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Subject: Formation of a Arab Gulf Treaty Organization. Any two or more of the following Iraq, Kuwate, Barai
SYSOP    9/24/2007 6:23:13 PM
Formation of a Arab Gulf Treaty Organization. Any two or more of the following Iraq, Kuwate, Barain, Qutar, UAE treaty with the United States to suport each others defence. Formal name may varie.
NATO needed to keep the Soviets out, the Americans in and the Germans down. AGTO would need to keep the international terroist organizations out, sectarain cults down and the Americans in. It would be a useful mix of force and diplomacy.

Saudi Araba could be a limited member the way that Japan was allied with the U.S. but not feilding "offencive" forces in the late 50's.
 
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ker       10/3/2007 3:08:57 PM
The story below from this sight sujests the AGTO may be happening by stealth. 


"Red Flag For Arabs
October 3, 2007: The U.S. Air Force has built a high tech air warfare training center in the Persian Gulf, without anyone really noticing. There, "Red Flag" type training has been provided for over six years. This all began in the 1990s, when the UAE (United Arab Emirates) decided to establish closer ties with the United States, especially military relationships. The UAE was particularly interested in upgrading its air force.

 

"There are two reasons for this type of training at the UAE Air Warfare Center. The obvious one is to improve the combat skills of pilots in the UAE, and other Arab nations. But another reason, is to prepare Arab fighter pilots to defeat any Iranian aggression. Despite the decrepit state of the Iranian military (as a result of decades of embargoes), Iran is still a large nation, with large armed forces. The UAE occupies most of the western coast of the Persian Gulf, but has a population of less than three million and armed forces of only 65,000. There are 70 million Iranians, and about half a million of them are in the military. While the Iranian air force only has about 200 operational, and quite elderly, combat aircraft, sheer numbers can be intimidating. The UAE has a hundred more modern warplanes, and it uses the training assistance from the U.S. Air Force, to provide a qualitative edge. The Americans also work with UAE commanders to figure out what kind of surprises the Iranians might try to pull. Arab nations fear the Iranians, who have dominated the region for thousands of years, and have a long history of coming up with imaginative tactics, and using them aggressively and often with success.

 
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ker       10/14/2007 5:14:47 PM
"The Arab Threat
 
"Iran also fears that the United States is mobilizing the Sunni Arab world against Iran. There is some truth to this, and Iranian leaders have condemned an American sponsored Middle Eastern peace conference planned for next month. The Sunni Arab nations are showing growing fear of Iran, and this is obvious in the Sunni Arab mass media. For Iran, the threat here is that Sunni Arabs will unite against Iran. For a long time, Iran has exploited a divided Arab world. But Iran's nuclear weapons efforts are uniting the Arabs, at least against Iran. "
 
Quoted from this site.
 
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ker       12/16/2007 4:47:33 PM
 

Reformers Create A New Coalition

 

link

 

?Iran still has lots of Arab enemies, mainly the Sunni Arab states across the Gulf, who see Iran as a threat. The Iranians see themselves as the natural and traditional leader for the region, and that's exactly the problem as far as the Arabs are concerned.  A recent meeting of the Gulf Cooperation Council (a Sunni Arab group) insisted that there can be no peace with Iran until Iran withdraws from small islands claimed by both Arabs and Iranians (and held by force by Iran).?
 
 
  Barhrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. are coporating ecconomicly,sientificly and diplomaticly through the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council). 
 
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