2013/04/03

Dean Henderson: Annunaki, Iraq and Pearl Harbor!

The process of stealing Iraq's oil began, when the Illuminati bankers, baited Saddam Hussein into invading Iran. While Saddam was preoccupied with the Iranians, the puppet Kuwaiti government, busied itself slowly moving its long disputed border with Iraq northward, into the area containing  the massive Rumaila oilfield, which the Four Horsemen now knew to be one of the richest in the world. There, the Kuwaitis established military installations, farms and oil facilities. The expansion added 900 square miles to Kuweit, and gave them control over the southern portion of Rumaila, which contains the largest portion of its estimated 30 billion barrels of oil. Iraq's oil terminal at Fao, was destroyed during the Iran Iraq War, crippling Iraqi National Oil Company (INOC) production at North Rumaila. Iraq wanted to lease the islands of Warbah and Bubiyan from Kuweit, to serve as deep sea ports, that could replace Fao. The Kuwaitis refused. In 1981, the Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), bought Santa Fe Drilling Corporation, and its high tech engineering subsidiary Braun. Santa Fe was a known CIA front. Braun had devised a new slant drilling technique. Throughout the 1980's KOC used this technology to drill horizontally into the Rumaila oilfield, 90% of which fell into Iraqi territory. The Iraqis said Kuwait stole $10 billion worth of crude oil. After the Gulf War, Santa Fe continued to steal Iraqi oil. In April 1993 Kenneth Beaty, head of exploration for Santa Fe, was arrested by the Iraqi government, when he was found inside Iraq, checking an oil well at Rumaila. He was sentenced to eight years at Abu Ghraib prison on trespassing charges. Estimates of Iraqi crude reserves continue to climb. The current estimate is 112 billion barrels, second only to Saudi Arabia, and up from 97 billion barrels just a decade ago. And much of Iraq remains unexplored. David Mangan Jr., editor of The Oil Daily, later said of the Gulf War, "It is most likely that the US plan, from the beginning was to capture Southern Iraq, because that land holds the richest oil fields on earth. But Iraq contains something more important than oil. Rumaila lies at the heart of what was Mesopotamia, between the Tigres and Euphrates Rivers, that drain into the Persian Gulf. The world's most ancient writings, are etched on Sumerian clay tablets, buried beneath the muck at the estuaries of these great rivers. During biblical times, the are was known as Chaldea. It was here, Annunaki researchers say, where the Nubian intruders chose to land, due to its plentiful supply of fossil fuels.  

No comments: