Tuesday, November 4, 2008

"Don't support the British Empire!"

Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz (R) welcomes British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.



November 3, 2008 (LPAC)--Under this title the leading Saudi international daily Asharq Al-Awsat posted a comment by Hussein Askary on November 3 under the report of British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's visit to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE to force them to back the "Britain Woods" dictatorship of the IMF.

In the 170-word-limited space for commentaries on the report, which was the main story in Asharq Al-Awsat, Askary wrote: "Don't support the British Empire! Anyone who harbors the illusion that America is the sole controller of the world and that it is the power which dictates to the Arab states their policies, should carefully study what Brown is doing. He is trying to save the international financial system which is controlled by the hedge funds based in the British islands, such as the Cayman Islands, through the creation of a world government under the umbrella of the IMF and run by Britain. This would supposedly be financed by the money from the Arabs which is not enough, and will never be enough to save the global financial system which was declared dead by Lyndon LaRouche a year ago. The British Empire is not a nation. It is not England. It is a group of financial and economic interests that need nations and armies to impose their control over all nations."

The publishing of this comment, although carefully reviewed, because it took hours to be posted, does not imply that the Saudis are saying "No" to the demands by Brown to pump money into the IMF. The Saudis have not said anything, but Brown, who was in Qatar on Sunday Nov. 2, after meeting the Saudi officials on Saturday, said that he was confident the Saudis will help the IMF.

To make sure that the Arabs get the point, Brown took with him the CEOs of BAE, Rolls Royce, and British Petroleum of the Al-Yamamah affair fame, among others . The BAE-Prince Bandar Al-Yamamah operations to support and manipulate international terrorism is also capable of reaching inside the palaces and bedrooms of the kings and Sheikhs of the region. So far, one Saudi king has been murdered in his own palace. A few weeks ago, the successors of the former King Faisal bin Abdul-Aziz inaugurated a museum celebrating his life on the occasion of his assassination at the hands of a young member of the royal family in 1975 following the oil crisis of 1973. The assassin was studying in the U.S., and reportedly part of the MK-Ultra project.



One interesting irony is that Brown arrived to the region on November 2, the 91st anniversary of the Balfour Declaration, part of the Sykes-Picot plan, which promised the Jews of Europe a homeland in Palestine (see letter above, inked by James Balfour to Lord Rothchild, a leader of the British Jewish community, for transmission to the Zionist Federation, a private Zionist organization ). Since then, Southwest Asia has been a bloody cockpit of British geopolitics and destabilization, and the Jews of Israel have not enjoyed peace in the new homeland, exactly due to British policies.

Text taken from here.

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