Download as doc, pdf, or txt
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 68

New World Order Definition

Introduction
The following article is extracted from an excellent analysis of the New
World Order by author Ken Adachi which can be found at educate-
yourself.org.
The term New World Order (NWO) has been used by numerous
politicians through the ages, and is a generic term used to refer to a
worldwide conspiracy being orchestrated by an extremely powerful and
influential group of genetically-related indiiduals !at least at the highest
echelons" which include many of the world#s wealthiest people, top
political leaders, and corporate elite, as well as members of the so-called
Black Nobility of $urope !dominated by the British Crown) whose
goal is to create a One World (fascist) Goern!ent, stripped of
nationalistic and regional boundaries, that is obedient to their agenda.
%isten to the &ionist' ban(er, )aul Warburg*
+We will hae a world goernment whether you li(e it or not. The only
,uestion is whether that goernment will be achieed by con,uest or
consent.+ !-ebruary ./, .012, as he testified before the 34 4enate".
Their intention is to effect co!"lete and total control oer eery
human being on the planet and to dramatically reduce the world#s
population by two thirds. While the name New World Order is the term
most fre,uently used today to loosely refer to anyone inoled in this
conspiracy, the study of exactly who ma(es up this group is a complex
and intricate one. -or further research sources, please see the side bar
on the left.
5n .006, Dr #ohn Cole!an published Conspirators Hierarchy: The
Story of the Committee of 300. With laudable scholarship and
meticulous research, 7r 8oleman identifies the players and carefully
details the New World Order agenda of worldwide domination and
control. On page .9. of the Conspirators Hierarchy, 7r 8oleman
accurately summari:es the intent and purpose of the 8ommittee of ;22
as follows*
+A One World <oernment and one-unit monetary system, under
permanent non-elected hereditary oligarchists who self-select from
among their numbers in the form of a feudal system as it was in the
=iddle Ages. 5n this One World entity, population will be limited by
restrictions on the number of children per family, diseases, wars,
famines, until . billion people who are useful to the ruling class, in areas
which will be strictly and clearly defined, remain as the total world
population.
There will be no middle class, only rulers and the serants. All laws will
be uniform under a legal system of world courts practicing the same
unified code of laws, bac(ed up by a One World <oernment police
force and a One World unified military to enforce laws in all former
countries where no national boundaries shall exist. The system will be
on the basis of a welfare state> those who are obedient and subserient
to the One World <oernment will be rewarded with the means to lie>
those who are rebellious will simply be stared to death or be declared
outlaws, thus a target for anyone who wishes to (ill them. )riately
owned firearms or weapons of any (ind will be prohibited.+
Why the Cons"iracy is $nknown
The sheer magnitude and complex web of deceit surrounding the
indiiduals and organi:ations inoled in this conspiracy is mind
boggling, een for the most astute among us. =ost people react with
disbelief and s(epticism towards the topic, unaware that they hae been
conditioned !brainwashed" to react with s(epticism by institutional and
media influences. Author and de-programmer -rit: 4pringmeier !The
Top 13 Illuminati Bloodlines" says that most people hae built in +slides+
that short circuit the mind#s critical examination process when it comes
to certain sensitie topics. +4lides+, 4pringmeier reports, is a 85A term
for a conditioned type of response which dead ends a person#s thin(ing
and terminates debate or examination of the topic at hand. -or example,
the mention of the word +conspiracy+ often solicits a slide response with
many people.
What most people beliee to be +)ublic Opinion+ is in reality carefully
crafted and scripted propaganda designed to elicit a desired behavioral
response from the public. %ublic o"inion "olls are really ta(en with
the intent of gauging the public#s acceptance of the New World Order#s
planned programs. A strong showing in the polls tells them that the
programming is +ta(ing+, while a poor showing tells the NWO
manipulators that they hae to recast or +twea(+ the programming until
the desired response is achieed.
&he NWO 'odus O"erandi
The NWO global conspirators manifest their agenda through the s(ilful
manipulation of human emotions, especially fear. 5n the past centuries,
they hae repeatedly utili:ed a contriance that NWO researcher and
author Daid (cke has characteri:ed in his latest boo(, The Biggest
Secret, as %roble!, )eaction, and *olution.
The techni,ue is as follows* NWO strategists create the %roble! - by
funding , assembling, and training an +opposition+ group to stimulate
turmoil in an established political power !soereign country, region,
continent, etc." that they wish to impinge upon and thus create
opposing factions in a conflict that the NWO themseles maneuered
into existence. 5n recent decades, so called opposition groups are
usually identified in the media as #freedom fighters# or #liberators#.
At the same time, the leader of the established political power where the
conflict is being orchestrated is demoni:ed and, on cue, referred to as
#another ?itler# !ta(e your pic(* 4addam ?ussein, =iloseic, Kadaffi,
etc.". The #freedom fighters# are not infre,uently assembled from a local
criminal element !i.e. K%A, drug traffic(ers". 5n the spirit of true
=achiaellian deceit, the same NWO strategists are e,ually inoled in
coertly arming and adising the leader of the established power as well
!the NWO always profits from any armed conflict by loaning money,
arming, and supplying all parties inoled in a war".
The conflict is drawn to the world stage by the controlled media outlets
with a barrage of photos and ideo tape reports of horrific and bloody
atrocities suffered by innocent ciilians. The cry goes up +4omething has
to be done@+ And that is the desired )eaction.
The NWO puppeteers then proide the *olution by sending in 3N #)eace
Keepers# !Aosnia" or a 3N #8oalition -orce# !<ulf War" or NATO Aombers
and then ground troops !Kosoo", or the military to #search for Weapons
of =ass 7estruction#, which of course are neer found. Once installed,
the #peace (eepers# neer leae. The idea is to hae NWO controlled
ground troops in all maBor countries or strategic areas where significant
resistance to the New World Order ta(eoer is li(ely to be encountered.
Who is the NWO+
The corporate portion of the NWO is dominated by international
bankers, oil barons and "har!aceutical cartels, as well as other
maBor multinational corporations. The )oyal -a!ily of .ngland,
namely /ueen .li0abeth (( and the ?ouse of Windsor, !who are, in
fact, descendants of the <erman arm of $uropean Coyalty - the *a1e-
Coburg-Gotha family - changed the name to Windsor in .0.D", are
high leel players in the oligarchy which controls the upper strata of the
NWO. The decision ma(ing nere centers of this effort are in 2ondon
!especially the City of 2ondon", Aasel 4wit:erland, and Brussels
!NATO head,uarters".
The $nited Nations, along with all the agencies wor(ing under the 3N
umbrella, such as the World 3ealth Organi0ation !W?O", are full time
players in this scheme. 4imilarly, N4&O is a military tool of the NWO.
&he leaders of all !a5or industrial countries li(e the 3nited 4tates,
$ngland, <ermany, 5taly, Australia, New &ealand, etc. !members of the
+</E<F+ " are actie and fully cooperatie participants in this conspiracy.
5n this century, the degree of control exerted by the NWO has adanced
to the point that only certain hand-pic(ed indiiduals, who are groomed
and selected are een eligible to become the prime minister or president
of countries li(e $ngland, <ermany, or The 3nited 4tates. 5t didn#t
matter whether Aill 8linton or Aob 7ole won the )residency in .009,
the results would hae been the same. Aoth men are playing on the
same team for the same ball club. Anyone who isn#t a team player is
ta(en out* i.e. )resident Kennedy, Ali Ahutto !)a(istan" and Aldo =oro
!5taly". =ore recently, Admiral Aorda and William 8olby were also (illed
because they were either unwilling to go along with the conspiracy to
destroy America, weren#t cooperating in some capacity, or were
attempting to exposeE thwart the ta(eoer agenda.
&he NWO6s )ole in *ha"ing 3istory
=ost of the maBor wars, political upheaals, and economic
depressionErecessions of the past .22 years !and earlier" were carefully
planned and instigated by the machinations of these elites. They include
The 4panish-American War !.F0F", World War 5 and World War 55> The
<reat 7epression> the Aolshei( Ceolution of .0./> the Cise of Na:i
<ermany> the Korean War> the Gietnam War> the .0F0-0. +fall+ of
4oiet 8ommunism> the .00. <ulf War> the War in Kosoo> and the
two 5ra, wars. $en the -rench Ceolution was orchestrated into
existence by elements of the NWO.
The instigation of a trumped-up war as a coer for amassing fortunes
can be dated bac( to at least the .6th 8entury when only a core group
of nine members of the Knights Templar, the military arm of a secret
society (nown as the )riory of 4ion, (ic(ed off the The 8rusades that
lasted for oer a century and a half. A rift later deeloped between the
Templars and the )riory of 4ion when Herusalem was lost to 4aracen
Tur(s in ..F/. 5n .;2/, the (ing of -rance, )hilippe the -air, coeted
the wealth and was Bealous of the Templars# power. The -rench (ing,
being a puppet of the )riory of 4ion, set out to arrest all the Templars in
-rance on October .;. While many Templars were sei:ed and tortured,
including their <rand =aster, Hac,ues de =olay, many other Templars
!who had been tipped off" escaped. They eentually resurfaced in
)ortugal, in =alta !as the Knights of =alta" and later in 4cotland as The
4cottish Cites of -reemasonry, with 4lbert %ike playing a (ey role in
defining a plan for establishing a world goernment.
The ac,uisition and consolidation of eer greater wealth, natural
resources, total political power, and control oer others are the
motiating forces which drie the decisions of the NWO leaders. The toll
in human suffering and the loss of innocent lies are non issues for
these indiiduals.
Significant Dates in the Creation of the New World Order
)erhaps the best way to relate a brief history of the New World Order,
would be to use the words of those who hae been striing to ma(e it
real throughout the ages. Iou will be ama:ed at how far bac( this grand
plan has extended, and how many similarities there are in early 8entury
6. compared to the .002#s, with two )residents from the Aush family in
power.
7879-78:8 ; 78<9 ; 78=9 ; 78>9 ; 78?9 ; 78@9
78A9 - %resent
787: -- 8olonel $dward =. ?ouse, a close adisor of )resident Woodrow
Wilson, publishes hillip !ru: "dministrator in which he promotes
+socialism as dreamed of by Karl =arx.+
787< -- The -ederal Cesere !neither federal nor a resere" is created.
5t was planned at a secret meeting in .0.2 on He(yll 5sland, <eorgia by
a group of ban(ers and politicians, including 8ol. ?ouse. This transferred
the power to create money from the American goernment to a priate
group of ban(ers. 5t is probably the largest generator of debt in the
world.
#uly :A, 787= -- World War 5 is triggered by the assassination of
Archdu(e -rancis -erdinand of Austria.
'ay :@, 787? -- )resident Woodrow Wilson proposes at the %eague of
Nations in a speech before the %eague to $nforce )eace, a world needed
to preent the recurrence of a similar war was a world goernment.
Noe!ber 77, 787A -- The end of World War 5, after the signing of the
Armistice at the ..th hour on the ..th day of the ..th month.
'ay <9, 7878 -- )rominent Aritish and American personalities establish
the Coyal 5nstitute of 5nternational Affairs in $ngland and the 5nstitute of
5nternational Affairs in the 3.4. at a meeting arranged by 8ol. ?ouse
attended by arious -abian socialists, including noted economist Hohn
=aynard Keynes. Two years later, 8ol. ?ouse reorgani:es the 5nstitute of
5nternational Affairs into the 8ouncil on -oreign Celations !8-C".
Dece!ber 7>, 78:: -- The 8-C endorses World <oernment in its
maga:ine #oreign "ffairs. Author )hilip Kerr, states*
+Obiously there is going to be no peace or prosperity for man(ind as
long as Jthe earthK remains diided into 12 or 92 independent states
until some (ind of international system is created...The real problem
today is that of the world goernment.+
78:A -- The $pen Conspiracy: Blue rints for a %orld &evolution by
?.<. Wells is published. A former -abian 4ocialist, Wells writes*
+The political world of the into a Open 8onspiracy must wea(en, efface,
incorporate and supersede existing goernments... The Open 8onspiracy
is the natural inheritor of socialist and communist enthusiasms> it may
be in control of =oscow before it is in control of New Ior(... The
character of the Open 8onspiracy will now be plainly displayed... 5t will
be a world religion.+
&o" of %age


78:9 L .0;2 L 78=9 ; 78>9 ; 78?9 ; 78@9
78<7 -- 4tudents at the %enin 4chool of )olitical Warfare in =oscow are
taught*
+One day we shall start to spread the most theatrical peace moement
the world has eer seen. The capitalist countries, stupid and
decadent...will fall into the trap offered by the possibility of ma(ing new
friends. Our day will come in ;2 years or so... The bourgeoisie must be
lulled into a false sense of security.

78<: -- New boo(s are published urging New World Order*
To'ard Soviet "merica by William &. -oster. ?ead of the 8ommunist
)arty 34A, -oster indicates that a National 7epartment of $ducation
would be one of the means used to deelop a new socialist society in the
3.4.
The New World Order by -.4. =arin, describing the %eague of Nations
as the first attempt at a New World Order. =arin says, +nationality
must ran( below the claims of man(ind as a whole.+
!are the School Build a New Social Order( is published. $ducator
author <eorge 8ounts asserts that*
+...the teachers should deliberately reach for power and then ma(e the
most of their con,uest+ in order to +influence the social attitudes, ideals
and behaior of the coming generation...The growth of science and
technology has carried us into a new age where ignorance must be
replaced by (nowledge, competition by cooperation, trust in )roidence
by careful planning and priate capitalism by some form of social
economy.+
lan for eace by American Airth 8ontrol %eague founder =argaret
4anger !.06." is published. 4he calls for coercie sterili:ation,
mandatory segregation, and rehabilitatie concentration camps for all
+dysgenic stoc(s+ including Alac(s, ?ispanics, American 5ndians and
8atholics.
78<< -- The first Humanist )anifesto is published. 8o-author Hohn
7ewey, the noted philosopher and educator, calls for a synthesi:ing of all
religions and +a sociali:ed and cooperatie economic order.+
8o-signer 8.-. )otter said in .0;2* +$ducation is thus a most powerful
ally of humanism, and eery American public school is a school of
humanism. What can the theistic 4unday schools, meeting for an hour
once a wee(, teaching only a fraction of the children, do to stem the tide
of a fie-day program of humanistic teachingM
78<< -- The Shape of Things to Come by ?.<. Wells is published. Wells
predicts a second world war around .0D2, originating from a <erman-
)olish dispute. After .0D1 there would be an increasing lac( of public
safety in +criminally infected+ areas. The plan for the +=odern World-
4tate+ would succeed on its third attempt !about .0F2", and come out
of something that occurred in Aasra, 5ra,.
The boo( also states, +Although world goernment had been plainly
coming for some years, although it had been endlessly feared and
murmured against, it found no opposition prepared anywhere.+
78<= -- The *+ternali,ation of the Hierarchy by Alice A. Aailey is
published. Aailey is an occultist, whose wor(s are channeled from a
spirit guide, the Tibetan =aster Jdemon spiritK 7Bwahl Kuhl. Aailey uses
the phrase +points of light+ in connection with a +New <roup of World
4erers+ and claims that .0;D mar(s the beginning of +the organi:ing of
the men and women...group wor( of a new order...JwithK progress
defined by serice...the world of the Arotherhood...the -orces of %ight...
JandK out of the spoliation of all existing culture and ciili:ation, the
new world order must be built.+
The boo( is published by the %ucis Trust, incorporated originally in New
Ior( as the %ucifer )ublishing 8ompany. %ucis Trust is a 3nited Nations
N<O and has been a maBor player at the recent 3.N. summits. %ater
Assistant 4ecretary <eneral of the 3.N. Cobert =ueller would credit the
creation of his World 8ore 8urriculum for education to the underlying
teachings of 7Bwahl Kuhl ia Alice Aailey#s writings on the subBect.
October :A, 78<8 -- 5n an address by Hohn -oster 7ulles, later 3.4.
4ecretary of 4tate, he proposes that America lead the transition to a
new order of less independent, semi-soereign states bound together
by a league or federal union.
78<8 -- New World Order by ?. <. Wells proposes a collectiist one-
world state+# or +new world order+ comprised of +socialist
democracies.+ ?e adocates +uniersal conscription for serice+ and
declares that +nationalist indiidualism...is the world#s disease.+ ?e
continues*
+The manifest necessity for some collectie world control to eliminate
warfare and the less generally admitted necessity for a collectie control
of the economic and biological life of man(ind, are aspects of one and
the same process.+ ?e proposes that this be accomplished through
+uniersal law+ and propaganda !or education".+
78=9 -- The New World Order is published by the 8arnegie
$ndowment for 5nternational )eace and contains a select list of
references on regional and world federation, together with some special
plans for world order after the war.
Dece!ber 7:, 78=9 -- 5n The Congressional &ecord an article entitled
A New World Order Hohn <. Alexander calls for a world federation.
*e"te!ber 77, 78=7 -- 8onstruction officially began at the )entagon.
92 years later to the day, the )entagon was to be attac(ed on the fateful
4eptember .., 622..
78=: -- The leftist 5nstitute of )acific Celations publishes ost %ar
%orlds by ).$. 8orbett*
+World goernment is the ultimate aim...5t must be recogni:ed that the
law of nations ta(es precedence oer national law...The process will
hae to be assisted by the deletion of the nationalistic material
employed in educational textboo(s and its replacement by material
explaining the benefits of wiser association.+
#une :A, 78=> -- )resident Truman endorses world goernment in a
speech*
+5t will be Bust as easy for nations to get along in a republic of the world
as it is for us to get along in a republic of the 3nited 4tates.+
October :=, 78=> -- The 3nited Nations 8harter becomes effectie.
Also on October 6D, 4enator <len Taylor !7-5daho" introduces 4enate
Cesolution .F; calling upon the 3.4. 4enate to go on record as faoring
creation of a world republic including an international police force.
78=? -- Alger ?iss is elected )resident of the 8arnegie $ndowment for
5nternational )eace. ?iss holds this office until .0D0. $arly in .012, he is
conicted of perBury and sentenced to prison after a sensational trial and
8ongressional hearing in which Whitta(er 8hambers, a former senior
editor of Time, testifies that ?iss was a member of his 8ommunist )arty
cell.
78=? -- The Teacher and %orld -overnment by former editor of the
.*" /ournal !National $ducation Association" Hoy $lmer =organ is
published. ?e says*
+5n the struggle to establish an ade,uate world goernment, the
teacher...can do much to prepare the hearts and minds of children for
global understanding and cooperation...At the ery heart of all the
agencies which will assure the coming of world goernment must stand
the school, the teacher, and the organi:ed profession.+
78=@ -- The American $ducation -ellowship, formerly the )rogressie
$ducation Association, organi:ed by Hohn 7ewey, calls for the*
+...establishment of a genuine world order, an order in which national
soereignty is subordinate to world authority...+
October, 78=@ -- N$A Associate 4ecretary William 8arr writes in the
.*" /ournal that teachers should*
+...teach about the arious proposals that hae been made for the
strengthening of the 3nited Nations and the establishment of a world
citi:enship and world goernment.+
78=A -- %alden II by behaioral psychologist A.-. 4(inner proposes +a
"erfect society or new and !ore "erfect order+ in which children
are reared by the 4tate, rather than by their parents and are trained
from birth to demonstrate only desirable behaior and characteristics.
4(inner#s ideas would be widely implemented by educators in the .092s,
/2s, and F2s as Galues 8larification and Outcome Aased $ducation.
#uly, 78=A -- Aritain#s 4ir ?arold Autler, in the 8-C#s #oreign "ffairs,
sees +a New World Order+ ta(ing shape*
+?ow far can the life of nations, which for centuries hae thought of
themseles as distinct and uni,ue, be merged with the life of other
nationsM ?ow far are they prepared to sacrifice a part of their
soereignty without which there can be no effectie economic or political
unionM...Out of the preailing confusion a new world is ta(ing shape...
which may point the way toward the new order... That will be the
beginning of a real 3nited Nations, no longer crippled by a split
personality, but held together by a common faith.+
78=A -- 3N$48O president and -abian 4ocialist, 4ir Hulian ?uxley, calls
for a radical eugenic policy in 0.*SC$: Its urpose and Its hilosophy.
?e states*
+Thus, een though it is ,uite true that any radical eugenic policy of
controlled human breeding will be for many years politically and
psychologically impossible, it will be important for 3N$48O to see that
the eugenic problem is examined with the greatest care and that the
public mind is informed of the issues at sta(e that much that is now
unthin(able may at least become thin(able.+
78=A -- The preliminary draft of a World 8onstitution is published by
3.4. educators adocating regional federation on the way toward world
federation or goernment with $ngland incorporated into a $uropean
federation.
The 8onstitution proides for a +World 8ouncil+ along with a +8hamber
of <uardians+ to enforce world law. Also included is a +)reamble+ calling
upon nations to surrender their arms to the world goernment, and
includes the right of this +-ederal Cepublic of the World+ to sei:e priate
property for federal use.
&o" of %age

78:9 ; 78<9 ; 78=9 ; 78>9 ; 78?9 ; 78@9
-ebruary 8, 78>9 -- The 4enate -oreign Celations 4ubcommittee
introduces 4enate 8oncurrent Cesolution 99 which begins*
+Whereas, in order to achiee uniersal peace and Bustice, the present
8harter of the 3nited Nations should be changed to proide a true world
goernment constitution.+
The resolution was first introduced in the 4enate on 4eptember .;,
.0D0 by 4enator <len Taylor !7-5daho". 4enator Alexander Wiley !C-
Wisconsin" called it +a consummation deoutly to be wished for+ and
said, +5 understand your proposition is either change the 3nited Nations,
or change or create, by a separate conention, a world order.+ 4enator
Taylor later stated*
+We would hae to sacrifice considerable soereignty to the world
organi:ation to enable them to ley taxes in their own right to support
themseles.+
4"ril 7:, 78>: -- Hohn -oster 7ulles, later to become 4ecretary of
4tate, says in a speech to the American Aar Association in %ouisille,
Kentuc(y, that +treaty laws can oerride the 8onstitution.+ ?e says
treaties can ta(e power away from 8ongress and gie them to the
)resident. They can ta(e powers from the 4tates and gie them to the
-ederal <oernment or to some international body and they can cut
across the rights gien to the people by their constitutional Aill of Cights.
A 4enate amendment, proposed by <O) 4enator Hohn Aric(er, would
hae proided that no treaty could supersede the 8onstitution, but it
fails to pass by one ote.
78>= -- )rince Aernhard of the Netherlands establishes the
Ailderbergers, international politicians and ban(ers who meet secretly on
an annual basis, een to this day. The :99< !eeting too( place oer
the wee(end of .1 to .F =ay in Gersailles, )aris.
78>A -- %orld eace through %orld 1a' is published, where authors
<renille 8lar( and %ouis 4ohn adocate using the 3.N. as a goerning
body for the world, world disarmament, a world police force and
legislature.
78>8 -- The 8ouncil on -oreign Celations calls for a New (nternational
Order. Study .umber 2, issued on Noember 61, adocated*
+...new international order JwhichK must be responsie to world
aspirations for peace, for social and economic change...an international
order...including states labeling themseles as #socialist# JcommunistK.+
78>8 -- The World 8onstitution and )arliament Association is founded
which later deelops a !iagram of %orld -overnment under the
Constitution for the #ederation of *arth.
78>8 -- The )id3Century Challenge to 04S4 #oreign olicy is published,
sponsored by the Coc(efeller Arothers# -und. 5t explains that the 3.4.*
+...cannot escape, and indeed should welcome...the tas( which history
has imposed on us. This is the tas( of helping to shape a new world
order in all its dimensions -- spiritual, economic, political, social.+
*e"te!ber 8, 78?9 -- )resident $isenhower signs 4enate Hoint
Cesolution ./2, promoting the concept of a federal Atlantic 3nion.
)ollster and Atlantic 3nion 8ommittee treasurer, $lmo Coper, later
deliers an address titled, The -oal Is -overnment of "ll the %orld5 in
which he states*
+-or it becomes clear that the first step toward World <oernment
cannot be completed until we hae adanced on the four fronts* the
economic, the military, the political and the social.+
78?7 -- The 3.4. 4tate 7epartment issues a plan to disarm all nations
and arm the 3nited Nations. 4tate 7epartment 7ocument Number /6//
is entitled #reedom #rom %ar: The 04S4 rogram for -eneral and
Complete !isarmament in a eaceful %orld4 5t details a three-stage plan
to disarm all nations and arm the 3.N. with the final stage in which +no
state would hae the military power to challenge the progressiely
strengthened 3.N. )eace -orce.+
78?: -- New 8alls for World -ederalism. 5n a study titled, " %orld
*ffectively Controlled by the 0nited .ations, 8-C member %incoln
Aloomfield states*
+...if the communist dynamic was greatly abated, the West might lose
whateer incentie it has for world goernment.+
The #uture of #ederalism by author Nelson Coc(efeller is published. The
one-time <oernor of New Ior(, claims that current eents compellingly
demand a +new world order,+ as the old order is crumbling, and there
is +a new and free order struggling to be born.+ Coc(efeller says there
is*
+a feer of nationalism...JbutK the nation-state is becoming less and less
competent to perform its international political tas(s....These are some
of the reasons pressing us to lead igorously toward the true building of
a new world order... JwithK oluntary serice...and our dedicated faith
in the brotherhood of all man(ind....4ooner perhaps than we may
reali:e...there will eole the bases for a federal structure of the free
world.+
78?< -- H. William -ulbright, 8hairman of the 4enate -oreign Celations
8ommittee spea(s at a symposium sponsored by the -und for the
Cepublic, a left-wing proBect of the -ord -oundation*
+The case for goernment by elites is irrefutable...goernment by the
people is possible but highly improbable.+
Noe!ber ::, 78?< -- )resident Kennedy is assassinated on
Noember 66, .09;. ?e was (illed according to the occult number
signature of eleen J..K. ?e was (illed in the ..th month, on the 66nd
day, and on the ;;rd parallel. ?e was also (illed in the =asonic 7ealey
)la:a, the most powerful secret society in the world today to whom the
number .. is extremely important. 4ee cuttingedge for details.
78?= -- Ta+onomy of *ducational $b6ectives5 Handboo7 II is published.
Author AenBamin Aloom states*
+...a large part of what we call #good teaching# is the teacher#s ability to
attain affectie obBecties through challenging the students# fixed
beliefs.+
?is Outcome-Aased $ducation !OA$" method of teaching would first be
tried as =astery %earning in 8hicago schools. After fie years, 8hicago
students# test scores had plummeted causing outrage among parents.
OA$ would leae a trail of wrec(age whereer it would be tried and
under whateer name it would be used. At the same time, it would
become crucial to globalists for oerhauling the education system to
promote attitude changes among school students.
78?= -- 8isions of $rder by Cichard Weaer is published. ?e describes*
+progressie educators as a #reolutionary cabal# engaged in #a
systematic attempt to undermine society#s traditions and beliefs.#+
78?@ -- Cichard Nixon calls for New World Order. 5n "sia after
8ietnam5 in the October issue of #oreign "ffairs5 Nixon writes of nations#
dispositions to eole regional approaches to deelopment needs and to
the eolution of a +new world order.+
78?A -- Hoy $lmer =organ, former editor of the .*" /ournal publishes
The "merican Citi,ens Handboo7 in which he says*
+the coming of the 3nited Nations and the urgent necessity that it
eole into a more comprehensie form of world goernment places
upon the citi:ens of the 3nited 4tates an increased obligation to ma(e
the most of their citi:enship which now widens into actie world
citi:enship.+
#uly :?, 78?A -- Nelson Coc(efeller pledges support of the New World
Order. 5n an Associated )ress report, Coc(efeller pledges that, +as
)resident, he would wor( toward international creation of a new world
order.+
&o" of %age

78:9 ; 78<9 ; 78=9 ; 78>9 ; 78?9 ; 78@9
78@9 -- $ducation and the mass media promote world order. 5n
Thinking About A New World Order for the Decade 19905 author
5an Aaldwin, Hr. asserts that*
+...the World %aw -und has begun a worldwide research and educational
program that will introduce a new, emerging discipline -- world order
-- into educational curricula throughout the world...and to concentrate
some of its energies on bringing basic world order concepts into the
mass media again on a worldwide leel.+
78@: -- )resident Nixon isits 8hina. 5n his toast to 8hinese )remier
8hou $n-lai, former 8-C member and now )resident, Cichard Nixon,
expresses +the hope that each of us has to build a new world order.+
'ay 7A, 78@: -- 5n spea(ing of the coming of world goern!ent,
Coy =. Ash, director of the Office of =anagement and Audget, declares
that*
+within two decades the institutional framewor( for a world economic
community will be in place...JandK aspects of indiidual soereignty will
be gien oer to a supernational authority.+
*e"te!ber 77, 78@: -- The world was introduced to terrorism at the
.0/6 =unich Olympic <ames. There were .. 5sraeli athletes (illed.
$xactly 60 years after this attac(, another more despicable horror
occurred - the 4eptember .., 622. terrorist attac(s.
78@< -- The Trilateral 8ommission is established. Aan(er 7aid
Coc(efeller organi:es this new priate body and chooses &bigniew
Ar:e:ins(i, later National 4ecurity Adisor to )resident 8arter, as the
8ommission#s first director and inites Himmy 8arter to become a
founding member.
78@< -- Humanist )anifesto II is published*
+The next century can be and should be the humanistic century...we
stand at the dawn of a new age...a secular society on a planetary
scale....As non-theists we begin with humans not <od, nature not
deity...we deplore the diision of human(ind on nationalistic
grounds....Thus we loo( to the deelopment of a system of world law
and a world order based upon transnational federal goernment....The
true reolution is occurring.+
*e"te!ber 77, 78@< -- 8hilean )resident 4alador Allende is (illed in
a brutal, iolent military coup led by <eneral Augusto )inochet. ?enry
Kissinger was strongly implicated in this attac(, and if he were to eer
stand trial in an 5nternational 8ourt, it is li(ely he would be charged with
masterminding this coup and ordering the assassination of Allende.
4"ril, 78@= -- -ormer 3. 4. 7eputy Assistant 4ecretary of 4tate,
Trilateralist and 8-C member Cichard <ardner#s article The Hard &oad to
%orld $rder is published in the 8-C#s #oreign "ffairs where he states
that*
+the #house of world order# will hae to be built from the bottom up
rather than from the top down...but an end run around national
soereignty, eroding it piece by piece, will accomplish much more than
the old-fashioned frontal assault.+
78@= -- The World 8onference of Celigion for )eace, held in %ouain,
Aelgium is held. 7ouglas Coche presents a report entitled We Can
Achiee a New World Order.
The 3.N. calls for wealth redistribution* 5n a report entitled New
International !cono"ic Order5 the 3.N. <eneral Assembly outlines a
plan to redistribute the wealth from the rich to the poor nations.
78@> -- A study titled, A New World Order5 is published by the 8enter
of 5nternational 4tudies, Woodrow Wilson 4chool of )ublic and
5nternational 4tudies, )rinceton 3niersity.
78@> -- 5n 8ongress, ;6 4enators and 06 Cepresentaties sign "
!eclaration of Interdependence5 written by historian ?enry 4teele
8ommager. The 7eclaration states that*
+we must Boin with others to bring forth a new world order... Narrow
notions of national soereignty must not be permitted to curtail that
obligation.+
8ongresswoman =arBorie ?olt refuses to sign the 7eclaration saying*
+5t calls for the surrender of our national soereignty to international
organi:ations. 5t declares that our economy should be regulated by
international authorities. 5t proposes that we enter a #new world order#
that would redistribute the wealth created by the American people.+
78@> -- Cetired Nay Admiral 8hester Ward, former Hudge Adocate
<eneral of the 3.4. Nay and former 8-C member, writes in a criti,ue
that the goal of the 8-C is the +submergence of 3. 4. soereignty and
national independence into an all powerful one-world goernment...+
78@> -- 9issinger on the Couch is published. Authors )hyllis 4chlafly
and former 8-C member 8hester Ward state*
+Once the ruling members of the 8-C hae decided that the 3.4.
goernment should espouse a particular policy, the ery substantial
research facilities of the 8-C are put to wor( to deelop arguments,
intellectual and emotional, to support the new policy and to confound,
discredit, intellectually and politically, any opposition...+
78@? -- &I$: &eshaping the International $rder is published by the
globalist 8lub of Come, calling for a new international order, including
an economic redistribution of wealth.
78@@ -- The Third Try at %orld $rder is published. Author ?arlan
8leeland of the Aspen 5nstitute for ?umanistic 4tudies calls for*
+changing Americans# attitudes and institutions+ for +complete
disarmament !except for international soldiers"+ and +for indiidual
entitlement to food, health and education.+
J4ound li(e America todayMK
78@@ -- Imperial Brain Trust by %aurence 4houp and William =inter is
published. The boo( ta(es a critical loo( at the 8ouncil on -oreign
Celations with chapters such as* Sha#ing a New World Order$ The
Council%s &lue#rint for 'lobal (ege"on)* 19+9,19-- and Toward
the 19.0%s$ The Council%s /lans for a New World Order.
78@@ -- The Trilateral Connection appears in the Huly edition of "tlantic
)onthly. Written by Heremiah Noa(, it says*
+-or the third time in this century, a group of American schools,
businessmen, and goernment officials is planning to fashion a New
World Order...+
78@@ -- %eading educator =ortimer Adler publishes hilosopher at 1arge
in which he says*
+...if local ciil goernment is necessary for local ciil peace, then world
ciil goernment is necessary for world peace.+
78@8 -- Aarry <oldwater, retiring Cepublican 4enator from Ari:ona,
publishes his autobiography %ith .o "pologies. ?e writes*
+5n my iew The Trilateral 8ommission represents a s(illful, coordinated
effort to sei:e control and consolidate the four centers of power --
political, monetary, intellectual, and ecclesiastical. All this is to be done
in the interest of creating a more peaceful, more productie world
community. What the Trilateralists truly intend is the creation of a
worldwide economic power superior to the political goernments of the
nation-states inoled. They beliee the abundant materialism they
propose to create will oerwhelm existing differences. As managers and
creators of the system they will rule the future.+
What )eally Caused World War 7+
&he &rue Cause of World War 7
?istory boo(s record that World War 5 started when the nations went to
war to aenge the assassination of the Archdu(e -rancis -erdinand, the
heir to the ?absburg throne, on Hune 6F, .0.D.
This is the typical explanation. Aut the +reisionist historian+ (nows Bust
what caused and what the purpose was of the conflagration of World
War 5.
3p until America#s entry into this war, the American people had followed
the wise adice of )resident <eorge Washington gien in his farewell
address, deliered to the nation on 4eptember ./, ./09. )resident
Washington said* +5t is our true policy to steer clear of permanent
alliance with any portion of the foreign world.... Why, by interweaing
our destiny with that of any part of $urope, entangle our peace and
prosperity in the toils of $uropean ambition, rialship, interest, humour
or capriceM#
)resident Washington attempted to warn the American people about
getting embroiled in the affairs of $urope. Aut in .0.D, it was not to be.
There were those who were secretly planning America#s inolement in
World War 5 whether the American people wanted it or not.
&he %lan to (nole 4!erica in World War 7
The pressure to inole the American goernment started in .020, long
before the actual assassination of the Archdu(e.
Norman 7odd, former director of the 8ommittee to 5nestigate Tax
$xempt -oundations of the 3.4. ?ouse of Cepresentaties, testified that
the 8ommittee was inited to study the minutes of the 8arnegie
$ndowment for 5nternational )eace as part of the 8ommittee#s
inestigation. The 8ommittee stated* +The trustees of the -oundation
brought up a single ,uestion. 5f it is desirable to alter the life of an
entire people, is there any means more efficient than war.... They
discussed this ,uestion... for a year and came up with an answer* There
are no (nown means more efficient than war, assuming the obBectie is
altering the life of an entire people. That leads them to a ,uestion* ?ow
do we inole the 3nited 4tates in a war. This is in .020.+
4o the decision was made to inole the 3nited 4tates in a war so that
the +life of the entire people could be altered.+ This was the conclusion
of a foundation supposedly committed to +peace.+

The method by which the 3nited 4tates was drawn into the war started
on October 61, .0.., when Winston 8hurchill was appointed the -irst
%ord of the Admiralty in $ngland.
Winston 8hurchill is an interesting indiidual, as he later came to the
conclusion that there was indeed a master conspiracy at wor( in the
maBor eents of the world, when he wrote the following in .062* +-rom
the days of 4partacusNWeishaupt to those of Karl =arx, to those of
Trots(y !Cussia"... this world-wide conspiracy for the oerthrow of
ciili:ation... has been steadily growing.+
The second (ey appointment made during the pre-war period was the
appointment of -ran(lin 7elano Cooseelt as Assistant 4ecretary of the
Nay by )resident Woodrow Wilson.
Cooseelt is also on record as concluding that there was a conspiracy, at
least in the 3nited 4tates. ?e once wrote to 8olonel $dward =andell
?ouse* +The real truth of the matter is, as you and 5 (now, that a
financial element in the larger centers has owned the goernment eer
since the days of Andrew Hac(son, and 5 am not wholly excepting the
administration of W.W. !Woodrow Wilson." The country is going through
a repetition of Hac(son#s fight with the Aan( of the 3nited 4tatesNonly
on a far bigger and broader basis.+
&he *inking of the 2usitania
The next step in the maneuering of the 3nited 4tates into the war
came when the 8unard %ines, owner of the ocean liner, the 0usitania,
turned the ship oer to the -irst %ord of the Admiralty, Winston
8hurchill. 5t now became a ship of the $nglish Nay and was under the
control of the $nglish goernment.
The ship was sent to New Ior( 8ity where it was loaded with six million
rounds of ammunition, owned by H.). =organ O 8o., to be sold to
$ngland and -rance to aid in their war against <ermany.
5t was (nown that the ery wealthy were interested in inoling the
American goernment in that war, and 4ecretary of 4tate William
Hennings Aryan was one who made note of this. +As 4ecretary JAryanK
had anticipated, the large ban(ing interests were deeply interested in
the World War because of wide opportunities for large profits. On August
;, .0.D, een before the actual clash of arms, the -rench firm of
Cothschild -reres cabled to =organ and 8ompany in New Ior(
suggesting the flotation of a loan of P.22,222,222, a substantial part of
which was to be left in the 3nited 4tates, to pay for -rench purchases of
American goods.+
$ngland bro(e the <erman war code on 7ecember .D, .0.D, so that +Ay
the end of Hanuary, .0.1, JAritish 5ntelligence wasK able to adise the
Admiralty of the departure of each 3-boat as it left for patrol....+
This meant that the -irst %ord of the Admiralty, Winston 8hurchill, (new
where eery 3-boat was in the icinity of the $nglish 8hannel that
separated $ngland and -rance.
The ocean liner was set to sail to $ngland already at war with <ermany.
The <erman goernment had placed adertisements in the New Ior(
newspapers warning the American people considering whether or not to
sail with the ship to $ngland that they would be sailing into a war :one,
and that the liner could be sun(.
4ecretary Aryan promised that +he would endeaor to persuade the
)resident !Woodrow Wilson" publicly to warn the Americans not to trael
Jaboard the 1usitaniaK. No such warning was issued by the )resident,
but there can be no doubt that )resident Wilson was told of the
character of the cargo destined for the 1usitania. ?e did nothing... .+
$en though Wilson proclaimed America#s neutrality in the $uropean
War, in accordance with the prior admonitions of <eorge Washington, his
goernment was secretly plotting to inole the American people by
haing the 1usitania sun(. This was made public in the boo( The
Intimate apers of Colonel House, written by a supporter of the 8olonel,
who recorded a conersation between 8olonel ?ouse and 4ir $dward
<rey of $ngland, the -oreign 4ecretary of $ngland*
<rey* What will America do if the <ermans sin( an ocean liner with
American passengers on boardM
?ouse* 5 beliee that a flame of indignation would sweep the 3nited
4tates and that by itself would be sufficient to carry us into the war.
On =ay /, .0.1, the 1usitania was sun( off the coast of 8ounty 8or(,
5reland by a 3-boat after it had slowed to await the arrial of the $nglish
escort essel, the /uno, which was intended to escort it into the $nglish
port. The -irst %ord of the Admiralty, Winston 8hurchill, issued orders
that the Huno was to return to port, and the 1usitania sat alone in the
channel. Aecause 8hurchill (new of the presence of three 3-boats in the
icinity, it is reasonable to presume that he had planned for the
1usitania to be sun(, and it was. .62. people lost their lies in the
sin(ing.
This sin(ing has been described by 8olin 4impson, the author of a boo(
entitled The 1usitania, as +the foulest act of wilful murder eer
committed on the seas.+
Aut the eent was not enough to enable )resident Wilson to declare war
against the <erman goernment, and the conspirators changed tactics.
They would use other means to get the American people inoled in the
war, as the +flame of indignation+ did not sweep the 3nited 4tates as
had been planned.
Cobert %ansing, the Assistant 4ecretary of 4tate, is on record as stating*
+We must educate the public gradually N draw it along to the point
where it will be willing to go into the war.+
After the sin(ing of the 1usitania, two in,uiries were held, one by the
$nglish goernment, in Hune, .0.1, and one by the American
goernment in .0.F. =r. 4impson has written that +Aoth sets of
archies... contain meager information. There are substantial differences
of fact in the two sets of papers and in many cases it is difficult to
accept that the files relate to the same essel.+
Aut in both in,uiries, the conclusions were the same* torpedoes and not
exploding ammunition san( the 1usitania, because there was no
ammunition aboard. The coer-up was now official.
Aut there hae been critics of these in,uiries. One was, of course, the
boo( written by 8olin 4impson, who did the research necessary to write
his boo( in the original minutes of the two in,uiries.
The %os Angeles Times reiewed =r. 4impson#s boo( and concluded*
+The 1usitania proes beyond a reasonable doubt that the Aritish
goernment connied at the sin(ing of the passenger ship in order to
lure America into World War 5. The <ermans, whose torpedo struc( the
liner, were the unwitting accomplices or ictims of a plot probably
concocted by Winston 8hurchill.+
)resident Wilson was see(ing re-election in .0.9. ?e campaigned on his
record of +(eeping us out of the War+ during his first term of office from
.0.6 to .0.9.

&he )eal )eason for World War 7
Aut behind the scenes, Wilson was secretly plotting America#s entry into
the War, mainly through the machinations of Wilson#s maBor adisor,
8olonel $dward =andell ?ouse. ?ouse had already committed America
to a participation in the war* +The ?ouse-<rey memorandum... pledged
American interention on the side of the Allies if <ermany would not
come promptly to the peace table. This agreement was approed by
Wilson eight months before the .0.9 election.+
Aut the real reason the War was being fought was slowly emerging. One
of the first reelations occurred on =ay 6/, .0.9, when )resident Wilson
urged the creation of the %eague of Nations in a speech entitled 1eague
to *nforce eace. Wilson argued that what the world needed to preent
the recurrence of a similar war was a world goernment.
4ome were not happy with the slowness of America#s entry into the war.
One of these was -ran(lin Cooseelt, who*
5n the early months of .0./ Jbefore the official declaration of war by the
3nited 4tates goernmentK he had been in constant conflict with his
chief, 4ecretary of the Nay, Hoseph 7aniels, oer the same issues.
-or 7aniels, who resisted eery moe that might carry the 3nited 4tates
into the war, those four months !Hanuary through April" of .0./ were
the +agony of <ethsemane.+
?e opposed conoying Jthe intentional sending of American ships into
the war :one in the hope that one would be sun( by the <erman NayK.
?e opposed the arming of merchant ships Jintentionally proo(ing the
<erman Nay into belieing that the ship was a ship of warK.
Cooseelt faored both.
And when a filibuster preented congressional authori:ation of the
arming of merchantmen, Cooseelt was impatient with Wilson for not
immediately using his executie power to arm Jthe shipsK. ?e dined at
the =etropolitan 8lub with a group of Cepublican +warhaw(s+ JCooseelt
was a 7emocratK. 5t included Theodore Cooseelt, <eneral Wood, H.).
=organ, and $lihu Coot Jone of the founders of the 8-CK.
The primary topic of discussion was, according to Cooseelt#s diary,
+how to ma(e Administration steer a dear course to uphold rights.+
This was an euphemism for an aggressie policy on the high seas that
would result in indents and inole the 3nited 4tates in the war.
Cooseelt#s badgering apparently paid off, for on April 6, .0./, )resident
Wilson as(ed 8ongress for a 7eclaration of War, and it was granted on
April 9. The 3nited 4tates was now in the war +to end all wars,+ and +to
ma(e the world safe for democracy.+
The war wound its horrible course through the destruction of human
lies and ended on Noember .., .0.F.
?istorian Walter =illis wrote the following about the purpose of the war
and about ?ouse#s basic intent* +The 8olonel#s sole Bustification for
preparing such a batch of blood for his countrymen was his hope of
establishing a new world order Ja world goernmentK of peace and
security....+
&he Outrageous &reaty of Bersailles
The official treaty that ended the war was the Treaty of Gersailles, where
representaties of all sides sat down at a conference table and wrote the
treaty.
4eeral interesting personalities attended these meetings. 5n the Aritish
delegation was the Aritish economist Hohn =aynard Keynes, and
representing the American ban(ing interests was )aul Warburg, the
8hairman of the -ederal Cesere. ?is brother. =ax, the head of the
<erman ban(ing firm of =.=. Warburg and 8ompany, of ?amburg,
<ermany, and who +was not only in charge of <ermany#s finances but
was a leader of the <erman espionage system+ was there as a
representatie of the <erman goernment.
The Treaty was written to end the war, but another delegate to the
conference. %ord 8ur:on of $ngland, the Aritish -oreign 4ecretary, saw
through what the actual intent was and declared* +This is no peace> this
is only a truce for twenty years.+ %ord 8ur:on felt that the terms of the
Treaty were setting the stage for a second world war, and he correctly
predicted the year it would start* .0;0.
%ord 8ur:on was indeed a prophet* he pic(ed the actual year that World
War 55 would start@
One of the plan(s of the Treaty called for large amounts of war
reparations to be paid to the ictorious nations by the <erman
goernment. This plan( of the Treaty alone caused more grief in the
<erman nation than any other and precipitated three eents*
.. The +hyperinflation+ of the <erman mar( between .062 and .06;>
6. The destruction of the middle class in <ermany> and
;. The bringing to power of someone who could end the inflation* a
dictator li(e Adolf ?itler.
This plan( was written by Hohn -oster 7ulles, one of the founders of the
8ouncil on -oreign Celations, and later the 4ecretary of 4tate to
)resident 7wight $isenhower.
$en Hohn =aynard Keynes became concerned about the Treaty. ?e
wrote* +The peace is outrageous and impossible and can bring nothing
but misfortune behind it+.
5n addition to writing the Treaty of Gersailles, the nations who were
ictorious in the war also wrote the 8harter of the %eague of Nations,
which was ratified on Hanuary .2, .062, and signed by )resident Wilson
for the American goernment. Wilson brought the treaty bac( to the
3nited 4tates and as(ed the 4enate to ratify it The 4enate,
remembering <eorge Washington#s adice to aoid foreign
entanglements and reflecting the iews of the American people who did
not wish to enter the %eague, refused to ratify the treaty. )resident
Wilson was not pleased, possibly because he saw himself, as 4enator
?enry 8abot %odge was ,uic( to point out, as* +... a future )resident of
the world.+
5t is now apparent that Wilson intended to head up the world
goernment the war was fought to gie the world, and he became
depressed when the Treaty was not ratified. 5magine the disappointment
of one who had come so close to becoming the ery first )resident of
the World, only to hae it ta(en away by the actions of the 4enate of the
3nited 4tates. 5magine the sense of incredible power that Wilson must
hae felt, thin(ing he would become the ery first indiidual in the
history of man(ind to rule the world. Others had tried and failed, but
Wilson was confident that he would succeed.
Aut the American people, expressing their displeasure through the
4enate, would not let him.
&he )ich Get )icher
Others were not so disappointed, howeer. +The war, in brief, proided
an unparalleled opportunity for the richest families to grab Jexorbitant
profitsK at the expense of the public and, without exception, they made
the most of this opportunity. The rich families, to be sure, wanted the
war to be won, but they too( care that the ictory was expensie to the
common taxpayers. They uttered no cries for goernment economy... so
long as the public treasury was at their disposal.+
One of the families who reaped the exorbitant profits were +the
Coc(efellers, who were ery eager for the 3nited 4tates to enter World
War 5, Jand whoK made far more than P622,222,222 from that conflict.+
Aut support for the %eague of Nations continued. The <rand Orient
%odge of -reemasonry of -rance was one which adised all of its
members* +5t is the duty of uniersal -reemasonry to gie its full
support to the %eague of Nations....+
As could hae been anticipated, the %eague of Nations became a maBor
issue during the )residential election of .062.
The Cepublican candidate Warren <. ?arding was on record as opposing
the %eague and further attempts to ratify the charter* +5t will aail
nothing to discuss in detail the %eague coenant, which was conceied
for world super-goernment 5n the existing %eague of Nations, world
goerning with its super-powers, this Cepublic will hae no part.+
?e was opposed in the Cepublican primaries by <eneral %eonard Wood,
one of the Cepublican +warhaw(s,+ who was +.. .bac(ed by a powerful
group of rich men who wish!ed" a military man in the White ?ouse.+
The American people, once again manifesting their disapproal of the
%eague, oted for ?arding as an eidence of that distrust and concern.
?arding outpolled his opposition by a greater margin than did )resident
Wilson who had +(ept us out of the war+ during the election of .0.9.
Wilson got only fifty-two percent of the ote, and ?arding got sixty-four
percent
?arding was a supporter of William ?oward Taft, the )resident who
opposed the ban(ers and their -ederal Cesere Aill. After his election, he
named ?arry =. 7augherty, Taft#s campaign manager, as his Attorney
<eneral.
?is other 8abinet appointments were not as wise, howeer, as he
unexplainably surrounded himself with men representing the oil
industry.
-or instance*
his 4ecretary of 4tate was 8harles $ans ?ughes, an attorney of
4tandard Oil>
his 4ecretary of the Treasury was Andrew =ellon, owner of <ulf
Oil>
his )ostmaster <eneral was Will ?ays, an attorney for 4inclair Oil>
and
his 4ecretary of the 5nterior was Albert -all, a protQgQ of the oil
men.
5t was =r. -all who was to be )resident ?arding#s downfall, as he later
accepted a bribe from ?arry 4inclair in exchange for a lease of the
Nay#s oil reseres in Teapot 7ome, Wyoming.
There are many who beliee that the scandal was intended to discredit
the ?arding administration in an attempt to remoe him from office for
two ery important reasons*
.. ?arding was consistently ocal against the %eague of Nations, and
there was still a chance that its supporters could get the 3nited
4tates to Boin as the %eague had suried the 4enate#s prior
refusal to ratify the treaty, and
6. Attorney <eneral 7augherty had been prosecuting the oil trusts
under the 4herman anti-trust laws.
These actiities did not please the oil interests who had created the
Teapot 7ome scandal. Aut ?arding unfortunately did not lie to see the
full repercussions of the artificial scandal, as he died on August 6, .06;,
before the story completely surfaced. !There are those who beliee that
there were some who couldn#t wait for the Teapot 7ome 4candal to
remoe )resident ?arding, and that he was poisoned."
Aut the oil interests allowed it to completely play its course as a warning
to future )residents of the 3nited 4tates not to oppose the oil interests.
The warning has been generally heeded. Not many hae chosen to
contend with the true rulers of the 3nited 4tates.
What )eally Caused World War :+
The True Cause of the Second World War
The date of 4eptember ., .0;0, when <ermany inaded )oland, is
remembered as the date the war started. Aut little is remembered about
the date Cussia also moed into )oland, on 4eptember .9,.0;0. The
nation of )oland was now diided between these two war-time allies.
5t is interesting to notice what the responses of the maBor allied nations
were to these two dates. When <ermany entered the western portion of
)oland, Aritain and -rance declared war on <ermany. Aut when Cussia
moed into eastern )oland, there was no war declaration by either
nation.
The 4oiets caused one of the tragic eents of history after they
occupied their portion of )oland. They captured approximately .2,222
)olish officers and brutally murdered them, most of them meeting their
death in Katyn -orest near the Cussian town of 4molens(. The
traditional story about their deaths was that the officers had been (illed
by the <erman army, but now the eidence is clear that the Cussians
committed this crime. The other ictims were ta(en aboard a barge
which was towed out to sea and then sun(.
$en with all of these efforts of the American businessman to construct
the <erman war machine with the full (nowledge and approal of
)resident Cooseelt, he (ept repeating that the nation would continue its
+neutral+ position* it would remain out of the war. On 4eptember .,
.0;0, when the war started, he was as(ed by a reporter whether
America would stay out of the war and Cooseelt replied* +... 5 beliee
we can, and eery effort will be made by the Administration to do so.+
Cooseelt responded by appointing <eorge =arshall, a 8-C member, as
8hief of 4taff of the Army oer <eneral 7ouglas =acArthur, not a
member of the 8-C, and other senior officers.
Others did not beliee Cooseelt#s claim that America would remain
neutral. On 4eptember .6, .0;0, ?ans Thomson, the <erman charge
d#affaires in Washington, cabled the <erman goernment* +... if defeat
should threaten the Allies !$ngland and -rance", Cooseelt is determined
to go to war against <ermany, een in the face of the resistance of his
own country.+
Aut <ermany#s war efforts were still dependent on oil resources, and it
came from a ariety of sources, some external to the <erman border.
Aefore Cumania was inaded by the <ermans, it was selling oil to
<ermany. %ife maga:ine of -ebruary .0, .0D2, has a picture of
Cumanian oil being loaded into oil tan( cars. The picture has a caption
under it which reads, in part* +Oil for <ermany moes in these tan( cars
of American $ssolube and Aritish 4hell out of 8reditui =inier yards near
)loesti !Cumania." Notice that cars are mar(ed for <erman-American Oil
8o. and <erman Cailways, consigned to ?amburg and Wuppertal in
<ermany. They were sent from <ermany to speed up Cumanian oil
shipments.+ This picture was ta(en after <ermany had inaded Austria
and )oland, yet American and Aritish oil companies are transporting oil
for the <erman goernment, !the tan( cars in the picture are dearly
mar(ed +$ssolube,+ and +4hell+".
And other sources supplied oil as well. When the <erman air force ran
short of fuel, this was generously supplied from the great refinery
belonging to the 4tandard Oil 8ompany situated on the island of Aruba
ia 4panish tan(ers. This occurred during the war itself, yet these
tan(ers were not sun( by American submarines.
$en with the purchases of oil from non-<erman sources, the maBor
supplier of oil was still the cartel. The 5.<. -arben-4tandard Oil
cooperation for production of synthetic oil from coal gae the 5.<.
-arben cartel a monopoly of <erman gasoline production during World
War 55. Hust under one half of <erman high octane gasoline in .0D1 was
produced directly by 5.<. -arben, and most of the balance by its
affiliated companies.
Aut as the war in $urope continued, America#s leaders were attempting
to get America inoled, een though the American people didn#t want
to become part of it Cooseelt, the presidential candidate, was
promising the American people that the Cooseelt administration would
remain neutral should he be re-elected. Others (new better. One, for
instance, was <eneral ?ugh Hohnson, who said* +5 (now of no well
informed Washington obserer who isn#t coninced that, if =r. Cooseelt
is elected !in .0D2", he will drag us into war at the first opportunity, and
that, if none presents itself, he will ma(e one.+
Cooseelt had two opportunities to inole America in World War 55*
Hapan was at war with 8hina, and <ermany was at war with $ngland,
-rance and other countries. Aoth war :ones presented plenty of
opportunities to inole the American goernment in the war, and
Cooseelt was ,uic( to sei:e upon the opportunities presented.
?is first opportunity came from the war in the )acific. 5t was in August,
.0D2, that the 3nited 4tates bro(e the Hapanese +purple+ war-time
code. This gae the American goernment the ability to read and
understand all of their recoerable war-time messages. =achines were
manufactured to de-code Hapan#s messages, and they were sent all oer
the world, but none was sent to )earl ?arbor.
Cooseelt#s public efforts to inole America, while ostensibly remaining
neutral, started in August, .0D2, when the National <uard was oted
into -ederal serice for one year. This was followed in 4eptember by the
4electie 4erice Act, also for one year#s duration.
Aut the (ey to America#s early inolement occurred on 4eptember 6F,
.0D2, when Hapan, <ermany and 5taly signed the Tripartite Treaty. This
treaty re,uired that any of the three nations had to respond by declaring
war should any one of the other three be attac(ed by any of the Allied
nations. This meant that should Hapan attac( the 3nited 4tates, and the
3nited 4tates responded by declaring war against Hapan, it would
automatically be at war with the other two nations, <ermany and 5taly.
Cooseelt now (new that war with Hapan meant war with <ermany. ?is
problem was soled.
?e had made secret commitments to Winston 8hurchill and the $nglish
goernment to become inoled in the war against <ermany and he
(new that the only way he could fulfill his secret commitments to
8hurchill to get us into the war, without openly dishonoring his pledges
to the American people to (eep us out, was by proo(ing <ermany or
Hapan to attac(.
Cooseelt moed towards the )acific theater first, (nowing that, if he
could proo(e Hapan to attac( America first, America would
automatically be at war with <ermany as well. ?e also (new that, should
<ermany attac( America, Hapan would hae to declare war on America.
4o Cooseelt attempted to get either nation to attac( the 3nited 4tates
first. Hapan was to get the first opportunity.
5n October, .0D2, 4ecretary of the Nay -ran( Knox sent for Admiral
H.O. Cichardson, 8ommander-in-8hief of the American fleet in the
)acific. Knox adised him that the )resident wanted him to establish a
patrol of the )acificNa wall of American naal essels stretched across
the western )acific in such a way as to ma(e it impossible for Hapan to
reach any of her sources of supply> a bloc(ade of Hapan to preent by
force her use of any part of the )acific Ocean. Cichardson protested
igorously. ?e said that would be an act of war, and besides, we would
lose our nay. Of course Cooseelt had to abandon it.
This scene in history poses two rather interesting ,uestions*
.. Why did Cooseelt, the 8ommander-in-8hief of all armed forces,
including the Nay, not directly order Admiral Cichardson to do as
he wishedM Why did he choose to use his 4ecretary of the Nay to
almost politely as( him to create the naal patrolM
5s it possible that Cooseelt did not choose to use his supreme
power because he (new that this was indeed an act of war and
that he did not want to be identified as the originator of the plan.
5f Cichardson had agreed to Knox#s proposal, and Hapan had
attac(ed an American naal essel, Cooseelt could hae directly
blamed the admiral for allowing the essel to get into the position
of being fired upon by the Hapanese Nay in the first place.
Cooseelt wanted a scapegoat and Cichardson refused.

6. Why did Cooseelt not replace the admiral with someone who
would do exactly as he wishedM
5t is possible that Cooseelt reali:ed that Cichardson now (new
about the plan, and since he did not approe, he would be in a
position to clearly identify Cooseelt as the source of the idea
should the second admiral agree to it.
Cooseelt did not want to Beopardi:e his carefully constructed
image as a +doe+ in the ,uestion of whether or not America
should become inoled in the war.
5t is important to remember that, in Noember, .0D2, Bust after this
incident, candidate Cooseelt told the American people* +5 say to you
fathers and mothers, and 5 will say it again and again and again, your
boys will not be sent into foreign wars.+
Cichardson later appraised his situation at )earl ?arbor and felt that his
position was extremely precarious. ?e isited Cooseelt twice during
.0D2 to recommend that the fleet be withdrawn to the west coast of
America, because*
.. ?is ships were inade,uately manned for war>
6. The ?awaiian area was too exposed for -leet training> and
;. The -leet defenses against both air and submarine attac(s were
far below the re,uired standards of strength.
That meant that the American goernment had done nothing to shore
up the defenses of )earl ?arbor against an offshore attac( since the
naal manueers of .0;6 discoered Bust how ulnerable the island was.
Cichardson#s reluctance to proide Cooseelt#s incident for the 3nited
4tates to enter the war, and his concern about the status of the -leet,
led to his being unexpectedly relieed of the -leet command in Hanuary,
.0D..
The American Ambassador to To(yo, Hoseph 8. <rew, was one of the
first to officially discoer that )earl ?arbor was the intended target of
the Hapanese attac(, as he corresponded with )resident Cooseelt#s
4tate 7epartment on Hanuary 6/, .0D.* +The )eruian minister has
informed a member of my staff that he had heard from many sources,
including a Hapanese source, that, in the eent of trouble brea(ing out
between the 3nited 4tates and Hapan, the Hapanese intended to ma(e a
surprise attac( against )earl ?arbor....+
5n =arch .0D., )resident Cooseelt was still hoping for an incident
inoling the 3nited 4tates and <ermany, according to ?arold 5c(es,
Cooseelt#s 4ecretary of the 5nterior. ?e reported* +At dinner on =arch
6D, he JCooseeltK remar(ed that #things are coming to a head>
<ermany will be ma(ing a blunder soon.# There could be no doubt of the
)resident#s scarcely concealed desire that there might be an incident
which would Bustify our declaring a state of war against <ermany....+
Cooseelt and 8hurchill had conspired together to incite an incident to
allow America#s entry into the war. According to 8hurchill*
The )resident had said that he would wage war but not declare it, and
that he would become more and more proocatie. 5f the <ermans did
not li(e it, they could attac( American forces.
The 3nited 4tates Nay was ta(ing oer the conoy route to 5celand.
The )resident#s orders to these escorts were to attac( any 3-boat which
showed itself, een if it were two or three hundred miles away from the
conoy....
$erything was to be done to force +an incident+.
?itler would be faced with the dilemma of either attac(ing the conoys
and dashing with the 3nited 4tates Nay or holding off, thus +giing us
ictory in the Aattle of the Atlantic. 5t might suit us in six or eight wee(s
to proo(e ?ider by taunting him with this difficult choice.+
Aut ?ider was attempting to aoid a confrontation with the 3nited
4tates. ?e had told his naal commanders at the end of Huly J.0D.K to
aoid incidents with the 3nited 4tates while the $astern campaign Jthe
war against CussiaK was still in progress .... A month later these orders
were still in force.
8hurchill een wrote to Cooseelt after the <erman ship the Bismarc7
san( the Aritish ship the Hood, recommending in April, .0D.* +... that
an American warship should find the rin, *ugen !the escort to the
Bismarc7" then draw her fire, #thus proiding the incident for which the
3nited 4tates would be so than(ful,# i.e., bring her into the war.+
?itler was not as wise in other matters. ?e attac(ed his +ally+ Cussia on
Hune 66, .0D., een though <ermany and Cussia had signed a treaty
not to declare war on each other.
With this action, the pressure to get the 3nited 4tates inoled in the
war really accelerated. Cooseelt, on Hune 6D, .0D., told the American
people* +Of course we are going to gie all the aid that we possibly can
to Cussia.+
And an American program of %end-%ease began, supplying Cussia
enormous ,uantities of war materials, all on credit.
4o with ?itler pre-occupied with the war against Cussia and refusing to
inole himself with the Americans on the open sea, Cooseelt had to
turn his attentions bac( to Hapan for the incident he needed.
The next step was to assist other countries, the $nglish and the 7utch,
to embargo oil shipments to Hapan in an attempt to force them into an
incident that would enable the 3nited 4tates to enter the war.
Hapan, as a relatiely small island, and with no oil industry to spea( of,
had to loo( elsewhere for its oil, and this was the reason for the
proposed embargo. 5t was thought that this action would proo(e Hapan
into an incident. $x-)resident ?erbert ?ooer also saw the
manipulations leading to war and he warned the 3nited 4tates in
August, .0D.* +The American people should insistently demand that
8ongress put a stop to step-by-step proBection of the 3nited 4tates into
undeclared war... .+
Aut the 8ongress wasn#t listening.
The True Cause of the Second World War
...8ontinued from %art 7
)resident Cooseelt wasn#t listening either to the charges of
8ongressman =artin 7ies, 8hairman of the ?ouse 8ommittee on 3n-
American Actiities. Ay August of .0D., the 7ies committee had
assembled a large amount of eidence which more than confirmed the
suspicions which we had entertained on the basis of surface
appearances* 5t was clear that the Hapanese were preparing to inade
)earl ?arbor and that they were in possession of ital military
information.
This information was made aailable to the Cooseelt administration by
8ongressman 7ies personally. Aut this was the second time that 7ies
had appealed to Cooseelt about his (nowledge of Hapan#s intention to
attac( )earl ?arbor. $arly in .0D. the 7ies 8ommittee came into
possession of a strategic map which gae clear proof of the intentions of
the Hapanese to ma(e an assault on )earl ?arbor. The strategic map was
prepared by the Hapanese 5mperial =ilitary 5ntelligence 7epartment.
7ies telephoned 4ecretary of 4tate 8ordell ?ull who tal(ed to )resident
Cooseelt.
8ongressman 7ies was told not to release the document to the public,
and the Cooseelt administration did nothing. !5n April, .09D, when
7ies told the American public of these reelations, he added this
comment* +5f anyone ,uestions the eracity and accuracy of these
statements, 5 will be glad to furnish him with conclusie proof.+"
5t was also in August, .0D., when the new product of the 5.<. -arben
cartel was tested on humans for the first time. The product was called
&y(lon A and it was to be used on the Hews and others at the
concentration camps.
5n the )acific Theater, Hapan#s war messages, being read in Washington,
started as(ing their spy in )earl ?arbor to report ship moements, and,
later, the exact nature and location of the ships in the harbor.
Hapan#s re,uest for more information on what was happening at )earl
?arbor was followed on October .9, .0D., by the resignation of the
)rince#s cabinet in Hapan. These resignations were followed by the
military administration of <eneral ToBo and his cabinet. All of this actiity
was recogni:ed by the American goernment as a decided step toward
war, but still nothing was done to alert )earl ?arbor.
5t was on this day that ?enry 4timson, Cooseelt#s 4ecretary of War,
wrote the following in his diary* +... and so we face the delicate ,uestion
of the diplomatic fencing to be done so as to be sure that Hapan be put
into the wrong and to ma(e the first bad moeNoert moe.+
4timson was to repeat this concern that faced the Cooseelt
administration when he testified before one of the 8ommittees
inestigating )earl ?arbor. There he was ,uoted as saying* +The
,uestion was how we should maneuer them Jthe HapaneseK into the
position of firing the first shot without allowing too much danger to
ourseles.+
The Hapanese would still not respond with the incident to proo(e the
3nited 4tates into retaliating, but America was coninced that it would
happen ultimately. -or instance, 4ecretary of 4tate 8ordell ?ull told
Cooseelt on Noember /, .0D., that he foresaw +eery possibility of an
early war with Hapan.+
Hapan continued its efforts towards staying out of a war with the 3nited
4tates and had its Ambassador in Washington continue his efforts
towards securing a no-war treaty with the 4ecretary of 4tate. On
Noember 66, .0D., they wired their Ambassador* +7o your best, spare
no efforts and try to bring about the solution we desire.+
Aut een though Hapan was attempting to aoid war with the 3nited
4tates, the Hapanese were being encouraged by an unli(ely source to
stri(e out at the 3nited 4tates. On =ay ./, .01., the New Ior( 7aily
News featured an article by its Washington correspondent, Hohn
O#7onnell, concerning arious old -ar $astern intelligence reports which
were being closely guarded in Washington. Among those documents
were the ;6,222 word confession of 4oiet spy Cichard 4orge.
=r. 4orge was a Cussian spy who had infiltrated the <erman embassy in
Hapan and wor(ed hard to conince Hapanese officials that Hapan should
not attac( Cussia, but moe south, at the ris( of war with the 3nited
4tates.
When 4orge informed the Kremlin Jin CussiaK in October, .0D., that the
Hapanese intended to attac( )earl ?arbor within 92 days, he receied
than(s for his report and the notice that Washington N Cooseelt,
=arshall, Admiral 4tar(, et al. N had been adised of the Hapanese
intentions.
On Noember 61,.0D., the day that the Hapanese fleet sailed for )earl
?arbor, )resident Cooseelt conened a meeting of the arious 8abinet
officers* 4ecretaries 4timson, Knox, =arshall and Admiral ?arold C.
4tar(, 8hief of Naal Operations. According to 4timson#s testimony*
+The )resident brought up the eent that we were li(ely to be attac(ed
perhaps Jas soon asK next =onday, for the Hapanese are notorious for
ma(ing an attac( without warning. 5n spite of the ris( inoled,
howeer, in letting the Hapanese fire the first shot, we reali:ed that in
order to hae the full support of the American people, it was desirable to
ma(e sure that the Hapanese be the ones to do this so that there should
remain no doubt in anyone#s mind as to who were the aggressors.+
On Noember 69, .0D., the Hapanese $mbassy in Washington sent the
following message to To(yo* +?ull said... 5 am sorry to tell you that we
cannot agree to it JHapan#s treaty )roposalK.+
The Aritish 5ntelligence 4erice, which had men inside the Hapanese
diplomatic agencies in the 3nited 4tates, too( the Noember 69th
telegram to To(yo as meaning that the +Hapanese negotiations off.
4erices expect action within two wee(s.+
And Cooseelt and the 7epartment of the Army also (new this, as +... a
ery important American Army 5ntelligence officer, in serice in the -ar
$ast during .0D.... had gained (nowledge of the Iamamoto plan to send
a tas( force to attac( )earl ?arbor and sent three separate messages to
Washington reealing this information, and at least two of these reached
the Army files well before the attac( on )earl ?arbor.+
-inally, in desperation, the Hapanese goernment sent a message to
their Washington embassy on 7ecember 9, .0D., in essence brea(ing
off all negotiations with the American goernment After the message
was intercepted by the American goernment, de-coded and gien to
Cooseelt, he is ,uoted as saying* +This means war.+
Cooseelt now (new that Hapan planned on attac(ing the 3nited 4tates,
but still he did nothing about warning the American forces at )earl
?arbor.
And on 7ecember /,.0D., Hapan launched a +surprise attac(.+
The American forces were not prepared for the attac(. And the attac(ing
Hapanese forces had orders from Hapan to return to Hapan should they
detect any eidence that the Americans had been alerted.
As their air force attac(ed )earl ?arbor, they reported that the American
planes were haing difficulty in getting off the ground.
This was because the American planes had been grouped in circles, with
their propellers all facing inward as the result of an order by )resident
Cooseelt. 5t was reported that Cooseelt had ordered the planes
grouped in this fashion because he feared +acts of sabotage+ against the
planes and he was acting to protect them.
4ince airplanes do not hae a +reerse gear+ the grouping of the planes
in this manner made it extremely difficult for them to rapidly get out of
the circle and into the air. One critic of the circling of these airplanes,
?arry $lmer Aarnes, has written* +Aunching the planes in a circle, wing
to wing, would Jma(e themK helpless in the eent of a surprise air
attac(.+
Another strange circumstance was the ma(e-up of the fleet anchored at
)earl ?arbor at the time of the attac(. The )acific -leet consisted of nine
battleships and three aircraft carriers along with a host of smaller ships.
7uring the attac(, the Hapanese san( or seriously damaged eight
battleships but no aircraft carriers.
The American goernment had reasoned that the aircraft carriers would
hae an extremely important role to play in the type of war they felt
would be waged in the )acific theater. 4o all of the aircraft carriers were
moed out of )earl ?arbor and all of the less aluable battleships were
left behind. The battleships were expendable because most of them had
been constructed prior to or during World War 5, which meant that they
were old and obsolete.
Along with the aircraft carriers, Cooseelt#s goernment also withdrew
the smaller, more mobile ships that they (new could be more efficiently
utili:ed in a sea war. On Noember 6Fth, Admiral William -. ?alsey was
sent to Wa(e 5sland with the carrier $nterprise, three heay destroyers
and nine destroyers. On 7ecember 1th, Admiral Hohn $. Newton was
sent to =idway with the carrier %exington, three heay cruisers and fie
destroyers. The carrier 4aratoga had been sent to the )acific 8oast.
Admiral ?usband Kimmel, the commander of the naal forces at )earl
?arbor, clearly places the blame for )earl ?arbor#s unpreparedness on
)resident Cooseelt. ?e has written* +We were unready at )earl ?arbor
because )resident Cooseelt#s plans re,uired that no word be sent to
alert the fleet in ?awaii.+
The Ct ?on. Olier %yttleton, a member of 8hurchill#s war cabinet,
declared in an address to the American 8hamber of 8ommerce in
%ondon on Hune 6D, .0DD* +America proo(ed Jthe HapaneseK to such an
extent that the Hapanese were forced to attac( )earl ?arbor. 5t is a
traesty of history to say that America was forced into the war.+
The 8ouncil on -oreign Celations published an article in its publication
called -oreign Affairs in Hanuary, .0/D, that agreed with %yttleton. The
article stated that +Hapan#s attac( on )earl ?arbor actually thrust the
3nited 4tates into World War 55, but the Cooseelt administration
decided a year and a half earlier to ris( war in order to preent the
totalitarian domination of all $urope.+
4o on 7ecember F, .0D., )resident Cooseelt as(ed the 8ongress to
declare war on Hapan, stating that 7ecember /, .0D. would go down in
history as a +day of infamy.+
4o when Cooseelt addressed the nation through his speech in
8ongress, he lied when he said* +We don#t li(e it N and we didn#t want
to get in it N but we are in it and we#re going to fight it with eerything
we#e got.+
4o Cooseelt as(ed for, and receied, a 7eclaration of War against
Hapan. <ermany followed on 7ecember ..th with a 7eclaration of War
against the 3nited 4tates. This action was in accordance with the terms
of the Tripartite Treaty signed earlier by <ermany, 5taly and Hapan.
Cooseelt#s actiities in the planning of )earl ?arbor had a costly price.
The final toll was 6,;D. 3.4. sericemen dead and .,.D; wounded>
eighteen ships including the eight battleships were sun( or heaily
damaged> more than two hundred Army Air 8orps and Nay planes were
destroyed or unusable> and sixty-eight ciilians were (illed.
-or his supposed unpreparedness at )earl ?arbor, Admiral Kimmel was
relieed of his command, and he retired on Hanuary /, .0D6.
After the war was oer. 8ongress loo(ed into the reasons for the lac( of
preparation at )earl ?arbor. Their conclusions are most reealing*
.. The attac( was unproo(ed by America>
6. There was no eidence that the )resident, 4ecretary of 4tate,
4ecretary of War, 4ecretary of Nay, proo(ed the attac(>
;. The American goernment made eery effort to aoid the war with
Hapan>
D. The attac( was caused by the Army#s and Nay#s failure to detect
hostile forces> and
1. The errors made were errors of Budgment and not derelictions of
duty.
The last conclusion was apparently intended to reliee the commanders
of the armed forces from responsibility so that they could not be court-
martialed. Admiral Kimmel and <eneral Walter 8. 4hort, the commander
of the armed forces at )earl ?arbor, continuously pleaded for a court
martial to clear their reputations, but they were neer granted.
Admiral Cobert Theobold, the 8ommander of all destroyers at )earl
?arbor, wrote a boo( entitled The #inal Secret of earl Harbor, in which
he detailed his conclusions about the +surprise attac(.+ ?e wrote*
.. )resident Cooseelt forced Hapan to war and enticed them to
initiate hostilities by holding the )acific fleet in ?awaiian waters as
an initation to that attac(>
6. The plans to use )earl ?arbor as the bait started in Hune, .0D2>
;. War with Hapan meant war with <ermany> and
D. Cooseelt, =arshall and 4tar( (new about )earl ?arbor 6. hours
before the attac(.
Aut in spite of all of this eidence that the Hapanese attac( on )earl
?arbor was (nown by Cooseelt and his top adisors well in adance of
that actual eent, there are those who still hold to the position that the
goernment, and Cooseelt specifically, (new nothing about it.
4o America now had a two-front war against Hapan in the )acific and
against <ermany in $urope.
Hust as planned@
&he %lanned World War < - 4 %lay in Nu!erous 4cts
World War Three in &rief
A Three World War scenario was deeloped seeral decades ago !see
Cons"iratorial 3istory". Two World Wars hae already been achieed,
and the &hird and final World War enisions an attac( on 5ra,, 5ran
andEor 4yria as being the trigger to set the entire =iddle $ast into fiery
conflagration. Once America is firmly entrenched into the =iddle $ast
with the maBority of her first-line units, North Korea is to attac( 4outh
Korea. Then, with America#s forces stretched well beyond the limit,
8hina is to inade Taiwan. This will usher in the start of World War
&hree.
World War Definition$
What constitutes a #world war#M ?ow many countries need to be
inoledM And who decides at which point a number of regional
s(irmishes can be grouped together and called a World WarM At the
time, who called the official start of World War . and World War 6M
And hae you noticed that although the term #World War Three# is freely
used in the alternatie press and on the 5nternet, all the maBor news
networ(s hae stoically aoided using any phrase reminiscent of World
War.
4ince it#s difficult to find a definition for an eent which has only
happened twice in modern history, here#s my attempt at an answer to
the ,uestion #what constitutes a world war#M
A World War is a military conflict spanning more than 6 continents, in
which at least 62 maBor countries participate in an attac( against a
common enemy, and which has the attention of the man-in-the-street
due to the significant loss of life.
With that definition, we can agree that WW. and WW6 were in fact
World Wars !both wars inoled some degree of participation from most
of the world#s then existing countries* Aritain, -rance, <ermany, 5taly,
Hapan, the 3nited 4tates and the 4oiet 3nion". We can also agree that
we are ery close to achieing World War ;. The only re,uirement left
to fulfill the start of WW; is that of a military conflict spanning more
than 6 continents. As soon as 5srael attac(s )alestine, or North Korea
attac(s 4outh Korea or the 34, or 8hina inades Taiwan, we will hae
the next World War well underway.
World War + Ti"eline
These are, 5 beliee, the elements of the planned &hird World War*
%relude - The eents leading up to the start of World War Three,
including 4ept .., 622..
4ct 7 - &he 'iddle .ast. Widespread conflict to bring the entire
region into the flames of war, possibly triggered by 5ran or
militants in )a(istan using North Korean supplied nuclear arms.
The first 4cene in this Act is the 34 5nasion of 5ra, on =arch 62,
622;.
4ct : - (srael at War -- Against her Arab neighbors, possibly
)alestine. A )alestinian 4tate will be established, so that all
5sraelis will be fully separated from )alestinians !listen out for
mention of a /-year treaty to be confirmed by a World %eader -
probably Aush", only for 5srael to iciously attac( )alestine shortly
thereafter.
4ct < - -ar .ast -- +?air-raising nuclear confrontation that
threatens man(ind#s existence+ - )eter %emesurier, author of The
"rmageddon Script5 p. 66;, written in .0F.. 5ncludes 8hina
inading Taiwan and a nuclear eruption on the Korean )eninsula.
4ct = - .rosion of Confidence in 6&he *yste!6 so seere
citi:ens will be panic(ed into giing up liberties and 8onstitutional
form of goernment. The plan calls for the dissolution of the 34
8onstitution, triggered by a significant enough #terrorist# attac(.
4ct > - &he colla"se of the $*, and other Western economies
and morals.
4ct ? - *ignificant "o"ulation reduction using natural and
man-made disasters.
Curtain. Who can tell how this war will endM
Aoth Aiblical "ro"hecy and the 5lluminati plan state that 5srael is the
(ey. The Third World War is planned to begin when 5srael goes to war
against her Arab enemies. Then and only then will all the other elements
begin to occur and they will occur in rapid succession. The plan is to
hae one disaster following another in such rapid succession that, before
people can mentally and emotionally handle one disastrous news eent,
they will be hit with another. 5t is also true to say that until A%% the
elements for WW; are in place, the plan will not commence.
While it would be naie to suggest a specific timeline for the eents
leading up to and including World War ;, we do (now that the plans for
World War ; are well adanced, and our leaders inoled in this secret
plan are waiting only for the right signal before all-out war begins.
We are in the last stages of the preparation to so globali:e the world
that the =asonic New Age 8hrist !Antichrist" can appear to receie all
the political and economic power of the world#s rulers. This is the
5lluminati plan and Aiblical prophecy !Ceelation ./*.6-./".
5 beliee that World War Three started on =arch 62, 622;, exactly 111
days after 4ept .., 622. attac(s on the World Trade 8enter. That#s 1/
years, 9 months and .F days after the end of WW55.
5n the words of )eter %emesurier, author of The "rmageddon Script:
+Their script is now written, subBect only to last-minute editing and
stage-directions. The stage itself, albeit in dar(ness, is almost ready.
7own in the pit, the subterranean orchestra is already tuning up. The
last-minute, wal(-on parts are een now being filled. =ost of the main
actors, one suspects, hae already ta(en up their roles. 4oon it will be
time for them to come on stage, ready for the curtain to rise. The time
for action will hae come.+
%adies and <entlemen, please ta(e your seats and welcome on stage the
players of this <rand )lay*
World War < - Before the *tart
%isted below are the eents leading up to World War ;.
*e"te!ber 77, 7889 -- )resident Aush J4eniorK gies a speech to a
Boint session of the 3.4. 8ongress entitled, +Toward A New World Order+.
#uly 7:, :997 -- A full two months before the 4eptember .. attac(, a
Cussian expert, Tatyana Koryagina, +a senior research fellow in the
5nstitute of =acroeconomic Cesearches subordinated to Cussian =inistry
of $conomic 7eelopment+, warned of an attac( in America* +Aesides
bombs and missiles, there are other (inds of weaponry, much more
destructie ones. . . . The 3.4. is engaged in a mortal economic game R
There is a shadow economy, shadow politics and also a shadow history,
(nown to conspirologists. There are !unseen" forces acting in the world,
unstoppable for !most powerful" countries and een continents. There
are international, #super-state# and #super-goernment# groups. 5n
accordance with tradition, the mystical and religious components play
extremely important roles in human history. One must ta(e into account
the shadow economy, shadow politics and the religious component,
while predicting the deelopment of the present financial situation.
4hadow financial actiities of P;22 trillion are hanging oer the planet.
At any moment, they could fall on any stoc( exchange and cause panic
and crash... The 3.4. has been chosen as the obBect of financial attac(
because the financial center of the planet is located there. The effect will
be maximal. The stri(e waes of economic crisis will spread oer the
planet instantly, and will remind us of the blast of a huge nuclear bomb.+

*e"te!ber 77, :997 -- $leen years to the day after )resident Aush#s
speech, the World Trade 8enter and the )entagon are attac(ed.
*e"te!ber 7<, :997 -- 7eputy 7efense 4ecretary )aul Wolfowit: says
the retaliation would be continued until the roots of terrorism are
destroyed. #These people try to hide. They won#t be able to hide foreer
... They thin( their harbors are safe, but they won#t be safe foreer ...
it#s not simply a matter of capturing people and holding them
accountable, but remoing the sanctuaries, remoing the support
systems, ending states who sponsor terrorism.#
October 77, :997 -- Tom Aro(aw announces the world now has formed
into the New World Order.
October :?, :997 -- )resident Aush signs legislation into law that gies
-ederal <oernment dictatorial powers and seerely -- if not fatally --
erodes indiidual liberties and rights.
Noe!ber :997 -- #anuary :99: - Aush foreign policy and security
adisers, including Cichard )erle, )aul Wolfowit:, and 8ondolee:a Cice,
say 4addam poses the greatest danger to the 3.4. and should be the
next target in the war on terrorism. 3nnamed diplomatic and )entagon
sources say through press reports that the 85A and 7efense 7epartment
are ma(ing plans for an 5ra,i military campaign. The president remar(s
that 4addam will +find out+ the conse,uences of refusing to allow 3nited
Nations weapons inspectors to return to 5ra,. J4ources* %ashington
Times5 0S" Today5 .e' :or7 Times and the $bserver ;0494<K
Dec. >, :997 -- =embers of 8ongress Hohn =c8ain, Cichard 4helby,
Hesse ?elms, ?enry ?yde, ?arold -ord Hr., Hoseph %ieberman, Trent %ott,
AenBamin <ilman, and 4am Arownbac( send )resident Aush a letter
urging military action against 5ra,.
#anuary :8, :99: -- Aush, in his 4tate of the 3nion Address, lists 5ra,,
5ran and North Korea as constituting an #axis of eil, arming to threaten
the peace of the world. Ay see(ing weapons of mass destruction, these
regimes pose a grae and growing danger#.
-ebruary :99: -- Gice )resident 7ic( 8heney prepares to isit the
=iddle $astern nations of 4audi Arabia, Hordan, Tur(ey, and Kuwait, all
of which border 5ra,. On 8heney#s trip Aush remar(s, +There#s nothing
li(e loo(ing somebody in the eye and letting them (now that when we
say we#re going to fight terror, we mean it.+ Also in -ebruary on a trip to
Hapan, Aush reportedly tells the Hapanese prime minister +We#ll attac(
5ra,. We#ll do it definitely.+J4ources* The -uardian ;0494<5 9yodo .e'sK
'arch 77-7<, :99: -- As 8heney traels on his =iddle $ast trip, the
leaders of Tur(ey and Hordan, two scheduled stops on the ice
president#s trael agenda, warn a 3.4. attac( on 5ra, could destabili:e
the region. 8heney first arries in %ondon, where Aritish )rime =inister
Tony Alair pledges support for expanding America#s war against
terrorism to other nations. Hordan#s King Abdullah meets with 8heney
and states publicly that he does not support a 3.4. stri(e against 5ra,.
J4ource* %ashington ostK
'arch 7=, :99: -- )resident Aush gies his first press conference since
0-.. and says, +all options are on the table,+ including nuclear weapons,
to confront states that threaten to use weapons of mass destruction.
4addam ?ussein +is a problem, and we#re going to deal with him.+
J4ource* %ashington ostK
'ay :=, :99: -- The six members of the Hoint 8hiefs of 4taff, who are
the highest ran(ing members of the 3.4. armed forces, publicly critici:e
the president#s desire for a swift stri(e against 5ra,. The military
commanders express fears that an early inasion would result in many
American casualties, and that a cornered 4addam ?ussein would not
hesitate to use biological or chemical weapons. J4ource* 1ondon
TelegraphK
#uly 8, :99: -- Aush tells reporters, +5t is the stated policy of this
goernment to hae a regime change Jin 5ra,K, and we#ll use all the
tools at our disposal to do so.+ J4ource* "ssociated ressK
#uly - *e"te!ber :99: -- On numerous occasions, former 3.N. 5ra,i
weapons inspector 4cott Citter critici:es the Aush Administration for its
5ra, policy. Citter maintains that 4addam#s military capability is
negligible and Aush wants to inade 5ra, for political purposes.
J4ources* C..5 %ashington ost5 .e' :or7 TimesK
4ug. 7A, :99: -- Cichard )erle is ,uoted in a Washington )ost story by
political reporter 7ana =ilban( headlined, +White ?ouse )ush for 5ra,i
4tri(e 5s on ?old.+ The subhead reads, +Waiting to =a(e 8ase for Action
Allows 5nasion Opponents to 7ominate 7ebate.+ )erle says, +Timing is
eerything when you do this. 5f you launched Ja public campaignK too
far in adance and nothing followed, that would raise ,uestions and fuel
a debate that would not be helpful to the administration...5f you Boin the
debate now, but don#t act for months, you pay a worse price.+
*e"t. A, :99: -- The 3nited Kingdom#s 5ndependent reports +more
than .22 3.4. and Aritish aircraft attac(ed 5ra,i air installations last
wee( in the biggest raid for more than three years.+ J4ource* The
Independent ;0494<K
*e"te!ber 7:, :99: -- Aush tells 3N that 5ra, is a +grae and
gathering danger+ and that the 34 +will not allow any terrorist or tyrant
to threaten ciilisation with weapons of mass murder+.
*e"t. 7<, :99: -- Ceps. Him =c7ermott, 7-Wash., and 7ennis Kucinich,
7-Ohio, declare 4addam#s efforts to amass weapons of mass destruction
pose no immediate threat to the 3.4., and Aush# real motie for a
military stri(e is to ma(e a grab for 5ra,i oil. +Oil is a factor. ?ow much
Jof a factorK is anybody#s guess, but to discount it as a factor is, 5 thin(,
misleading,+ said Kucinich. +5t#s not a conspiracy theory to bring it in
because, after all, it is the second largest oil supply in the world.+
J4ource* C..K
*e"t. 7?, :99: -- Nelson =andela increases his erbal offensie
against the Aush Administration haw(s. +What right has Aush to say that
5ra,#s offer is not genuineM+ as(ed =andela. +We must condemn that
ery strongly. No country, howeer strong, is entitled to comment
adersely in the way the 3.4. has done. They thin( they#re the only
power in the world. They#re not and they#re following a dangerous policy.
One country wants to bully the world.+ J4ource* BBCK
*e"t. 78, :99: -- )resident Aush submits a draft of a congressional
resolution authori:ing him to ta(e military action against 5ra,. 4enate
=aBority %eader Tom 7aschle, 7-4.7., predicts 8ongress will ote on the
resolution before Noember elections. The draft resolution says, +The
president is authori:ed to use all means that he determines to be
appropriate, including force, in order to enforce the 3nited Nations
4ecurity 8ouncil resolutions Jpertaining to 5ra,K, defend the national
security interests of the 3nited 4tates against the threat posed by 5ra,,
and restore international peace and security in the region.+ J4ource*
%ashington ostK
*e"t. :=, :99: -- Tony Alair uneils a dossier of eidence on 4addam
?ussein#s possession of weapons of mass destruction. The dossier, based
on Aritish and 3.4. intelligence, was critici:ed for not reealing
conincing eidence pointing to the need for 4addam#s immediate
remoal. J4ource* "ssociated ressK
*e"t. :@, :99: -- The 5nternational Atomic $nergy Agency !5A$A"
announces that the Aush Administration cited a non-existent report said
to be from .00F on 5ra,#s supposed imminent nuclear capability.
+There#s neer been a report li(e that issued from this agency,+ said
=ar( <wo:dec(y, an 5A$A spo(esman. J4ource* %ashington TimesK
*e"t. :A, :99: -- 3p to D22,222 protesters march against war in 5ra,
in central %ondon.
Oct. 7, :99: !Time approximate .6*22 $7T" - 5n Gienna, ?ans Alix,
the head 3.N. weapons inspector, announces a tentatie agreement with
5ra, to allow inspectors to return beginning in two wee(s. 4earch
protocols of ?ussein#s )residential palaces remain unresoled. 4ource*
%ashington ostK
Oct. 7, :99: !Time approximate .9*;2 $7T" -- Within hours of the Alix
announcement )resident Aush reacts negatiely to the agreement
reached between 5ra, and weapons inspectors. +We#re Bust not going to
accept something that is wea(,+ he said. Aush urges the 3.N. to +put
some calcium in the bac(bone+ of an alternatie resolution for dealing
with 5ra,. On an alternatie congressional resolution drafted by 4enators
Aiden and %ugar of the 4enate -oreign Celations 8ommittee, Aush says,
+5 don#t want a resolution that ties my hands...What 5 won#t accept is
something that allows 4addam ?ussein to continue to lie, deceie the
world,+ Aush said. +5#m Bust not going to accept something that is wea(.
5t#s not worth it - the 3nited Nations must show its bac(bone and we#ll
wor( with members of the 4ecurity 8ouncil to put a little calcium there,
put some calcium in the bac(bone, so this organi:ation is more li(ely to
(eep the peace as we go down the road.+ J4ources* %ashington ost5
"ssociated ressK
World War < - 4ct 7C &he 'iddle .ast

*cene 7* Aaghdad 5naded
*cene :* #Gictory# 7eclared


*cene (C Baghdad (naded
The initial D6 day war, waged strictly #by the numbers#.
S'arch 7@, :99< -- At F*.1pm, $4T, )resident Aush announces a DF-
hour ultimatum to 4addam ?ussein to leae the country with his sons,
or suffer the inasion.
'arch :9, :99< -- 34 starts inasion of 5ra,, exactly 111 days after
4eptember .., 622..
4"ril 8, :99< -- 8oalition -orces sei:e control of Aaghdad ,uic(ly and
relatiely effortlessly because 4addam orders a tactical retreat.
4"ril 7:, :99< -- +5n a uni,ue meeting in 4t. )etersburg, Cussia, the
leaders of Cussia, -rance, and <ermany meet to delier a ery somber
warning against )resident Aush. Cussia#s )resident )utin deliers the (ey
summation* #We are not going to export capitalist, democratic
reolutions. 5f we do, we#re going to end up on a slippery slope to non-
ending military conflicts. We can#t let that happen#.+ )utin bac(s up his
threat by deploying the Alac( 4ea -leet between 4yria and North Korea,
in )eter the <reat Aay, and conducts aggressie sea, air and land
exercises from April .1-6..
4"ril 7@, :99< -- The 34 issues an impossible ultimatum to 4yria
demanding*
the release of all Weapons of =ass 7estruction hidden by 4addam
in 4yria>
the return to 5ra, of all officials of the 4addam regime granted
asylum>
the disbanding of command structures of the ?i:ballah, ?amas,
Hihad 5slami and other )alestinian terrorist groups.
4"ril 7@, :99< -- The 3nited 4tates bolsters its military presence near
the 5ra,i-4yrian border. 3.4. officials say 8entral 8ommand has ordered
a build-up of assets in western 5ra,. They say the build-up is centered at
Al Cutba and includes =.A. main battle tan(s, A?-9DA attac(
helicopters and A-.2 ground-support fighter-Bets.
4"ril 7@, :99< -- Aechtel 8orp., the 4an -rancisco construction giant,
wins a contract worth up to P9F2 million to rebuild 5ra,i roads, schools,
sewers and hospitals damaged in the war.
'ay 97, :99< -- )resident Aush lands on the aircraft carrier, Abraham
%incoln, at ;*;;pm to declare the maBor combat phase in the 5ra,i War
oer, exactly D6 days after the war started. 5n his speech he says, +The
battle of 5ra, is one ictory in a war on terror that began on 4eptember
the .., 622. -- and still goes on... -rom )a(istan to the )hilippines to
the ?orn of Africa, we are hunting down al Taeda (illers... The liberation
of 5ra, is a crucial adance in the campaign against terror... Our war
against terror is proceeding according to principles that 5 hae made
clear to all* Any person inoled in committing or planning terrorist
attac(s against the American people becomes an enemy of this country,
and a target of American Bustice. Any person, organi:ation, or
goernment that supports, protects, or harbors terrorists is complicit in
the murder of the innocent, and e,ually guilty of terrorist crimes. Any
outlaw regime that has ties to terrorist groups and see(s or possesses
weapons of mass destruction is a grae danger to the ciili:ed world --
and will be confronted.+

World War < - 4ct (, *cene ((C Bictory Declared - Ongoing
3ostilities
Dece!ber 7<, :99< -- 5n one of the greatest )syOp exercises of all
time, 4addam is su""osedly captured while the dreaded )atriot Act 55
is ,uietly signed into power.
#anuary 7A, :99= -- 4uicide car bombing near main gate to 3.4.-led
coalition#s head,uarters in Aaghdad (ills at least ;. people.
-ebruary 7, :99= -- Twin suicide bombers (ill .20 people in two
Kurdish party offices in 5rbil.
-ebruary 79, :99= -- A suicide bomber detonates a truc(load of
explosies outside a police station in 5s(andariyah, (illing 1; people.
-ebruary 77, :99= -- A suicide attac(er blows up a car pac(ed with
explosies in a crowd of 5ra,is waiting outside an army recruiting center
in Aaghdad, (illing D/.
'arch :, :99= -- 5n the deadliest attac( since the fall of 4addam
?ussein, suicide bombers stri(e 4hiite =uslim shrines and (ill .F1 5ra,i
religious pilgrims in Aaghdad and Karbala.
'arch ::, :99= -- $xactly .. days after the =adrid bombings, 5srael
assassinates the ,uadriplegic, partially blind elderly =uslim clerical
founder of ?amas, 4hei(h Ahmed Iassin. 5n a region which has become a
hotbed of political rage, could this assassination become the e,uialent
to the assassination of the Austrian Archdu(e -ran: -erdinand which
ignited World War 5M
'arch <7, :99= -- 5n an apparent retaliation, nine Americans died in
and around -alluBah ;2 miles west of Aaghdad in a particularly
horrendous spasm of blood-letting Wednesday, =arch ;.. $xactly one
wee( after assuming responsibility for the most intractable town in 5ra,
in a troop rotation, the 8alifornia-based .st =arine $xpeditionary -orce
suffered the loss of fie men in a single attac(* a bomb exploded under
their ehicle in a illage near -alluBah. 5nside the city, gunmen attac(ed
two ciilian cars carrying four 34 ciilian contractors. The cars were
torched by a dancing lynch mob which screaming 5slamic slogans
dragged the bodies through the city, dismembered and decapitated
them and hanged them by their feet. 7$AKAfile. -or extremely graphic
and disturbing pictures of what happened, see ru!or!illnews.co!
'arch <7, :99= -- 5n the first year of war in 5ra,, the military ma(es
.F,22D medical eacuations during Operation 5ra,i -reedom, the
)entagon#s top health official told 8ongress. The new data, through
=arch .;, is nearly two-thirds higher than the ..,622 eacuations
through -eb. 1 cited in -ebruary to 8ongress by the same official.
7$AKAfile.
4"ril :7, :99= -- -ie suicide bombings near police stations and police
academy in southern city of Aasra (ill at least /D and wound .92.
4"ril :=, :99= -- A roadside bomb hits a bus south of Aaghdad, (illing
.;.
4"ril <9, :99= -- A New Ior(er article appears exposing mistreatment
at Abu <hraib prison in Aaghdad. 4oon after, similar stories start
brea(ing about Aritish troops engaging in the same actiities. 7etails of
prisoner abuse, torture and rape are plastered all oer the media, in a
seeming attempt to fulfill part of an oerall plan to enrage specific
=uslim sensibilities in order to proo(e war. 4ee a &i!eline of eents
leading up to the furore.
'ay 77, :99= -- A ideo airing on an 5slamic militant website shows a
man who identifies himself as Nic( Aerg from )hiladelphia. The ideo
shows the man being beheaded. The website says he was executed in
reenge for the abuse of 5ra,i prisoners. All indications are that the
ideo is purely a psy-op exercise designed to shoc( and scare
Americans.
'ay 7@, :99= -- A suicide car bomber (ills 5::adine 4aleem, president
of the 5ra,i <oerning 8ouncil, and eight others including the bomber
outside the <reen &one.
#une 7, :99= -- A roadside bomb explodes near 3.4. base in the
northern town of AeiBi, (illing .. 5ra,is and wounding more than 66
people, including two 3.4. soldiers.
S#une 7, :99= -- A 4unni <oerning 8ouncil 8hief is named the new
5ra,i )resident after the 3.4.-bac(ed candidate refused the post.
SThe 5ranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dismissed 5ra,Us
new careta(er administration a few days later as a #lac(ey# goernment
at the bec( and call of the 3nited 4tates. #?umiliating 5ra,i men, raping
5ra,i women, brea(ing down the doors of 5ra,i homes and installing a
lac(ey goernment, thatUs what happens when you remoe the clergy
from politics#, Khamenei said in a (eynote speech mar(ing the .1th
anniersary of the death of his predecessor Ayatollah Cuhollah
Khomeini.
#une ?, :99= -- A car bomb explodes near the entrance to an
American-run base at TaBi north of Aaghdad, (illing at least nine people
and wounding ;2 others, including three 3.4. soldiers.
#une A, :99= -- A car bomb explodes outside a 3.4. base in Aa,ouba,
(illing one 3.4. soldier and fie 5ra,is. -ifteen 5ra,is and .2 3.4. soldiers
are wounded. A second car bomb explodes in =osul, (illing nine people
and inBuring 61.
#une 7<, :99= -- A suicide car-bomber (ills .6 people and wounds .;
near a 3.4. garrison in Aaghdad.
#une 7=, :99= -- A car bomb rips through conoy in Aaghdad, (illing
.; people, including an American, two Aritons and a -renchman. At
least 96 wounded.
#une 7@, :99= -- A sport utility ehicle pac(ed with artillery shells
slams into a crowd waiting to olunteer for the 5ra,i military, (illing at
least ;1 people and wounding at least .;F.
#une 7A, :99= -- The second apparent beheading of an American -
)aul =. Hohnson Hr., preiously ta(en hostage by terrorists. <ruesome
photographs were apparently published on an Al Taeda Web site.
#une ::, :99= -- =ilitants behead Kim 4un-il in 5ra, after 4eoul
refused their demand to withdraw its troops and scrap plans to send
additional troops. chosun.co!
#une :=, :99= -- 5nsurgents launched fierce attac(s that (illed about
.22 people in fie 5ra,i cities, wrea(ing haoc Bust days from the
handoer of power. The worst attac(s were in the city of =osul, where at
least 96 people died and 662 were hurt in a series of car bombings, the
34 military said. =ore than D2 people died in Aa,uba, Camadi, -alluBa
and Aaghdad, in what appeared to be coordinated attac(s.
*e"te!ber 7A, :99= -- +5ra, had no W=7* the final erdict+, by Hulian
Aorger in Washington, !%ondon". +The comprehensie .1-month search
for weapons of mass destruction in 5ra, has concluded that the only
chemical or biological agents that 4addam ?ussein#s regime was
wor(ing on before last year#s inasion were small ,uantities of poisons,
most li(ely for use in assassinations. A draft of the 5ra, 4urey <roup#s
final report circulating in Washington found no sign of the alleged illegal
stoc(piles that the 34 and Aritain presented as the Bustification for going
to war, nor did it find any eidence of efforts to reconstitute 5ra,#s
nuclear weapons programme... )resident <eorge Aush now admits that
stoc(piles hae not been found in 5ra, but claimed that +4addam
?ussein had the capability of ma(ing weapons, and he could hae
passed that capability on to the enemy+.
Noe!ber A, :99= -- 1,222 34-led troops (ic( off Operation )lymouth
Coc(, in which ..9 suspected insurgents are captured.
Dece!ber 77, :99= -- +3.4. deserter numbers reach 1,122+, Aig News
Networ(.com. +4ince the war started in 5ra,, the )entagon says 1,122
3.4. soldiers hae deserted, with some of them see(ing refugee status
in 8anada, 8A4 reported... =eanwhile, other soldiers who were denied
conscientious obBector status are using the 5nternet to locate Gietnam-
era resisters who assist and een drie obBectors to 8anada, 8A4 said.+
No doubt because of the poor conditions coalition forces are expected to
operate in.

World War < - 4ct ((, *cene (C (srael D %alestine
The struggle between the 5sraelis and the )alestinians is one of the most
enduring and explosie of all the world#s conflicts.
5t has its roots in the historic claim to the land which lies between the
eastern shores of the =editerranean 4ea and the Hordan rier.
5srael has been a dry tinderbox in world affairs since .0DF when she
became a nation once again. ?oweer, tensions hae been steadily
increasing since )alestine#s Iasser Arafat started ordering suicide and
terrorist stri(es against 5srael from the early .0F2#s. All these terror
stri(es, resulting in much innocent blood being spilt, has prompted
arious 5sraeli responses that hae accomplished little except to stir up
further hatred within the hearts of all )alestinian people.
All this terror, bloodshed, and military retaliation, has turned the entire
region into a literal tinderbox, awaiting Bust the right spar( to set the
=iddle $ast abla:e. The =uslim world intends for the 5sraeli-)alestinian
conflict to be set abla:e as part of their oerall effort to defeat both
5srael and her maBor ally -- the 3nited 4tates. This plan was boldly
enunciated by 5ranian leaders in =arch 6226. As 8oalition -orces were
fighting furiously in the southern portion of 5ra,, (ey Arab leaders in the
region announced plans to use 5ra, as a +swamp+ in which to tie down
superior American forces and then light +many fires+ in the entire =iddle
$ast region, including 5srael. !Herusalem )ost".
Why is this story worthy of an Act all of its ownM
5t#s clear to see that no nation in the 'iddle .ast really wants a
%alestinian *tate. Therefore, why hae American )residents from
Nixon to <eorge W. Aush spent so much time, energy, and diplomatic
power behind trying to set up a state within a state that no one wantsM
5n forcefully heralding a )alestinian 4tate, both 5srael and the 3nited
4tates can tell the rest of the world that, if the )alestinians had Bust
wanted peace, - and had stopped the terror attac(s - they could hae
achieed it through the newly created )alestinian 4tate. The 34 and
5srael will be able to state that continued )alestinian terrorism Bust
pushed 5srael too far, and +they had it coming+. This will be the excuse
when 5srael attac(s and completely destroys )alestine.
%et#s follow the play and see what happens...
'arch - #une, :99: -- After waes of suicide attac(s early in the year,
5srael re-occupied almost all of the West Aan( in =arch, and again in
Hune. -or most of 6226, )alestinian cities were regularly raided,
remained cut off from each other, surrounded and under curfew for long
periods of time.
4"ril :99: -- 5sraeli forces entered and captured the refugee camp in
northern West Aan( city of Henin. The )alestinians claimed massacre.
The 5sraeli army, which too( heay casualties, said it met heay
organised resistance, and insisted that 16 )alestinians were (illed.
'ay :99: -- 5n =ay, a fie-wee( standoff at Aethlehem#s 8hurch of the
Natiity ended when .; )alestinian militants were sent into exile. A
large group of )alestinians had ta(en refuge in the church when 5sraeli
troops moed into the town.
'arch <9, :99< -- A conoy of diplomatic ehicles arries at 4haron#s
house in Herusalem at ;*;2pm, local time to formally present him with a
long-awaited internationally bac(ed =ideast peace plan, which foresees
a )alestinian state established within 5srael#s borders no later than 6221,
proided the )alestinians permanently cease their terror campaign.
;*;2 on 2;E2;E622; - are all those threes coincidentalM
'arch <9, :99< -- As if to underscore the )alestinians# defiance
against the )eace )lan, a suicide terror attac( at the Alues cafe near the
34 $mbassy in Tel Ai (ills ;.
S4"ril <9, :99< -- 34 Ambassador 7an Kurt:er meets with 5sraeli
)rime =inister Ariel 4haron to formally present him with a long-awaited
internationally bac(ed =ideast peace plan, designed to create a
)alestinian state within 5srael.
'ay ::, :99< -- )resident Aush literally +orders+ )rime =inister 4haron
to push through 8abinet acceptance of the Coad =ap, which enisions a
side-by-side )alestinian 4tate with 5srael. Aush orders P.2 billion in 34
loan guarantees fro:en until 5srael complies, and reportedly compiles a
long list of punitie actions he could ta(e against 5srael if it did not bac(
his +)eace )lan+.
'ay :>, :99< -- =ost 5sraelis are aghast at the sudden turn of eents*
+5n 9; years 5 hae neer had a sic(er feeling down deep in my Hewish
soul than 5 do this day. To thin( that a )rime =inister of 5srael would
agree to a )alestinian 4tate against the will of the maBority of the Hewish
people, not only in 5srael but also around the world... 5t is no secret
that <eorge W. Aush along with the rest of the ,uartet has pressured
4haron. The ,uestion in the minds of most 5sraelis is what is it Aush has
on 4haron that could force him to turn against his own people. -or there
is no doubt that he will go down in Hewish and World history as the Hew
who sold out his own people and gae 5srael to the enemies of <od.+
J+5t#s time to stand up for the Hewish people@+, Herry <olden +C$)OCT+,
1E61E622;K
S'ay :@, :99< -- -acing a firestorm of criticism from members of his
%i(ud )arty oer his 8abinet#s approal of a 3.4.-bac(ed peace plan
enisioning a )alestinian state, )rime =inister Ariel 4haron says that
(eeping the )alestinians under occupation harms 5srael. #This can#t go on
foreer#, 4haron tells %i(ud lawma(ers at a stormy meeting a day after
the 8abinet approed the plan. #To (eep ;.1 million )alestinians under
occupation -- you can disli(e the word, but what is happening is
occupation -- is in my iew bad for 5srael, for the )alestinians and for
5srael#s economy#, 4haron says. 5t was the first time that 4haron, for
years a haw( and architect of the 5sraeli settlement drie in the West
Aan( and <a:a 4trip, had publicly used the word #occupation# to describe
5srael#s military presence in those territories.+
S#une =, :99< -- The A,aba JHordanK )eace 4ummit ends with
profound statements from (ey leaders* 5sraeli )rime =inister 4haron,
)alestinian )rime =inister Abbas and 34 )resident Aush all refer to a
%alestinian *tate in their closing addresses - something which has
been arduously aoided and fought against for many years. What#s
going onM After years resisting )alestinian 5ndependence, 5srael ma(es
a miraculous about turn and agrees to a )alestinian 4tate.
S#une ?, :99< -- 5n sheer disgust, the )alestinian militant group,
?amas, says it is brea(ing off tal(s with )alestinian )rime =inister Abu
=a:en in protest at his promise to end iolence against 5sraelis... A
spo(esman for ?amas, Abdela:i: al-Cantissi, tells the AA8 that the
prime minister#s promise opens the door for 5srael to (ill )alestinians at
will, and that ?amas is left with no choice but to continue fighting 5srael.
S#une 79, :99< -- 57- helicopters fire fie missiles at the car of ?amas
leader, Abdel A:i: Cantisi, who suries, but three others are (illed.
?amas and other )alestinian leaders ow such reenge as to cause an
+earth,ua(e+@
S #une 77, :99< -- A )alestinian disguised as an Orthodox Hew blows
up a crowded ciilian bus in 8entral Herusalem, (illing ./ and wounding
scores. Within 62 minutes, 57- Bets roc(et )alestinian targets in <a:a
4trip.
S#une 7<, :99< -- ?eadlines throughout the region scream that both
5srael and ?amas hae declared all-out war on each other, during a
wee( in which almost 12 people were (illed in arious terrorist attac(s.
SNoe!ber 7?, :99< -- The treasonous <enea Accord, drafted in
%ondon, not 4wit:erland as is widely belieed, is mailed to eery 5sraeli
household. 5magine this* a group of Americans, say presidential
candidate ?oward 7ean, 4enators Ted Kennedy, -rit: ?ollings and
Cobert Ayrd, go to the wilds of )a(istan and meet with the lieutenants of
3sama bin %aden. They carry with them a VpeaceW proposal hammered
out with arious al Taida supporters in the 3nited 4tates calling for the
unilateral withdrawal of American forces from all 5slamic countries. They
present the proposal to terror agents representing bin %aden, wor( out
the (in(s and arrie at an agreement aimed at ending the conflict
between al Taida and the 3nited 4tates. What would the oerwhelming
maBority of Americans sayM 5n unison the outcry would be X &reasonE
4"ril 7@, :99= -- Abdel A:i: al-Cantissi, head of the ?amas militant
group in <a:a, is (illed in a targeted 5sraeli attac(. +5srael will regret
this. Ceenge is coming,+ another ?amas leader, 5smail ?aniya, told
reporters. +This blood will not be wasted. 5t is our fate in ?amas and it
is our fate as )alestinians to die as martyrs.+
S7ecember D, 622D -- 5n an apparent change in long-standing policy, a
top ?amas leader in the West Aan( said the group would accept the
establishment of a )alestinian state in the West Aan( and <a:a 4trip as
well as a long-term truce with 5srael. #?amas has announced that it
accepts a )alestinian independent state within the .09/ borders with a
long-term truce#, 4hei( ?assan Iousef told The Associated )ress,
referring to lands 5srael captured in the .09/ 4ix 7ay war. A true turn-
around of unbelieable proportions.
S
World War < - 4ct (((, *cene (C &he -ar .ast
?air-Caising Nuclear 8onfrontation
While not widely reported in the 34 press, war rhetoric has been
escalating rapidly since late April 622;, when North Korea#s military
reached full war preparedness. No army prepares for war, only to
remain in this state for so long. What on earth is going onM
4"ril :7, :99< -- North Korea calls on all its citi:ens to increase the
country#s defence capabilities, according to the state#s official media. #All
officers and men of the )eople#s Army ... always (eep yourseles combat
ready,# the K8NA news agency reports the North Korean military as
saying. #5f enemies inade our iniolable s(y, land and seas een an
inch, destroy up the aggressors with merciless annihilating blows#. The
8entral 8ommittee and the 8entral =ilitary 8ommission of the Wor(er#s
)arty of Korea Bointly issue the call which was carried in )yongyang
newspapers.
4"ril :7, :99< -- One day before scheduled tal(s between 34 and
North Korean diplomats, a secret 7onald Cumsfeld memorandum calling
for regime change in North Korea is lea(ed. The paper does not call for
military action against North Korea, but wants the 3nited 4tates to team
up with 8hina in pushing for the collapse of Kim Hong-il#s ban(rupt but
belligerent regime.
4"ril :=, :99< -- American enoy Hames Kelly deliberately insults
8hinese and North Korean diplomats by brea(ing off tal(s in AeiBing
without giing any notice. American embassy officials would not say
where he was heading.
'ay =, :99< -- Kim =yong 8hol, a Hapanese-born Korean, deliers a
message on behalf of the North Korean goernment* +North Korea has a
nuclear capability. 5t#s ,uite obious. North Korea may hae minimum
.22 nuclear warheads, maximum ;22. They all loc( onto American
cities... 5f the 34 attac(s North Korea, North Korea will definitely use
those nuclear weapons against the 34 mainland.+ Oops, shouldn#t we
ta(e this threat seriouslyM
'ay =, :99< -- 3.4. 7efense 4ecretary 7onald Cumsfeld refuses to rule
out the possibility of war with North Korea.
S#une =, :99< -- After a fairly uneentful month, war rhetoric
continues to escalate. The 34 announces an P34.. billion new North
Korean war plan... When war brea(s out, the forces will s(irt the 7=&
and head for )yongyang, giing them the ability to +ta(e down+ North
Korea#s heay presence on the border within an hour of war brea(ing
out.. +This is Kim Hong-il#s worst nightmare,+ one official said.
S#une 77, :99< -- 7efense 4ecretary 7onald Cumsfeld#s adisory
panel states that the 3nited 4tates should be prepared to destroy North
Korea#s Iongbyon reactor if necessary to (eep )yongyang from
traffic(ing in nuclear weapons.
S#une 77, :99< -- Australia considers ta(ing a role in an international
effort to intercept North Korean ships that may be carrying weapons of
mass destruction !W=7" or illegal cargoes used to finance its military
programs. North Korea has always warned that a naal bloc(ade would
be a trigger for war. 4he cannot afford to hae any interdiction of critical
foodstuffs or fuel.
S4"ril 79, :99= -- +The year to fear for Taiwan* 6229+, Ay Wendell
=innic(, Asia Times. +TA5)$5 - 5f 8hina eer ma(es the decision to
inade Taiwan it is unli(ely to be a large-scale Normandy-style
amphibious assault. The reality is that 8hina is more li(ely to use a
decapitation strategy. 7ecapitation strategies short circuit command
and control systems, wipe out nationwide nere centers, and leae the
opponent hopelessly lost. All 8hina needs to do is sei:e the center of
power, the capital and its leaders. 5f 8hina decides to use force to
reunify the mainland with what it terms a brea(away proince, the
window of opportunity is belieed to be 6229. This would gie 8hina a
couple of years to clean up the mess before the 622F 4ummer
Olympics. =ost analysts estimate that 8hina#s military strength will
surpass Taiwan#s defense capabilities by 6221. 4o 6229 - the Iear of the
7og - is clearly the year to fear.+
S4"ril ::, :99= -- A massie train explosion in North Korea claims the
lies of approximately ;,222, including many children in a nearby
school.
S+North Korean security concludes train blast was assassination try+,
4pecial to World Tribune.com, Hune ., 622D
+North Korea#s state security agency has determined that April#s massie
train blast was a botched effort to (ill North Korean dictator Kim Hong-5l,
a 4outh Korean newspaper reported ... Kim#s heaily guarded special
train passed through Cyongchon station on his way bac( from 8hina Bust
nine hours before the explosion. This triggered speculation that the
incident was an assassination attempt on the North Korean leader ...
Kim anished from public iew for more than a wee( following the
explosion and the North#s normally attentie state-controlled media
made no mention of his actiities or whereabouts.+
S#une :9, :99= -- 8hina is told to withdraw its underta(ing on no first-
use of nuclear weapons should Taiwan try to blow up the Three <orges
7am. The call was made by them - as well as some who sit on the
country#s top political adisory body - in the wa(e of a 34 7efence
7epartment report which suggested that Taiwan could target the dam in
a pre-emptie stri(e.
This (ind of news story Bust escalates the war rhetoric. War rhetoric can
play a significant role in starting a war nobody really wanted. As war tal(
escalates, war action generally follows.
S4ugust 7, :99= -- 8hina#s 7efense =inister 8ao issued a stern
warning to Taiwan, saying the mainland military has the strength and
determination to +smash+ any moes toward independence by the self-
ruled island. 8ao#s remar(s were published on the front pages of many
newspapers and followed days of escalating rhetoric and tension,
aggraated by annual war games held in Huly by both sides to display
their military prowess. Wang &aixi, ice minister of the 4tate 8ouncil#s
Taiwan Affairs Office, warned that AeiBing won#t rule out war if Taiwanese
)resident 8hen 4hui-bian pursues his plan to adopt a new constitution
by 622F.
4ugust :>, :99= -- All 02 passengers and crew aboard two Cussian
passenger Bets die after both planes went down almost simultaneously in
different parts of the country, raising immediate suspicion of terrorist
action. The accidents too( place Bust four days ahead of controersial
elections in the separatist Cussian 8aucasus republic of 8hechnya.
S*e"te!ber 7, :99= -- +=O48OW !A)" - A suicide bomber (ills .2
people in a subway station. A militant =uslim group that claimed
responsibility for the crash of two Cussian airliners on August 61, said it
was also behind the latest attac(. The attac( was only the latest in a
string of iolence in the capital and elsewhere that the goernment has
appeared helpless to preent. =ost of the iolence has been blamed on
rebels in the brea(away republic of 8hechnya or their sympathi:ers.+
SOn the same day, more than a do:en attac(ers carrying guns and
wrapped in suicide-bomb belts sei:ed a school in the Cussian region of
North Ossetia and held hundreds of hostages, including some 622
children. =ore than ;D2 people died, and 1D6 wounded.
SNoe!ber 7@, :99= -- )ortraits of North Korean leader Kim Hong-il
disappear from some public places li(e the <rand )eople#s 8ultural
)alace, with tal( going around that this is a sign of changes in the North
Korean power structure. 4eeral possible explanations for the portrait
remoal readily come to mind*
.. SKim Hong-il has died
6. SKim Hong-il has been remoed from office by a military coup
;. SThe 3nited 4tates has been successful in its attempts to
assassinate him in order to force a +Cegime 8hange+
D. SAn internal power struggle is under way and Kim Hong-il is not
now in the ascendancy in that struggle.
SDece!ber ::, :99= -- 7eputy 4ecretary of 4tate Cichard Armitage
states that the 34 is not re,uired to defend Taiwan if AeiBing launches a
war against the island. 4ee WorldNetDaily. This statement could
proe to be one of the most heinous acts of betrayal in recent history.
S
World War < - 4ct (B, *cene (C .rosion of Confidence in 6&he
*yste!6
4o seere citi:ens will gradually be willing to gie up their liberties and
8onstitutional form of goernment.
%oo( out for terrorist attac(s, disruption to serices, disease scares,
natural disasters, corruption or scandals in western goernments, all
real or imagined. All will be designed to undermine our confidence in
#the powers that be#.
5t appears that this phase is not yet ready to be implemented, so eents
are few and far between. Aut rest assured, this phase will start soon@
When it does, eents will happen with ery ,uic( succession.
Noe!ber :99: -- -irst reported cases of 4AC4. A massie media
blit: attempts to create a pandemic, but by 4eptember 622;, only /F2
people worldwide hae died. 4ource* W.3.O. 8ompared to the
5nfluen:a )andemic of .0./-.0.0 which (illed F22,222 Americans and
61 million people worldwide, 4AC4 is hardly a pandemic.
-ebruary 97, :99< -- 4pace shuttle 8olumbia brea(s up on re-entry
oer 7allas, Texas.
S#une 7:, :99< -- A deadly train bombing in Cussia, a few days before
their elections. -or those following numerology, here you hae an
obious 999 in the date !9Y6'9", but in addition, this attac( occurred
990 days after 0.., which is another form of 999.
S4ugust 7@, :99< -- What began as a handful of commonplace,
summertime +trips+ brief transmission line shutdowns, usually due to
ebbing oltage caused by anything from a bird hitting the lines to a
power oerload set off the biggest outage in 3.4. history. -ifty million
people lost power in eight states and parts of 8anada.
S
S4ugust :A, :99< -- 5n an uncannily similar eent to the 34
blac(outs, %ondon is hit shortly thereafter. =ayor of %ondon Ken
%iingstone said at least 612,222 people were affected. +We#e neer
had this catastrophic failure before and we clearly can#t hae it again,+
he said.
SDece!ber 7<, :99< -- While the public was fixated on the external
dramatics of the capture of 4addam, )resident Aush was ,uietly signing into law
the most dictatorial powers act in American history. Americans had Bust lost their
liberties and 8onstitutionally protected rights. As of the signing into law
of ?C 6D./, commonly referred to as )atriot Act 55, Aush has the power
of ?itler, 4talin, and =ao Tse-Tung.
S#anuary :8, :99= -- %ord ?utton in the 3K deliers the ?utton
Ceport into whether Alair misled the Aritish public into inading 5ra,. +5
am satisfied there was not a dishonourable or underhand or duplicitous
strategy on the part of the prime minister and officials to lea( 7r Kelly#s
name coertly.+ $en %abour =)s were ta(en abac( by the tone of the
report - some going as far as calling it a #whitewash#. A indicated =r
Alair immediately called on =ichael ?oward, the leader of the
opposition, to withdraw his claim that the )rime =inister had lied. #The
allegation that 5 or anyone else lied to this ?ouse or deliberately misled
the country by falsifying intelligence on W=7 is itself the real lie,+ =r
Alair told the ?ouse, clearly relishing the sudden change in his political
fortunes.
S-ebruary >, :99= -- The start of seere criticism in the 34 of the 5ra,
War. +)recisely because of the ,ualms the administration encountered,
it created a rogue intelligence operation, the Office of *"ecial %lans
!O4)", located within the )entagon and under the control of neo-
conseraties. The O4) roamed outside the ordinary inter-agency
process, stamping its approal on stories from 5ra,i exiles that the other
agencies dismissed as lac(ing credibility, and feeding them to the
president. At the same time, constant pressure was applied to the
intelligence agencies to force their compliance. 5n one case, a senior
intelligence officer who refused to buc(le under was remoed.+
guardian.co.uk
-ebruary 77, :99= -- 5n an impromptu news conference, Aush stated
that he did not (now of +anybody in my administration who lea(ed
classified information.+ ?e went on to say that he +wanted to (now the
truth+ about the lea(. cnn.co!. This will later be proen to be false.
S'arch 77, :99= -- =adrid, 4pain. $xactly 0.. days after 4ep ..,
622., oer 622 people are (illed and thousands are inBured when deadly
simultaneous attac(s are launched on seeral trains in VretaliationW for
the inolement of 4panish troops in the occupation of 5ra,. 4ee
'adrid 4ttack for details.
S'arch :>, :99= -- -A5 7irector Cobert =ueller warns that terrorists
may attempt to influence the outcome of NoemberUs presidential
election by launching new attac(s in America and oerseas. =ueller
says, VWe understand that between now and the election there is a
window of time in which terrorists might try to influence eents, whether
itUs here or oerseas.W 8onsistently throughout the summer, -ederal
officials (ept up the drumbeat that America could expect a terrorist
attac( during the )residential campaign. These rumors of war were
intended
S4"ril <9, :99= -- A New Ior(er article appears exposing
mistreatment at Abu <hraib prison in Aaghdad. 4oon after, similar
stories start brea(ing about Aritish troops engaging in the same
actiities. 7etails of prisoner abuse, torture and rape are plastered all
oer the media, in a seeming attempt to fulfill part of an oerall plan to
enrage specific =uslim sensibilities in order to proo(e war. 4ee a
&i!eline of eents leading up to the furore.
S#une <, :99= -- )resident Aush consults with powerhouse attorney
Him 4harp, who represented 5ran-contra figure retired Air -orce =aBor
<eneral Cichard 4ecord> $nron#s Ken %ay> and Watergate co-conspirator
Heb 4tuart =agruder. +This action by Bush is a rather stunning and
e+traordinary development4 The resident of the 0nited States is
potentially hiring a private criminal defense la'yer4 0nsurprisingly5 the
%hite House is doing all it can to bury the story5 providing precious little
detail or conte+t for the resident=s action>?: -ormer White ?ouse
8ounsel and Watergate figure Hohn 7ean.
S#une < D =, :99= -- 785 <eorge Tenet suddenly resigns on Hune ;rd,
only to be followed a day later by Hames )aitt, the 85A#s 7eputy
7irector of Operations.
Tenet#s resignation, which occurred at night, was the first +eening
resignation+ of a 8abinet-leel official since October .0/; when Attorney
<eneral $lliott Cichardson and his deputy, William Cuc(elshaus, resigned
in protest of Cichard Nixon#s firing of Watergate special prosecutor
Archibald 8ox. =any regard this as the watershed moment when the
Nixon administration was doomed.
S #une :=, :99= -- An apparent deliberate campaign designed to
discredit )resident Aush, which appeared to start in early Hune, obtains
a real boost when Al <ore accused )resident Aush of lying about a lin(
between al-Taida and 4addam ?ussein and said the president refuses to
bac( down from that position to aoid political fallout. #They dare not
admit the truth lest they loo( li(e complete fools for launching our
country into a rec(less, discretionary war against a nation that posed no
immediate threat to us whatsoeer#, <ore, the former ice president
who lost the presidency to Aush in 6222, said during a speech at
<eorgetown 3niersity %aw 8enter.
S#uly :<, :99= -- A national commission probing the 4eptember ..
attac(s in the 34 finds +failures of imagination, policy, capabilities and
management+ by the 3nited 4tates goernment and recommends a
sweeping oerhaul of intelligence serices. The foregone conclusion
obiously exonerated Aush and his entire 8abinet of any responsibility in
the attac(s. This erdict set the stage for further encroachments upon
indiiduals# liberties and freedoms by setting forth D. recommendations
that would +sole+ these imaginary +intelligence failures+. ?oweer, for
a more accurate perspectie on 0.., see letsroll877.org,
877in"lanesight.co!, a!ics.co!, and 877truthradio.co!.
S4ugust 7, :99= -- Hust hours after the 7emocrat )arty nominated
Hohn Kerry as )resident, the Aush Administration turned to its
+incumbency adantage+ to announce a terrorist alert in New Ior( 8ity,
eleating the alert leel to Orange. 5mmediately, the 7emocrats cried
+foul+ because such action irtually eliminated any poll +bounce+ Kerry
might hae expected following his nomination.
SNoe!ber ::, :99= -- P.22,222 reward is offered to the first person
to delier a full mathematical, engineering proof of how the impact
andEor fires caused any of the WT8 buildings to collapse the way the
goernment claims. 5t must include all the fuel, mass, critical
temperatures, li(ely temperatures and their causes, energy needed to
crush concrete into fine powder, force needed to sheer bolts and riets,
time calculations, and all the other releant data in a detailed analysis to
be reiewed by accredited engineers on a team headed by Heff King
877reiew.org, engineer and doctor educated at '(&. 7eadline* Hune
;2, 6221. -or application* htt"CFFwww.reo"en877.orgF
SDece!ber 7, :99= -- The 34 senator leading an inestigation into
the 3nited NationsU oil-for-food programme in 5ra, calls on secretary-
general Kofi Annan to resign. This is the first in a number of olleys
fired at Annan. 5t appears that Annan will not succeed as 4ecretary
<eneral of a future World <oernment, and may soon be replaced.
)erhaps by 8lintonM

World War < - 4ct B, *cene (C Colla"se of $* and Western 'orals
and .cono!ies
Aetween .//9-./FF, $dward <ibbons published a huge six olume wor(
entitled The (istor) Of The Decline And 1all Of The 2o"an
!"#ire. <ibbons# wor( was scholarly and monumental, as it thoroughly
coered a period of history spanning approximately .,622 years. ?is
goal in producing this study was to precisely catalog the reasons for the
rise of the Coman $mpire and the factors leading to the decline and fall
of the $mpire. <ibbons was uniersally hailed as achieing his obBectie
brilliantly.
Aut, <ibbons not only created a document which details how and why
the Coman $mpire rose and fell> he created a document which detailed
precisely how a successful and powerful $mpire could be suberted and
destroyed.
<ibbons listed fie basic reasons that the enormous Coman $mpire was
destroyed*
.. The dramatic increase of diorce undermined the institution of the
family.
6. The imposition of higher taxes undermined the economic stability
and itality of the $mpire. Taxes were raised to pay for deficit
goernment spending, to pay for food for all in society and to pay
for goernment-sponsored actiities of diersion, such as circuses
and sports. 5nterestingly, as the time of the final collapse drew
closer, greater emphasis was placed on sports, to diert the
attention of the public from the distressing news of massie
trouble within the $mpire.
;. The drie for personal pleasure had become ery intense, een to
the point of obsession. <ibbons noted that, at the ery end, sports
had become more exciting and brutal.
D. )eople lost their faith, both religiously and in their goernment.
)aganism gae way to 8hristianity and the efficient Coman
<oernment gae way to chaos and disintegration.
1. ?idden conspirators were wor(ing within the goernment to
secretly destroy it. They wor(ed ,uietly, inisibly and deceitfully>
during the entire time they were secretly dismantling the
goernment of the Coman $mpire, they publicly proclaimed their
unswering support of it.
Cecogni:e any of the aboe 1 points occurring in Western societies
todayM

'ay :A, :99= -- The -ederal Cesere raises the =oney 4upply !=-;" by
unprecedented, almost crisis proportions, up another PD9.F billion in one
wee(, bringing the total oer the month of =ay to P.11 billion. This
e,uates to a P6.2 trillion annuali:ed pace, a 66.6 percent annuali:ed
rate of growth. These numbers are huge.
Definition of Cons"iratorial 3istory
With than(s to Calph $pperson, author of The 0nseen Hand5 "n Introduction to the Conspiratorial 8ie' of History4
Two 3iews of (istor)
There are two fundamental ways to iew history* We call one the catastrophic or
accidental vie' of history, the other we call the conspiratorial vie' of history.
4ccidental 3istory
5n the catastrophic or accidental iew of history we are led to beliee that historical
eents, such as wars and reolutions were the direct result of some sudden or
surprising eent. While the catastrophic iew is accurate for weather, olcanoes and
earth,ua(es, it does not always proide a realistic iew of humanity and eents
influenced by man.
Ioung, malleable American and other Western minds are sadly taught the Accidental
iew of history in the goernment school systems. This iew is reinforced throughout
their lies by the controlled mass media. As a result, when most discoer the
8onspiratorial Giew of ?istory, the immediate reaction is shoc(, disbelief and a refusal
to accept something other than they#e been taught to beliee.
Cons"iratorial 3istory
8onspiratorial history studies that part of history that is a product of man#s planning.
5n conspiratorial history we are led to beliee that eents, such as wars and
reolutions, are the result of planned eents. While the conspiratorial iew is not
accurate for weather, olcanoes and earth,ua(es, it is a realistic and accurate iew of
the interrelationship of man and nations. 4ince the planning for most of these eents
was done in secret, we use the term conspiratorial history. That is> this history is the
result of plans constructed in secret, which by definition is a conspiracy.
5nterestingly enough, the 8onspiratorial Giew of ?istory is also the Aiblical Giew of
?istory. Try )salms 6 for starters.'
We beliee that current world eents are not simply circumstantial, but the result of an
organi:ed campaign by an elite group of unseen and widely un(nown world leaders.
Their goal is to exercise absolute dictatorial control oer the world, to establish a New
World Order.
The Cause of War
Wars start when one nation moes into the territory of another> depressions occur
when mar(ets ta(e unexpected downturns> inflations occur when prices are drien up
by shortages> reolutions start when the people, always spontaneously, rise up to
oerthrow the existing goernment.
These are the traditional explanations of historical eents. $ents happen by accident>
there do not seem to be any causes.
Aut this explanation of history leaes gnawing ,uestions in the minds of serious
students. 5s it possible that goernment leaders and others planned these eents and
then orchestrated them to their desired conclusionsM 5s it possible that een the great
catastrophes of history were part of this planM
There is an explanation of historical eents that answers these ,uestions in the
affirmatie. 5t is called the 8onspiratorial Giew of ?istory and it is the alternatie to the
Accidental Giew, the iew that is commonly held today. 5t is possible, therefore, to
summari:e the maBor eents of history into two alternatie schools of thought*
The Accidental 3iew of (istor)$
?istorical eents occur by accident, for no apparent reason. Culers are
powerless to interene.
The Cons#iratorial 3iew of (istor)$
?istorical eents occur by design for reasons that are not generally
made (nown to the public, but are well (nown to those in power at the
time.
-ran(lin 7. Cooseelt who certainly saw many monumental eents occur
during his consecutie administrations has been ,uoted as saying* +5n
politics, nothing happens by accident. 5f it happens, it was planned that
way.+
5f harmful eents are planned, it follows that the people who were about to suffer
through the scheduled eent would act to preent the eent from occurring if they
(new about it in adance. The people expect goernment to protect them from harmful
eents.
Aut if the eents still occur after the goernment officials had been expected to preent
them, the goernment officials hae failed in their assigned duties. There are only two
explanations as to why they failed*
.. The eents oerwhelmed them, and could not hae been preented> or
6. The eents were allowed to occur because the officials wanted them to occur.
5t is difficult for the casual obserer to beliee that World War . and World War 6 could
not hae been preented, as humane people of conscience do not allow harmful eents
to occur.
5f a planned and unwanted eent is allowed to happen, those who planned the eent
would hae to hae acted in secret so as to preent discoery of their plans by those
who would be adersely affected.
)lanners wor(ing in secret to plan an eent that the people do not wish to occur are,
by definition, members of a conspiracy. Webster#s defines conspiracy as a +combination
of people, wor(ing in secret, for an eil or unlawful purpose.+
Not only must the 8onspirators wor( in secret, they must ma(e eery effort to ensure
that their plans are not made public. The first tas( of a conspiracy, then, becomes that
of conincing the people that the conspiracy itself does not exist.
This ma(es the tas( of uncoering the machinations of the conspiracy all the more
difficult.
Cons"iracies .1"osed
There are three ways of exposing a 8onspiracy*
.. One is for any of the participants in the conspiracy to brea( with it and to
expose his or her inolement. This ta(es an extremely courageous indiidual,
and that type of exposure is indeed rare.
6. The second group of exposers are those who hae un(nowingly participated in a
conspiratorial planning of an eent but who didn#t reali:e it until later. These
indiiduals, and there aren#t many in the history of the world, hae also
exposed the inner wor(ings of the conspiracy at great peril to themseles.
;. The third method of exposing a conspiracy is for researchers to uncoer
conspiratorial designs in the eents of the past. 5f you#re interested in this field
of study 5#m sure you#e come across many such sources who expose
conspiracies.
5t is our belief that a conspiracy does indeed exist, and that it is extremely large,
deeply entrenched, and therefore extremely powerful. 5t is wor(ing to achiee absolute
and brutal rule oer the entire human race by using wars, depressions, inflations and
reolutions to further its aims. The 8onspiracy#s one unchanging purpose has been to
destroy all religion, all existing goernments, and all traditional human institutions, and
to build a New World Order out of the wrec(age they hae created.
Notice that if the 8onspiracy does exist, it will do eerything it can to deny the charges
of both those who see( to expose it and those who claim to hae been a part of it.
+Three hundred men, all of whom (now one another, direct the economic destiny of
$urope and choose their successors from among themseles.+ Walter Cathenau, who
in .020 controlled <erman <eneral $lectric.
+-ifty men hae run America and that#s a high figure.+ Hoseph Kennedy, the father of
the late president Hohn Kennedy.
+There does exist, and has existed for a generation, an international Anglophile
networ( which operates, to some extent, in the way the radical Cight beliees the
8ommunists act. 5n -act, this networ(, which we may identity as the Cound Table
<roups, has no aersion to cooperating with the 8ommunists, or any group, and
fre,uently does so.+
+5 (now of the operations of this networ( because 5 hae studied it for twenty years
and was permitted for two years, in the early .092#s, to examine its papers and secret
records.+ 7r. 8arroll Tuigley, a professor of ?istory at <eorgetown 3niersity#s
-oreign 4erice 4chool, author of Tragedy @ Hope.
What 'otiates the Cons"iracy+
The ultimate purpose of this 8onspiracy is power. There are some who desire this more
than een material goods, although the two fre,uently go together.
+Cose Kennedy !the wife of Hoseph Kennedy" (new that the man she loed loed a
power beyond the power of money. ?e wanted the power of goernment, and he would
hae it.+ )earl Auc( author of The 9ennedy %omen.
The 8onspiracy, then, needs conspirators, and it is logical to as( why illustrious men of
wealth and fortune would Boin such an enterprise.
+The answer is ,uite the reerse of the ,uestion* These men !inoled with the
8onspiracy" became illustrious primarily because they were part of the 8onspiracy.+
Alair 8oan, author of The &ed %eb.
4o those inoled do not become rich andEor illustrious and then Boin the 8onspiracy>
they become rich and illustrious because they are members of the 8onspiracy.
Aut what is their motieM What prompts men to see( wealth and positionM
+When a person has all the money he needs, his goal becomes power.+ -ormer
8ongressman Hohn 4chmit:.
+There are two passions which hae a powerful influence on the affairs of men. These
are... loe of power and loe of money.... When united... they hae the most iolent
effects.+ AenBamin -ran(lin
?oweer, power itself has a corrupting influence on those who see( it. 5n an oft-
,uoted truth. %ord Acton explained power thus* +)ower corrupts> absolute power
corrupts absolutely.+
Those who see( power will be corrupted by it. They will be willing to intentionally cause
depressions, reolutions, and wars in order to further their desire for more power. This
corrupting nature of the ery pursuit of power explains why the moral mind of the
indiidual who neither desires power oer others nor understands the desire for such
power cannot fathom why power-see(ers would want to create human misery through
wars, depressions, and reolutions.
5n other words, the conspirators are successful because the moral citi:en !you and 5"
cannot accept the conclusion that other indiiduals would actually wish to create
incredibly destructie acts against their fellow citi:ens.
Another power see(er, the Cussian anarchist Aa(unin, explained that this process of
corruption een affected those dedicated to freedom who were gien power to protect
the powerless. ?e wrote that +... the possession of power transformed into a tyrant
een the most deoted friend of liberty.+
+)ower is the end. What other delight is there but to enBoy the sheer sense of controlM
%et me see any other motie in the people who command.+ Cichard H. Whalen, author
of The #ounding #ather, spea(ing of Hoseph Kennedy.
4o the motie of the 8onspirators has been identified* 5t is )ower@

With than(s to Calph $pperson, author of The 0nseen Hand5 "n Introduction to the Conspiratorial 8ie' of History4
4 /sal" 5
1 %hy do the nations conspire
and the peoples plot in vain(
A The 7ings of the earth ta7e their stand
and the rulers gather together
against the 1$&!
and against his "nointed $ne4
3 ?1et us brea7 their chains5? they say5
?and thro' off their fetters4?

You might also like