Well, it makes me glad to see that the US isn't the only country with certain protectionist instincts that plum make no sense. Courtesy of Jerusalem Post:
Having adamantly denied for months that Israel could possibly be purchasing any oil originating in Iran, an Israeli official has now acknowledged that the Jewish state cannot be sure that Iranian oil is not coming here indirectly, and a former Israeli energy minister has told The Jerusalem Post that Iranian oil may have been imported indirectly for years and that he would have readily authorized such purchases himself.
Evidently this must've been a scandal or something for awhile, but at least this sounds reasonable:
"I don't see any problem if Iranian oil is arriving in Israel," said Moshe Shahal, who served as energy minister from 1984 to 1990, "because it's not coming straight from Iran."
Shahal explained that once oil is on the open market, its source becomes clouded. In a sense, he said, the oil loses its nationality while retaining its quality.
Kind of beautiful, that.
da len
Posted by: beats by dr dre headphones | September 28, 2011 at 06:27 AM
ティンバーランド京都府の担当者も「処理の実働部隊となる市町村に受け入れを要請する際の国の基準が不明確で、検討する予定はない」としており、まずは国基準をさらに明確化する必要があると主張。滋賀県も、県内の全19市町が「受け入れ困難」としているため、県としても検討していないという。
ティンバーランドまた、近畿で唯一、広域連合に加盟していない奈良県の担当者も「県民の理解や感情論を考えると現状では難しい」と話している。
Posted by: ティンバーランド | December 10, 2011 at 01:35 AM