ChatterBank4 mins ago
Mali And Cameron
How annoyed CAM THE CON,must be . He was not informed about the Algerian armys rescue attempt, and could not turn this into a THATCHER and the Falklands re election campaign .
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Call me cynical, but I do not believe we and the US were entirely in the dark on this, Algeria is only 5 hours away. Our embassy and officials there will have been in constant contact with the Algerians. I would not be surprised if our special forces were not at the hostage s ene even if they did not participate.
It was never going to be a Falklands situation and a bounce for the sitting Prime Minister.
Unfortunate ending. As another poster mentioned, we have meddled and left vaccuums in North Africa. Perfect for al qaeda to infiltrate and destabilise the region. All the fault of diplomatic cowardise on Hagues watch.
It was never going to be a Falklands situation and a bounce for the sitting Prime Minister.
Unfortunate ending. As another poster mentioned, we have meddled and left vaccuums in North Africa. Perfect for al qaeda to infiltrate and destabilise the region. All the fault of diplomatic cowardise on Hagues watch.
what a load of tosh, gromit.
You really ought to study recent Algerian history in the 20thC before pontificating and you may just learn that there is an inherent distrust of European nations, mainly due to the impact and deceit of the French when Algeria was under their custody, with a healthy disregard for Spain and Italy too.... The UK is just seen as yet another European and one of the better ones for striking oil and gas deals with.
I am not surprised that they have done their own thing - with the growth in terrorism and also a long wariness of their eastern border and the shenanigans going on over there, their way of dealing with terrorism has always been shoot first and ask questions later.
The one sensible remark that you make is that perhaps the SAS and perhaps the Delta Force were on the ground - but only in the last few days......the first call would, probably, have been on the French equivalent.
You really ought to study recent Algerian history in the 20thC before pontificating and you may just learn that there is an inherent distrust of European nations, mainly due to the impact and deceit of the French when Algeria was under their custody, with a healthy disregard for Spain and Italy too.... The UK is just seen as yet another European and one of the better ones for striking oil and gas deals with.
I am not surprised that they have done their own thing - with the growth in terrorism and also a long wariness of their eastern border and the shenanigans going on over there, their way of dealing with terrorism has always been shoot first and ask questions later.
The one sensible remark that you make is that perhaps the SAS and perhaps the Delta Force were on the ground - but only in the last few days......the first call would, probably, have been on the French equivalent.
The downstream oil industry is dependent on the importation of all petroleum products, which account for 17% of the country's imports - and we are talking 4.6k barrels a day (not at all huge). Product is imported from the SIR refinery at Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire and the SAR refinery at Dakar, Senegal, with a significant amount of smuggling from Nigeria taking place. That will have increased dramatically with the ongoing action but French Forces logistics will have covered that, probably Dakar providing the necessary.
DTCrossword fan.
Algeria has been independent of France for over 50 years. The Arab Spring protests in Algeria stem from more recent grievences like a 19 year emergency rule and rampant corruption in the Government. Nothing at all to do with colonialism and anti European feeling.
The result of protests in 2011 resulted in the lifting of emergency rule, but the underlying distrust of its leaders remains.
In 2010 the US signaled a change in policy where they were no longer going to prop up corrupt regimes. They were betting that more democratic regimes would be more stable. Unfortunately democracy hasn't taken root overnight and places such as Algeria are still rather unstable.
Algeria has been independent of France for over 50 years. The Arab Spring protests in Algeria stem from more recent grievences like a 19 year emergency rule and rampant corruption in the Government. Nothing at all to do with colonialism and anti European feeling.
The result of protests in 2011 resulted in the lifting of emergency rule, but the underlying distrust of its leaders remains.
In 2010 the US signaled a change in policy where they were no longer going to prop up corrupt regimes. They were betting that more democratic regimes would be more stable. Unfortunately democracy hasn't taken root overnight and places such as Algeria are still rather unstable.
Here is an interesting article from a year ago that the fight is about cocaine control, the politics of the region being de-stabilised in part by the demise of Qadaffi.
It's in French.
http:// www.lem onde.fr /afriqu e/artic le/2012 /03/12/ la-nouv elle-ge opoliti que-pos t-kadha fi-expl ique-le s-probl emes-ac tuels-a u-mali_ 1652756 _3212.h tml?xtm c=alger ie& xtcr=39 6
It's in French.
http://