
U105 Nozzle Boot
Materials:
Body: Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U105-A 1.5kg/case of1 1.6kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-B 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-C 1.1kg/case of1 1.2kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-D 1.3kg/case of1 1.4kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-E 1.5kg/case of1 1.6kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-F 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-G 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
centre-right newspaper, that Le
Monde had distorted his testimony. Mr de Villepin had never, he declared, asked him to investigate
any political figure. Yet his notes of a meeting with Mr de Villepin, which were seized in judicial
raids, read “Political stake Nicolas Sarkozy. Fixation with N.Sarkozy (re conflict
Chirac Sarkozy)� And new evidence leaked to Le Monde this week suggests that Mr Sarkozy was
indeed discussed.
Other fuel dispenser questions remain. Who forged the list and who were they trying to destabilise? What was
the role of executives at EADS, the defence and aerospace firm, whose offices were raided by the
judges? They also searched offices at the defence ministry and intelligence headquarters. Mr de
Villepin said this week that he would be ready to testify if asked. But rumours and counter-
rumours keep flying.
On one level, this is a struggle between two presidential aspirants on the right Mr Sarkozy and Mr
de Villepin. Ever since he returned to the interior ministry last year, Mr Sarkozy has wanted to find
out who was behind the smear campaign. He also wanted to know why Mr de Villepin, as interior
minister, did not inform him sooner of the allegations, or of the investigation that cleared his
name. If Mr de Villepin gained from Mr Sarkozy s discomfort at the time, the reverse is now true
the prime minister s popularity has fallen even below that of the president (see chart).
On another level, the affair raises institutional questions.
If it were true that a leading politician had asked a top
spy to snoop on his rival, that would be serious enough.
That politicians consider the intelligence services as
instruments for political ends is graver still. “In a normal
country,�commented François Bayrou, the centrist UDF
leader, “the state is protected from clan warfare. Neither
the state nor the secret services should exist to serve
clans.�
A third uncertainty hovers over the political right. In the
past, corruption scandals have damaged the electoral
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