;æ;æÑ ÔÑßÇÊ ÇáÇãä æáÇ ÝÑÓÇä ãÇáØÉ Ýì ÚãáíÇÊ ÇáÊÝÌíÑ ÇáÊì ÊÓÌá Úáì ÍÓÇÈ ÇáãÊÃÓáãíä ãä ‏ÇáØÑÝíä</strong> <br />
<strong>‏3.Åäå‏ áã íßÊÈ Çä ÇáÍßæãÉ ÇáÇãÑíßíÉ ÌÇÁÊ ÊÍÊ ãÓãì ÊÍÑíÑ ÇáÚÑÇÞ áÇÌá ãÕÇáÍ ÇáÔÑßÇÊ ÇáÇãÑßíÉ æÚáì ÑÃÓåÇ ‏Halliburton</strong> <br />
<br />
President Dick Cheney had made in a speech at the London Institute of Petroleum Autumn lunch ‎in 1999 when he was Chairman of Halliburton. A key passage from his speech was: “That means ‎by 2010 we will need on the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day.” ‎ <br />
It suggested that he was fully aware of the issue of peak oil. A full text of the talk had been ‎available on the website of the Institute of Petroleum, but has now been removed ‎‎(wwww.petroleum.co.uk/speeches.htm). Nevertheless, further research did bring to light a printed ‎version, dated 24.08.00, as follows: ‎ <br />
Dick Cheney: “From the standpoint of the oil industry obviously - and I'll talk a little later on ‎about gas - for over a hundred years we as an industry have had to deal with the pesky problem ‎that once you find oil and pump it out of the ground you've got to turn around and find more or ‎go out of business. Producing oil is obviously a self-depleting activity. Every year you've got to ‎find and develop reserves equal to your output just to stand still, just to stay even. This is as true ‎for companies as well in the broader economic sense it is for the world. A new merged company ‎like Exxon-Mobil will have to secure over a billion and a half barrels of new oil equivalent ‎reserves every year just to replace existing production. It's like making one hundred per cent ‎interest; discovering another major field of some five hundred million barrels equivalent every ‎four months or finding two Hibernias a year. For the world as a whole, oil companies are ‎expected to keep finding and developing enough oil to offset our seventy one million plus ‎barrel a day of oil depletion, but also to meet new demand. By some estimates there will be ‎an average of two per cent annual growth in global oil demand over the years ahead along ‎with conservatively a three per cent natural decline in production from existing reserves. ‎That means by 2010 we will need on the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day. ‎So where is the oil going to come from? Governments and the national oil companies are ‎obviously in control of about ninety per cent of the assets. Oil remains fundamentally a ‎government business. While many regions of the world offer greet oil opportunities, the Middle ‎East with two thirds of the world's oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately ‎lies, even though companies are anxious for greeter access there, progress continues to be slow. ‎‎( Bold by the auther)”‎ </font><font size="5"><strong>‏4. áã íßÊÈ Ãä ãä ÇÊÎÐæÇ ÞÑÇÑ ÊÏãíÑ ÇáÚÑÇÞ æÇáÚÑÈ ÌãíÚÇ åã ÇÚÖÇÁ Ýì ÇáãäÙãÉ ÇáÇãÑíßíÉ ÇáÕåíæäíÉ </strong>Das 1953 durch I.L.Kenen gegründete American Zionist Committee for Public Affairs wurde ‎später zum American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC, ‎ </font></p>
<p><font size="5">ÈÚÖ ÇÚÖÇÁ ÇáãäÙãÉ ÇáÇãÑíßíÉ ÇáÕåíæäíÉ AIPAC íÃÎ ÍÓíä <br />
<br />
• George W. Bush, ‎ÇáÇÈä <br />
• George H. W. Bush, ‎ÇáÇÈ‎ ‎ <br />
• Dick Cheney, ‎äÇÆÈ ÇáÑÆíÓ æãÊÎÐ ÞÑÇÑ ÇáÍÑÈ ÈÇáÇÊÝÇÞ ãÚ æÒíÑ ÎÇÑÌíÉ ÇáÓÚæÏíÉ‎ ‎ <br />
• Nancy Pelosi, ‎ãÊÍÏËÉ ÈÇÓã ÇáÈíÊ ÇáÇÈíÖ‎ ‎ <br />
• Bill Clinton,‎íÇÎ ÍÓíä‎ ‎ãÇáÊ ãæäíßÇ‎ ‎ <br />
• Hillary Clinton, ‎ÇáÑÆíÓÉ ÇáÞÇÏãÉ <br />
• Condoleezza Rice, ‎ÇÌãá äÓÇÁ ÇáÚÇáãíä‎ ‎ <br />
• John Kerry, ‎ÓÇÞØ ÇäÊÎÇÈÇÊ ÇáÑÆÇÓÉ ÇáÓÇÈÞÉ <br />
• John McCain, ‎ÓíäÊæÑ <br />
æãä Öãä ÇÚÖÇÁ‎ AIPAC ‎ÇáÇÓÑÇÆáííä ‏ <br />
• Ehud Olmert ‎ <br />
• Jitzchak Rabin ‎ <br />
• Schimon Peres ‎ <br />
• Benjamin Netanjahu ‎ <br />
• Ehud Barak ‎ <br />
• Ariel Scharon ‎ </font></p>