FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: The Council on Foreign Relations


Wiseman, a partner in the New York banking house of Kuhn, Loeb &
Co.,” received $75,000 from the U.S. government as part of a “scheme”
for a secret mission to rescue the Czar and his family.

Prince Kuli-Mirza, commander of the ‘White Russian’ forces, believed
that the Royal family survived, and showed Gleb Botkin, the son of the
Czar’s doctor, documents which said that “the imperial family had first
been taken to a monastery in the province of Perm, and later to
Denmark.” A 1919 book called Rescuing the Czar, by James P. Smyth,
who identified himself as an American secret agent, revealed how he
led the Romanovs through a secret tunnel to the British Consulate in
Ekaterinburg, and from there they were secretly taken to Tibet.

The remains of the two youngest of the Romanov children, Aleksei and
Maria, have never officially been located; and through the years, there
has been some evidence to suggest that Aleksei and Anastasia may
have survived the execution. An entry in the diary of Richard
Meinertzhagen, a former British intelligence agent, suggested that one
of the Czar’s daughters escaped; and in the 1993 book The Romanov
Conspiracies, British writer, Michael Occleshaw, also claimed that one
of the Czar’s daughters survived.

The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk between Russia and Germany, which was
signed on March 3, 1918 to end the hostilities between them, was said
to also contain a codicil that guaranteed that the Romanov’s would not
be harmed. The Russian people were to continue believing that they
were dead, so the communists could replace the monarchy. It had
been hoped that the Bolshevik government wouldn’t survive, so they
could return, but it never happened.

On June 11, 1971, the New York Daily Mirror announced the exclusive
publication of “Reminiscences of Observations” by ‘His Imperial
Highness Aleksei Nicholaevich Romanoff, Tsarevich and Grand Duke
of Russia.’ The U.S. Government never officially recognized
Goleniewski as a Romanov, because history reported that prince had
suffered from hemophilia, an incurable genetic disease– but
Goleniewski didn’t.

The Czar left millions in American and European banks, which today is
worth billions, and some researchers have made the claim, that the
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