russians that the pilots “smiled at each other” before going their separate ways. U.S. officials confirmed the Russian flight, but said no U.S. jets were scrambled.

“The message to the West is clear: The days of dismissing Russia as a spent force are over,” the Washington Times (http://washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070819/FOREIGN/108190065/1003) said.

A re-energized and oil-rich Russia is drastically upping its military expenditures. Russia plans to increase combat aircraft production 100 percent by 2025. Plans for submarine-launched nuclear ballistic missiles with a 5,000-mile range and carrying up to 10 warheads each are also in the works, along with new, advanced anti-aircraft missiles and missile defense launchers.

Jane’s Sentinel Country Risk Assessments notes that Russia also plans to invest significantly in its new tu-160 strategic bomber, the su-34 “Fullback” fighter-bomber, and a new fifth-generation fighter, the Sukhoi T-50, which will enter service next year.

Russia’s naval capability will also enjoy a massive upgrade. Russia’s carrier fleet is expanding to include six brand-new, nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, up from only one currently in service. Russia is also adding eight new ballistic missile submarines.

Putin “believes in fighting for your place in the sun and has said that nobody appreciates weakness,” says Alex Pravda (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/08/19/wputin119.xml), a Russian expert at London’s foreign-policy think tank Chatham House.

Russia’s newly aggressive posture will have huge implications for Europe. A disunited, bickering, fractured Europe did not have as much to worry about with Russia still smarting from its economic collapse a decade ago, but the economically robust and militarily resurgent Russia of today changes the geopolitical picture dramatically.

The EU comprises many former Soviet bloc nations, including the nations formerly comprising Czechoslovakia. Europe’s eastern expansion is something Russia desperately wants to stop.

Conversely, if motivation for further European integration were needed, Russia’s recent military exhibitions may be a potent unification catalyst. The European Union is set to get much tighter, and Russia much stronger. http://thetrumpet.com/images/blip.gif

-OceanKill-
08-23-2007, 10:30 PM
Uhhh what does this have to do with German Banks and Iran?

shocker1
08-23-2007, 10:50 PM
Don't know what the article posted has to do with your title so I will post something relevant.

CBI Warns German Banks not to End Operations in Iran
TEHRAN (Fars News Agency)- Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran has warned German banks that their withdrawal from the country may result in business disadvantages in the future, the bank's vice governor Mohammad Jafar Mojarrad said.

http://media.farsnews.com/Media/8407/Images/jpg/A0131/A0131612.jpg
"There is no guarantee that they may return in good times. Our economic relations are based on trust and it's very difficult to restore trust once it has been breached," he said in an interview with Financial Times Deutschland.

Mojarrad added that banks from Asia, Russia and the Persian Gulf Region are prepared to take over the German banks' business in Iran.

Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank gradually shut down their Iranian operations in the past months and last week Allianz's Dresdner Bank said it will also discontinue its business relations with the country.

According to the report, the banks were put under pressure from Washington to cut ties to Iran as part of the United States' plan to cut the country off from international money transactions as long as it refuses to give up its nuclear rights.
http://www.farsnews.com/English/newstext.php?nn=8606010222

muck
08-24-2007, 04:41 AM
The Iranians are the lesser of two evils in this case. The Deutsche Bank is caught between two stools, and on the bigger one there are sitting the United States who also threat with disadvantages if the Bank does not cancel it's business in Iran.

:roll:

PsychoMantis
08-24-2007, 04:45 AM
Poor Germany,its one way or another. Theyre screwed either way.

deagle
08-24-2007, 11:59 PM
lol, its iran's loss if ya ask me

=DG=
08-25-2007, 09:29 AM
Poor Germany,its one way or another. Theyre screwed either way.

Germany Screwed? Guess you speak about the Deutsche Bank AG
Believe me ,CEO Mr.Ackermann would spend a only broad smile if he would read your sentence.Deutsche Bank AG is still one of the largest investment banks in the world.So please explain me how a small cut in financial relations will "screw"
a financial giant?

Btw. all that is not a real news.Here an article from July 30, 2007
http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,497319,00.html