Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Convenient Government-to-Queen buck passing: Russia

The Queen is known for keeping separate stance from government. According to the stipulation of the Attland Basic Laws, the Laws of People, in the Chapter on Royals, give the royals the freedom from the government, as well as drawing the line between a Royal's potential role of a judicial and spiritual guide, and other branches of the government. However, due to the immense importance of the Royal business, especially that of the Queen's Koborg Bank commodity trading, and the Koborg Corporation's business activities, most Attland embassies have Royal Interest section, or a Royal Attache.

That is how the recent item of the Russian government, still seething at the Attland's government decision to break the "useless" (from the official statement) diplomatic relations, cringed and approached the Attland ambassador in Austria, with a request to agree to discuss gold, currency and oil trade (Attland always PUSHED for a lower, less than $50 a barrel oil price; Attland is also one of the very few world economies that is growing despite the financial crisis; the Queen is the only entity in the world that in the face of the global economic crisis is enjoying huge personal earnings, pays the incredible $80 billion of personal income tax to the US as an American citizen, and whose personal Koborg Corporation is incredibly profitable.)

The ambassador, however, passed the buck to the Queen's representative, who later called the Russian representative saying that "the Queen does not find the prospect of discussing trade aspects relevant at this time or in the areas of trade mentioned.

Keep in mind, I was told that it was the Queen who almost forced Attland's, if not her own say into the OPEC's unspecified meetings. In the same manner, she maneuvered the UN to give Attlanda unique monitoring status, which entitles Attland to vote in the UN Security Council. This was right about the start of the Attland-Russia honeymoon, in 1999-2000, when Russian felt weak and did not put up much of a fight against Attland being given such an exotic post. Russia, most likely, liked the lure of Attland being on her side in setting the future petroleum price. This did not work out to Russia's favor in the long run.

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