Friday, August 9, 2013

Britainistan succumbs to massive bribe from Bahrain


Goodbye UK  ...  Hello Caliphate's first conquest in Europe.  The vid below is from Bahrain's News channel and was posted to YouTube  almost a year ago  when a defence contract was signed between islamized Britain and  shariah complaint Bahrain.  

The article below is from today's Telegraph ....tiny little drip, drip, drip for the consumption of the British public.  Nice eh?  The writer of course, sees no danger in such transactions and can only think of  the tonnes of money that's coming Britainistan's way.

If you think our own government does not play the same kind of tricks on us here in Canada .... think again. The only difference is ... we haven't uncovered  them as yet.



Con Coughlin writing at TelegraphUK:
....A huge new defence deal involving    the purchase of Typhoon fighters could see the Army and RAF take on a permanent role.....

....In April the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Democracy in Bahrain even launched a campaign to persuade Bernie Ecclestone, the Formula One chief, to cancel this year’s Bahrain Grand Prix because of the country’s poor human rights record.
And yet when David Cameron marked his return from holiday this week by holding private talks with King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa, the Bahraini monarch, hardly a voice was raised in protest.
If the absence of most MPs from Westminster meant that ministers were spared having to answer awkward questions about the state of our relations with Bahrain, this was not the only reason King Hamad’s London visit prompted such a muted response.............

...........the dawning realisation that a similar fate could befall the kingdoms of the Gulf that has persuaded Britain to adopt a more nuanced approach. Indeed, according to senior Bahraini officials who travelled with the royal party this week, one of the main items on the Downing Street agenda was Bahrain’s desire to sign a billion-pound arms deal with Britain to supply 12 state-of-the-art Typhoon fighters..........

............The government’s decision in 1971 to grant independence to the Arab countries of the Persian Gulf and withdraw British forces west of the Suez Canal predated the Iranian revolution and its negative impact on the security of the region, upon which the West relies for more than 50 percent of its energy. But since coming to office Mr Cameron has spearheaded the diplomatic effort to re-engage with our traditional allies in the Gulf. He has taken business delegations to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, and there is talk of a prime ministerial visit to Bahrain next year, when the kingdom is preparing to celebrate the bicentenary of its association with Britain. At the heart of this flurry of activity is the possibility of an arms deal between the UK and all the Gulf states – including Bahrain – which would provide a much-needed boost to the British defence industry while safeguarding the Arab world’s more vulnerable countries.

If a deal can be agreed – and detailed negotiations have been under way for more than a year – then the six states (Saudi Arabia, Oman, the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait) would sign a multi-billion-pound contract to buy Typhoons and military equipment. In return, those countries would like to see Britain strengthen its military ties, with a permanent garrison of troops and an RAF combat squadron stationed in the Gulf..........

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