Challenge, page 3

With Bush's February 16, 2008, trip to Afrika to counter China's and Russia's economic investment and political foray on the continent, Barack Obama will be required to examine and promote the U.S., Inc. Afrikan economic initiatives. However, he will find difficulty prohibiting CIA covert operations in behalf of American corporations, especially petroleum companies, dividing Afrikan populations in ethnic wars of genocidal proportion, in order to exploit their natural resources.3 These CIA proxy ethnic wars in Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, Sudan and Chad, virtually operate pursuant to the aged old tactic of divide and conquer. Theoretically, such tactics will permit the U.S., Inc. to introduce solutions that favor U.S., Inc. encroachment requiring either the placement of U.S. troops as so-called peacekeepers, and/or U.S., Inc. financial investments – via the World Bank, International Monetary Fund austerity programs or direct U.S. corporate incursions with exorbitant interest and fees resulting in the control of certain natural resources. These economic ventures seek to preserve and/or forge a neo-colonial relationship with these Afrikan governments as part of an overall geopolitical initiative of U.S., Inc. hegemony.

However, other U.S. ethnic groups will seek to reserve their turn at the throne, to be a White House occupier, and will preserve that opportunity by jockeying for political recognition, enjoining competitive monopoly-capitalist ventures i.e., NAFTA, a program that was signed into law by President Bill Clinton in December 1993. Here, Barack Obama will confront protest on the issue of immigration from Mexico and South America and how this impacts the U.S., Inc. economy and race relations in proceeding years, reminiscent of the January 31, 2008, Mexican “Sin maiz, no hay pais” (Without corn, there is no homeland) protest opposing NAFTA. The NAFTA initiative to build a super highway from Canada to Mexico to allow a broad range of imports/exports to travel between the countries will further exacerbate the immigration and drug trafficking concern.

It is documented that Barack Obama supports Zionism over Palestinian right of return and Palestinian independence, he virulently opposes fundamentalist Islam. Despite Barack Obama claiming to oppose U.S. military occupation of Iraq, and allegedly the war in Afghanistan, his campaign promise to withdraw U.S. troops out of Iraq will be limited. Majority of these troops will be redeployed to Kurdistan, Kuwait, and to strengthen troop numbers in Afghanistan. While in campaign speeches he proclaims the need to apply a new method of forging international dialogue, Barack Obama believes in the implementation of an U.S., Inc. hegemonic foreign policy. In this regards, Barack Obama will need to address and balance the dilemma of domestic socio-economic recovery from the recession, while continuing the war policy of the previous administration whose corporate capital investments demand adherence, at the threat of a CIA assassination. This includes the continuation of the documented Afghanistan poppy production that for decades has been a financial drug operation of the CIA that the Taliban had previously disrupted.

3Today, the U.S., Inc., is bankrupt, according to U.S. Treasury report of 2006, it has a federal debt of more than $5 trillion, while Saudi Arabia, Japan, and China governments and corporate investors either control or highly influence major U.S. banking and properties, having purchase close to 100% of that debt. That's $3 trillion borrowed from the Saudis, the Chinese, the Japanese and others. The Arabs of the Gulf nations' took $252 billion in 2005 for OPEC's oil – and put back $311 billion by purchasing U.S. Treasury bills Latin America borrowed $227 billion at high interest – while lending the U.S. $379 billion at low interest. Americans bought $243 billion in products from China – while China holds nearly a trillion dollars ($800 million) in reserve to buy up the U.S. See, also, January 20, 2008, New York Times article: “Overseas Investors Buying U.S. Holdings at Record Pace – Weak Dollar Lures Foreigners, Reigniting Debate” byline Peter S. Goodman and Louise Story.

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