FINAL WARNING: The Communist Agenda
humiliated by the failed Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba. Later, Kennedy
planned to begin scaling back.
Vietnam escalated into a major war by 1964, with casualties peaking in
1969.
In 1964, with a possibility that ultra-conservative Barry Goldwater
might win the presidency, a coalition of liberal forces, under the
guidance of Illuminati advisors, worked for the election of former Vice
President Lyndon B. Johnson, who had taken over after Kennedy’s
assassination in 1963. Johnson was urged to pursue “peace at any
price,” but the Illuminati didn’t want peace, and Johnson further
escalated the War. At the height of the war, there were about 543,000
American soldiers in Vietnam.
On July 25, 1965, President Johnson told an American television
audience that the military build-up was to administer “death and
desolation” to the communists, yet he made agreements to provide the
Soviet Union, and her communist satellite countries, with millions of
dollars worth of food, computers, industrial plants, oil refinery
equipment, jet engines, military rifles, and machine tools for an $800
million automobile production facility. At the same time, our Supreme
Court ruled that communists could teach in our schools, and work in
our defense plants; and the Senate and State Department allowed them
to open diplomatic offices in major American cities, even though FBI
Director J. Edgar Hoover warned that their embassies were part of an
espionage network.
Johnson’s war policies severely damaged his chances for re-election,
and he was forced to drop out of the 1968 Primary race.
In 1966, after Averill Harriman had made a 22-day, 12 nation peace tour
for Johnson, he was asked by a television reporter how the Russians
felt about the Vietnam War, and Harriman said they were “embarrassed
by the war. They don’t like it and they would like to see it stopped.” A
brilliant piece of propaganda, considering the fact that the Russians
were shipping guns, ammunition, missiles, and MiG fighters to the
North Vietnamese.
In 1968, the Congress increased ‘foreign aid’ of war materials to