By Chinweizu
07feb15
Is this one of them?
Global
Research, May 28, 2010
Or is this
one of those off-the-radar reasons that it pays not to mention to the people?
Now, about
my friend and old sparring partner WS. If you want to know what the Western
powers are up to in Nija, you just watch WS. He has been their boy-in-the-hood
ever since one of his lecturers at IU inspired him to set up his Pyrates as
cover for a Nija network branch of British intelligence. And you think he got
his Nobel for his unreadable books? But that’s another story.
Anyway what
has that deal, signed in May 2010, got to do with Wole’s pro-Buhari position,
or with the momentum of the Buhari campaign despite his being prima facie the
Boko Haram candidate?
The report
about that China
deal concluded on this note:
“Western
policy on Nigeria
is driven by the super-profits generated from the extraction of oil and its
processing. While publicly the US
and its allies proclaim the need for democracy and openness, this is window
dressing. Anything that impedes their drive for profits, whether from local
opposition or from a rival nation, will be dealt with ruthlessly when required.
The latest moves by China
will have caused consternation in the boardrooms of the big oil companies, and
countermeasures are all but inevitable.”
That’s the link, I tell you, to events now unfolding in the
2015 elections.
Is the
pro-Buhari campaign momentum part of the countermeasures? An effort at regime change
by orchestrated propaganda?
To appreciate that possibility, go watch the film “A Very British Coup” to see how such is done.
But what was
the deal for? Why did it give offence and cause consternation in the boardrooms
of the western oil giants—Shell, ExxonMobil and the lot?