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The NWO Files - EUROPEAN UNION


Guest Donald Hastings

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Guest Donald Hastings

[illuminati, Freemason, Lucifer, satan, 666, NWO, Skull and Bones]

 

Subject: EUROPEAN UNION

Title: The New World Order Files

Author: David Allen Rivera

 

The European Union, formerly known as the European Communities (EC), or

European Economic Community (Common Market), is a movement to unite

Western Europe. For hundreds of years, there has been an ongoing effort

to unify Europe. Prior to World War II, because of intermarriage between

Royal families, all crowned heads were closely related.

 

French philosopher Montesquieu said in the 18th century: "Whenever in

the past Europe has been united by force, the unity lasted no longer

than the space of a single reign." He went on to predict the peaceful

unification of Europe. In 1871, Victor Hugo, the French novelist, said:

"Let us have the United States of Europe; let us have continental

federation; let us have European freedom."

 

In 1922, Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi founded the Pan European

Union. He fled Austria in 1940, and came to the United States, where he

continued to work towards European unity. In 1941, Andre Malraux called

for a "European New Deal, a federal Europe excluding the USSR." In an

October, 1942 letter to the British War Cabinet, Winston Churchill

wrote: "Hard as it is to say now, I trust that the European family may

act unitedly as one under a Council of Europe. I look forward to a

United States of Europe." He said in a September 19, 1946 speech at the

University of Zurich: "We must build a kind of United States of Europe."

Churchill made the United Europe Movement a cohesive group, by merging

the Union of European Federalists, the Economic League for European

Cooperation, and the French Council for a United Europe, into an

organization known as the International Committee of Movements for

European Unity.

 

Late in 1947, various people and groups formed a committee to

coordinate their efforts, and by May, 1948, organized the Congress of

Europe, which convened at the Hague in the Netherlands. Nearly 1000

prominent Europeans from 16 countries called for the establishment of a

United Europe. Dr. Joseph Retinger, who had helped organized the meeting

at the Hague, came to the United States in July, 1948, along with

Winston Churchill, Duncan Sandys, and former Belgian Prime Minister

Henri- Paul Spaak, to raise money for the movement. This led to the

establishment of the American Committee on a United Europe (ACUE) on

March 29, 1949. Their first Chairman was William Donovan, the first

Director of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS, the forerunner of the

CIA); the Vice-Chairman was Allen Dulles, who later became the Director

of the CIA; and the Secretary was George S. Franklin, who was a Director

in the Council on Foreign Relations, and later a coordinator with the

Trilateral Commission.

 

Lord James Edward Salisbury, the conservative British statesman, said:

"Federation is the only hope of the world." The historic address on June

5, 1947, by Gen. George C. Marshall, the Secretary of State, which made

proposals for European aid known as the Marshall Plan, also called for

the unification of Europe.

 

On March 17, 1948, a 50 year treaty was signed for "collaboration in

economic, social, and cultural matters and for collective self defense,"

in Brussels, by England, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, and

Luxembourg. In 1950, its functions were transferred to NATO, and in May,

1955, a military alliance, known as the Council of Western European

Union was established, made up of the foreign ministers from Belgium,

France, West Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and England,

who met every three months. There was also a Western European Union

Assembly made up of delegates to the Consultive Assembly of the Council

of Europe in Paris.

 

The Western European Coalition began on June 8, 1948, with the signing

of the Benelux Agreement by Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands, to

unite their economic and domestic policies.

 

On May 5, 1949, Foreign Ministers from ten European countries signed a

Treaty in London, for the purpose of working for "greater European

unity, to improve the conditions of life and principle human value in

Europe and to uphold the principles of parliamentary democracy, the rule

of law and human rights." The Treaty sought to promote unity, both

socially and economically, among its members: Belgium (1949), Denmark

(1949), France (1949), Ireland (1949), Italy (1949), Luxembourg (1949),

Netherlands (1949), Norway (1949), Sweden (1949), England (1949), Greece

(1949), Turkey (1949), Iceland (1949), West Germany (1951), Austria

(1956), Cyprus (1961), Switzerland (1963), Malta (1965), Portugal

(1976), Spain (1977), and Liechtenstein (1978). The Council of Europe

was open to all European States which accepted the "principles of the

rule of law and of the enjoyment by all persons within (their)

jurisdiction of human rights and fundamental freedoms." Their

headquarters were in Strasbourg, France; their ministers met twice a

year, their deputies met ten times a year, and their 154 delegates met

at the Congresses.

 

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the father of the Common

Market, was a defense alliance developed to implement the North Atlantic

Treaty in 1949, and to apply counterpressure against the growing Soviet

military presence in Europe. Article V states: "The Parties agree that

an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe shall be

considered an attack against them all and consequently they agree that,

if such an attack occurs, each of them...will assist the Party or

Parties so attacked...to restore and maintain the security of the North

Atlantic Area." Belgium, France, the Netherlands, Italy, West Germany,

Spain, Luxembourg, United Kingdom, Canada, Denmark, Greece, Iceland,

Norway, Portugal, Turkey, and the United States, all joined to oppose

the growing threat of communism. Soon afterwards, the Russians,

recognizing NATO is a stumbling block to their plans, emulated the group

by uniting their communist satellites in 1955 with the Warsaw Treaty

Organization. The Warsaw Pact alliance included the countries of

Albania, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and

Russia.

 

On May 27, 1952, the European Defense Community Treaty was signed in

Paris, and provided for the armies of West Germany, France, Italy,

Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg, to become closely aligned with

England's. On October 23, 1954, it was replaced with the Western

European Union, who merged their armies into a multi-national armed force.

 

French economist and diplomat Jean Monnet, called the "Father of

Europe," said: "As long as Europe remains divided, it is no match for

the Soviet Union. Europe must unite." He established a pressure group in

1955 called the Action Committee for the United States of Europe. He

also said: "Once a Common Market interest has been created, then

political union will come naturally."

 

On March 25, 1957, the European Economic Community (EEC), also called

the European Common Market, was established with a 378-page Declaration

of Intent, called the Treaty of Rome, to facilitate the removal of

barriers, so trade could be accomplished among member nations; eventual

coordination of transportation systems, agricultural and economic

policies; the removal of all measures restricting free competition; and

the assurance of the mobility of labor, capital, and entrepreneurship.

The Common Market began with six countries: France, West Germany, Italy,

Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. George McGhee, the former U.S.

ambassador to West Germany, said that "the Treaty of Rome which brought

the Common Market into being was nurtured at the Bilderberg meetings."

 

In 1973, Henry Kissinger, Nixon's Secretary of State (who favors a 'New

International Order' of one-world government) urged the Common Market to

include four more nations: Norway, United Kingdom, Denmark, and Ireland.

Norway eventually backed out, but on May 28, 1979, in Athens, Greece

became the tenth nation to join the Common Market. When they officially

became a member in January, 1981, Europe was as unified as it was in

814, when Charlemagne, founder of the Roman Empire, died.

 

A French foreign minister said: "The Europe of the future, when it

finally unites politically as well as economically, will be the

mightiest force on earth." Walter Hallstein said: "Make no mistake about

it, we are not in business, we are in politics. We are building the

United States of Europe." _Time_ magazine wrote: "If the Europe of

tomorrow could muster the political will, it could become a co-equal of

the other two superpowers, the United States and Russia..." Another

publication said: "The European Common Market is emerging to shake the

world economically and politically." England's former Prime Minister,

Edward Heath, said: "Europe must unite or perish."

 

The December 3, 1975 issue of the _Review of the News_ said: "A new

move towards a One World Government was recently initiated by Holland.

The motion, introduced by a Socialist deputy in the Netherlands

Assembly, was passed on to the Common Market Commission in Brussels

where it received approval. The Dutch motion called for European

elections in which 355 members would be elected to a Federal European

Parliament, which, if all goes as planned, will unite Western Europe

under a single Socialist Government...the term of office would be five

years and a Socialist-Communist majority would be inevitable." The first

such election was held June 7-9, 1979, which elected a 410 member

European Parliament, the first in over 1,000 years. Great Britain,

France, West Germany, and Italy had 81 seats; the Netherlands, 25 seats;

Belgium, 24 seats; Denmark, 16 seats; Ireland, 15 seats; and Luxembourg,

6 seats. The Palace of Europe was built in Strasbourg, France, to

provide a facility for its Parliament, which met monthly, ten months out

of the year.

 

On March 17, 1979, the Common Market initiated a new monetary system to

encourage trade and investment by stabilizing their currency values in

relation to each other. The main feature of this link-up was a $33

billion fund made up of each other's gold and currency reserves. Members

could borrow against this fund to support their own currencies. The

value of each participating currency were set against "European Currency

Units" established by the fund.

 

On January 1, 1986, Spain and Portugal became the 11th and 12th members

of the European Community. On November 11, 1991, Jeane Kirkpatrick,

former U.S. Ambassador to the UN, wrote: "If the Bush Administration has

a vision of the New World Order, it is time to share it with the

Europeans and Americans, because a New World Order is precisely what is

emerging on the continent of Europe today." On December 9-11, 1991, at a

meeting in Maastricht, in the Netherlands, a serious effort was made to

establish a common currency, and discussions were held concerning a

common foreign policy, and a common defense policy. On December 31,

1992, the "Single Europe Act" went into effect, uniting the 12 nations

into a federation and lifting the restrictions on the movement of goods,

services, capital, workers and tourists within the Community. They also

adopted common agricultural, fisheries, and nuclear research policies.

Jacques Delors, in the _Delors Report_, a blueprint for EC unification,

called for a "transfer of decision-making power from member states to

the community."

 

On January 1, 1995, Austria became the 13th nation, and three other

nations are set to join the Union, pending the outcome of referendum

votes in their respective countries: Finland, Norway, and Sweden. The

industrial capability of the European Union, is nearly equal to that of

the United States. Western Europe also accounts for about 25% of the

world's production, and 35% of its trade. When the time comes, and it

surely will, that the people of the European Union finally allow

themselves to become a single political entity, they will be a world

power, and a force to be reckoned with.

 

 

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

"Thus, Illuminist John Page is telling fellow Illuminist

Thomas Jefferson that "...

Lucifer rides in the whirlwind and directs this storm."

 

Certainly, this interpretation is consistent with most New Age

writings which boldly state that this entire plan to achieve

the New World Order is directed by Lucifer working through

his Guiding Spirits to instruct key human leaders of every

generation as to the actions they need to take to continue

the world down the path to the Kingdom of Antichrist."

 

--- from Cutting Edge Ministries

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