>Всем Б.Пр.
>>Здравствуйте!
>
>>...в смысле конспирология-то имеет место быть? :)))
Я вообщем-то хотел выделить следующую главную мысль
на основе "недавно обнаруженных фактов" сейчас раскручивается идея, что Россия нарушала санкции СБ ООН в отношении Ирака ВСЕ последние 12 лет
следовательно имидж честного и корректного поведения РФ и ее спецэкспортеров на внешнем рынке, а также имидж эффективно работающей системы экспортного контроля, созданные титаническими усилиями в последние 5-7 лет будут облиты грязью за месяц
Роль Фашки Пельген-хуэра в том, что он на протяжении последних 10 лет подыгрывает этой игре очень старательно
За последние два дня в западных СМИ его "факты и доказательства" (приведенные в статье в Новой газете) были процитированы туеву кучу раз
См. для примера ниже свежую статью корреспондента Чикаго Трибьюн
что примечательно в оной статье - автор цитировал только то, что ему нужно было, что хотелось и кого хотелось
напр. указанные в статье
1. Павел Фельгенгауэр, который собственно и нашел «единственное объяснение» тому факту, что иракская техника и стрелковка еще стреляет и работает в том, что Россия «все эти годы поставляла ВВТ в Ирак»
2. ПИР Центр Владимира Орлова, который в 1997 году толи "нашел" толи хотел найти в Ираке российские гироскопы для БР
3. Иван Сафранчук (ЦОИ) зачем то подыграл словами, что пограничники и таможенники за денежку «всегда закроют глаза» и дадут добро на пропуск нелегальной поставки
4. даже слова Рогова (ИСКАН) можно трактовать как признание уже свершившегося факта прошлых поставок
при этом не были процитированы слова двух человек с которыми связывался оный корреспондент при подготовке статьи, и которые говорил в другом, «невыгодном для основной идеи статьи» ключе :))
>З.Ы.
>"А как начиналось..."(с) т.Бывалов.
извините, то есть?
C уважением, Марат
+++++++++
(ниже статья на английском:
краткий перевод
ляли вали траливали - Россия как всегда ведет себя некрасиво, поставляя оружие Саддаму, тому подтверждение куча фактов)
By Alex Rodriguez
Tribune foreign correspondent
MOSCOW-Washington was furious after learning that electronic jamming equipment, anti-tank weapons and night vision goggles had found their way from Russia and into the hands of Iraqi forces, but far from surprised.
Russian defense firms and black marketeers have deftly snaked past United Nations sanctions on Saddam Hussein's regime for years, providing Baghdad with everything from spare parts for Iraq's Soviet-era tanks and helicopters to gyroscopes for long-range missiles.
Perhaps the best example of the breadth of illegal arms and military equipment trafficking between Russia and Baghdad was the discovery by Germany's Federal Intelligence Service in early 2001 that Iraq had set up its own military intelligence bureau in Russia to facilitate arms bargaining, according to a report published by the U.S. General Accounting Office.
In the past, Washington has approached the problem cautiously, preferring to use behind-the-scenes diplomacy to stanch the flow of military equipment from Russia to Iraq. That was the tack Bush administration aides took last August, when they first learned that Russian companies were selling Iraq items such as sensitive jamming devices that disrupted the guidance systems of U.S. missiles. But in the early days of the Iraqi war, when the Bush administration learned that Iraqi troops were using the devices with on-the-ground assistance from the manufacturer's experts, Washington decided to vent its anger publicly.
"We did try to resolve these things privately, but we got progressively more frustrated that the Russian side was not investigating these cases seriously enough," said a senior U.S. diplomat who spoke on the condition of anonymity. "The dialogue had run aground." Indeed, since the 1990 imposition of UN sanctions barring sales of military equipment to Iraq, Russia has paid little heed to U.S. complaints about the military goods pipeline that links Russian defense companies with Baghdad, via conduits such as Syria, Ukraine and Belarus.
In 1995, Russia agreed to sell Iraq fermentation equipment that UN inspectors warned was capable of being used to develop biological weapons.
Russia denied any involvement in the matter.
That same year, authorities in Jordan intercepted 30 crates of 115 Russian-made gyroscopes removed from long-range missiles and being shipped from Russia to Karama, Iraq's missile development center, according to 1997 testimony congressional testimony from the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center. Russia at first denied involvement, then told the State Department that it could not track down who made the shipment.
Publicly, Moscow has always hailed its commitment to the spirit of the sanctions. It repeated that commitment after Washington made public its accusations about the electronic jamming devices, as well as Russian defense industry deals to sell Iraq night vision goggles and Kornet anti-tank missiles capable of piercing 47-inch thick tank armor.
"If there is a danger of any kind of illegal supplies, then we have no less interest than the Americans in cutting off those channels," said Igor Neverov, director of the Russian Foreign Ministry's North America department.
Russian experts say the Kremlin is indeed committed to cracking down on Russian dealers that violate UN sanctions, but it has yet to find a way to improve its sieve-like enforcement of that commitment.
Illegal arms sales to Iraq are usually masked with the help of fake end-user certificates that indicate a shipment is destined for Syria or Belarus, when in fact it is headed directly to Iraq. At times, third-party countries actually are used as conduits for the illegal shipments.
Part of the problem also lies in level of corruption that persists in Russia; border authorities responsible for enforcing illegal export laws are easily bought. "There is always someone who closes their eyes," said Ivan Safranchuk, director of the Center for Defense Information in Moscow.
It's impossible to quantify how much Russian-made military equipment has made it to Iraq while UN sanctions have been in place. However, the former Soviet supplied Iraq with $30.5 billion in military hardware, wrote Moscow-based military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer in the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, "and the majority of this equipment can still function, despite the embargo and U.S. bombings.
"There is only one explanation for this miracle," Felgenhauer wrote. "All these years, Russian spare parts and weapons have been secretly supplied to Iraq." Exactly what impact the latest round of Russian-Iraqi military equipment sales will have on Washington's already rocky relationship with Moscow remains unclear. Some experts have already begun to sound grim forecasts of future U.S.-Russian ties.
Sergei Rogov, director of the Moscow-based USA and Canada Studies Institute, said last week the two countries' "partnership has not fallen apart yet, but it is very fragile and may fall apart if the situation develops in a negative way." Leaders in both Moscow and Washington have pointedly stressed that any damage wrought by the war in Iraq to their ties is far from permanent.
Nevertheless, the U.S. has said it awaits with keen interest Russia's reaction to the revelation about military sales to Iraq.
Testifying before a House Appropriations subcommttee last week, U.S.
Secretary of State Colin Powell said a continued denial from Russia about the recent Iraqi purchases likely would diminish Moscow's chances of claiming an economic stake in a postwar Iraq.
"It would be a problem in our relationship," Powell said, "and they understand that."
Адназначна! - Alexusid03.04.2003 17:19:24 (68, 2524 b)