Meanwhile, the geopolitical front remains very shaky to say the least. While there is hoopla over the weekend re democracy breaking out in the Middle East re events in Lebanon, there are just as many ominous developments which are not discussed to any significant degree by the US media.
The death and mutilation scene in Iraq is atrocious and not improving in any way, shape, or form. With unconfirmed reports the US might conduct some kind of military action in Iran in June, this new warning is very disturbing:
Iran warns US, European pressure on nuclear could prompt oil crisis
by Siavosh Ghazi TEHRAN - Iran's top nuclear official on Saturday warned the United States and Europe of the danger of an oil crisis if Tehran is sent before the UN Security Council over its nuclear programme, rejecting outright their demands to halt uranium enrichment. Taking the matter to the Security Council would be "playing with fire", Hassan Rowhani, whose country is the second largest oil producer in OPEC, told reporters. "The first to suffer will be Europe and the United States themselves, this would cause problems for the regional energy market, for the European economy and even more so for the United States," Rowhani said at a conference in Tehran on nuclear technology and sustainable development. EU members Britain, France and Germany are trying to convince Iran to dismantle nuclear fuel work -- which the United States says is part of a covert atomic weapons development -- in return for economic and political rewards. Tehran has argued that it wants to enrich uranium to generate atomic energy for purely civilian use, and argues such work is authorised by the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The United States says the country is "cynically" manipulating a loophole in the NPT, and has threatened to take the matter to the Security Council to seek international sanctions. If Washington brings the issue before the Security Council, "Iran will retract all the decisions it has made and the confidence-building measures it has taken." He said Iran's leaders "could be called upon to make new decisions", but did not provide any details on what that would involve. "The stability in the region would become fragile and the United States would be the first to suffer," he said…