"Libya could be a super-power in the region"
Ha ha. This guy is a joke. RT is again looking foolish.
GASMON wrote:Typical answer from a Yank. Tell you who is a joke - OBAMA.
GASMON wrote:Have a listen - VERY frightening, even if only a bit is true.
radon wrote:Can't help but say that RT are mimicking the western-sponsored media in Russia. The gentleman knows everything about all the things in the world and talks with confidence and competence regarding any issue raised - just like the talking heads of the western media in Russia.
Sixstrings wrote:something's not right about Libya.
The thing that bugs me is that this invasion is going down AFTER Libya made right with the West. Gadaffi did what the US asked and gave up his nukes. Libya was rewarded with normalized relations, taken off the terror list, all that. And not that it could ever be made right, but I think Libya did pay restitution to the Pan Am victims.
So here's a situation where a bad actor like North Korea cleaned up its act and did everything we asked -- and right after that we go for regime change! WTF?
A U.S. president eager to advance an agenda of energy dominance, and a market with no room for risk, means 2018 may be one for the geopolitical books. The New Year started with Iran in the grips of one of its worst bouts of political unrest since the Green Revolution in 2009 brought the first glimpses of a challenge to the cleric-backed regime. On Thursday, hundreds of protesters gathered in Mashhad, the country's second-largest city by population, to chant slogans against rising prices in the Islamic Republic. By the weekend, those protests had turned violent and deadly. As the unrest escalated, Eshaq Jahangiri, one of the country's vice presidents, said Thursday he felt the economy was "on a good trend" and inflation, while high, was under control. According to the International Monetary Fund, growth in gross domestic product for Iran should be
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