FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: The Communist Agenda


It was alleged by some researchers, that Russia sent China a telegram,
saying that if they didn’t surrender, they would be destroyed. They
were requested to send ten technicians to see the bomb that would be
used, and when they went, they saw an atomic bomb with the
capability of destroying a large city. As the story goes, Chiang sent a
telegram to President Truman, asking for help. Truman refused. In
1948, Congress voted to send China $125 million in military aid, but
again the money was held up until Chiang was defeated. In October,
1949, 450 million people were turned over to the Communist movement.

Chiang fled to the island of Taiwan, 110 miles off the east coast of
China, where he governed that country under a democracy. Mao Tse-
tung, who announced in 1921 that he was a Marxist, after reading the
Communist Manifesto, took over as China’s leader, and Peking was
established as the new capital. On February 14, 1950, a thirty-year
treaty of friendship was signed with Russia.

In March, 1953, Mao proposed to the Soviet Union, a plan for world
conquest, in which every country, except the United States, would be
communist-controlled by 1973. It was called a “Memorandum on a New
Program for World Revolution,” and was taken to Moscow by the
Chinese Foreign Minister, Chou En-lai. The first phase was to be
completed by 1960, and called for Korea, Formosa, and Indochina to
be under Chinese control.
On July 15, 1971, Chairman Mao appealed to the world to, “unite and
defeat the U.S. aggressors and all their running dogs.”

While campaigning in 1968, Richard Nixon said: “I would not recognize
Red China now, and I would not agree to admitting it to the United
Nations.” In his book Six Crises, he said that “admitting Red China to
the United Nations would be a mockery of the provision of the Charter
which limits its membership to ‘peace-loving nations.’ And what was
most disturbing, was that it would give respectability to the
Communist regime which would immediately increase its power and
prestige in Asia, and probably irreparably weaken the non-Communist
governments in that area.” Yet it was Nixon who opened the dialogue
with China, and in 1971, Communist China was seated as a member
country of the United Nations, while the Republic of China (Taiwan)
was thrown out. With the visits to China by Nixon and Kissinger in
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