FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
axis powers, gave momentum to the movement by issuing the
“Declaration of the Twenty-Six United Nations” on January 1, 1942. In
February, 1942, the State Department’s Advisory Committee on Post-
War Foreign Policy secretly worked out more details. One of their
reports said: “Its discussions throughout were founded upon belief in
the unqualified victory by the United Nations. It predicted, as an
absolute prerequisite for world peace, the continuing strength of the
United Nations through unbroken cooperation after the war.”
In 1942, Free World, a periodical published by the International Free
World Association (organized in 1941), they stated that their objective
was to create the “machinery for a world government in which the
United Nations will serve as a nucleus ... in order to prepare in time the
foundations for a future world order.”
Leading diplomats from the United States, Russia, England, and China,
attended preliminary meetings in October, 1943, at a conference in
Moscow. In November, Cordell Hull “secured the consent of Stalin to
establish a general organization ... for the maintenance of international
peace and security,” and in proposing it to Roosevelt, made it appear
as though it was an American project. Among the leading U.S. figures
who were involved in the planning of the United Nations: Alger Hiss,
Harry Dexter White, Virginius Frank Coe, Noel Field, Laurance Duggan,
Henry Julian Wadleigh, John Carter Vincent, David Weintraub, Nathan
Gregory Silvermaster, Harold Glasser, Victor Perlo, Irving Kaplan,
Solomon Adler, Abraham George Silverman, William L. Ullman, William
H. Taylor, and Dean Acheson. All of these men, were either
communists, or had pro-communist sympathies.
The idea for the United Nations was officially proposed in 1944, at the
secret Dumbarton Oaks Conference, where the framework was
developed, and the final plans laid out. The conference was attended
by representatives from the U.S., England, and Russia, and it was all
coordinated by Alger Hiss. Hiss was a Trustee of the Woodrow Wilson
Foundation, a director of the Executive Committee of the American
Association for the United Nations, a director of the American Peace
Society, a Trustee of the World Peace Foundation, a director of the
American Institute of Pacific Relations, and President of the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace. In 1950, he was convicted of
perjury, and sent to prison. Exposed as a Soviet spy, his communist