06 May 2016

Reinsurance (Acts of Terrorism) Act 1993

The sequence of the issuance of these documents - contrary to popularly held misconceptions - indicate that the British, not the Americans, were the planners of the 2003 Iraq invasion.

It has been inferred of the 10 April 1992 Baltic Exchange incident investigation that semtex was used. The similar, or a variant of semtex, being inferred as used in the Lockerbie incident 4 years previous, according to RARDE's Alan Feraday and Dr. Thomas Hayes.

Thereby the documents, when placed side by side with Prime Minister Tony Blair's citations endeavouring to justify a war, expose a glaring discrepency between MI6 estimates and MP reasoning.

One cannot after a State terrorist incident legislate protection of shareholder profit margin, and conversely across the pond, authorise a war, and then protect the markets.

On the American side, Public Law 107–297 implies a protracted conflict, which was not in Administrative statements reflected in their "selling" of the conflict to the U.S. populace.

The theme of a protracted conflict - perhaps a ruse on the seizure of Iraqi State assets - is however evident already in U.S. Executive Orders 13290, 13303, and 13315, respectively, of 20 March, 22 May, and 28 August 2003.

Who does one think is being fought in Iraq, through the criminal aerial bombardments and disbursements from the Exchequer, one is fighting a Socialist State prosecuting a guerilla war.

One is not fighting the Salafists.

Reinsurance (Acts of Terrorism) Act 1993
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1993/18/pdfs/ukpga_19930018_en.pdf

Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002 (Pubic Law 107–297)
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/STATUTE-116/pdf/STATUTE-116-Pg2322.pdf

Terrorism Risk Insurance Program (Pubic Law 109-144, 110-160, 114-1)
https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/fin-mkts/Pages/program.aspx

Other OECD countries apparently have been following the Anglo-American design.

Terrorism Risk Insurance in OECD Countries
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 1 January 2005.

Since 1993, the OECD has published a series on Policy Issues in Insurance. This series addresses major concerns of economic, political and social actors in the insurance sector, and covers a wide scope of regulatory and supervisory issues, such as: investment regulation, solvency assessment, management of insolvency, insurance contract law, mandatory insurance, reinsurance, taxation of insurance products, accountability, convergence in the financial services industry, policy holder protection, environmental risks, and emerging systemic risks.