FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
“The first stage would significantly reduce the capabilities of
nations to wage war by reducing the armed forced of the
nations ... nuclear capabilities would be reduced by treaties ...
and UN peace-keeping powers would be strengthened ... The
second stage would provide further substantial reductions in the
armed forces and the establishment of a permanent international
peace force within the United Nations ... The third stage would
have the nations retaining only those forces required for
maintaining internal order, but the United States would provide
manpower for the United Nations Peace Force.”
The plan called for “all weapons of mass destruction” to be eliminated,
except for “those required for a United Nations Peace Force” (page 12,
1st^ paragraph); and (on page 16, 8th paragraph) to “keep the peace, all
states will reaffirm their obligations under the UN Charter to refrain
from the threat of use of any type armed force.” I’m sure that this
includes the disarming of American citizens. Sarah Brady, one of the
leading proponents in this country against handguns, said: “Our task
of creating a socialist America can only succeed when those who
would resist us have been totally disarmed.” Sen. Joseph S. Clark of
Pennsylvania said during a March 1, 1962 debate on the Senate floor,
that the program is “the fixed, determined, and approved policy of the
government of the United States.” The Program was later revised in
The Blueprint for the Peace Race, which said on page 33: “...the
Parties to the Treaty would progressively strengthen the United
Nations Police Force ... until it had sufficient armed forces and
armaments so that no state could challenge it.” The Program was
again revised by the present Outline of Basic Provisions of a Treaty on
General and Complete Disarmament in a Peaceful World.
In 1961, during the Kennedy administration, Robert McNamara,
McGeorge Bundy and Dean Rusk (all CFR members), initiated a secret
study to study the direct and indirect ramifications of war, and how
they could control the economy during peace-time. They wanted to
know what situations the United States would be exposed to in the
world if it moved from a period of war to a time of permanent peace, or
as the Report said, “to consider the problems involved in the
contingency of a transition to a general condition of peace, and to
recommend procedures for dealing with this contingency.”
Conceivably, it would look for ways to slowly move this country into