FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
While campaigning for the Presidency, Bill Clinton said: “My vision is
that we would become an instrument working as much as possible
through the United Nations for freedom and democracy and human
rights and global economic growth.” In a speech to the World Affairs
Council in Los Angeles, Clinton called for a permanent UN “rapid
deployment force.” Richard Gardner, a Clinton advisor on the UN, and
a professor of international law, has outlined a plan for a world army of
30,000 men. The five member nations of the Security Council would
provide 2,000 men, and 30 other nations would add up to 750 each.
This would create a military force that the Security Council could
deploy within 48 hours to maintain the peace.
In a February 1, 1992 speech to the UN General Assembly, President
George Bush said: “It is the sacred principles enshrined in the United
Nations charter to which the American people will henceforth pledge
their allegiance.”
In 1993, the UN became financially stretched to the limit, because of all
the peace-keeping operations throughout the world (numbering about
70,000, they pay each country $988 per soldier every month, and more
for specialized troops), which forced it to cutback on travel, meetings,
and the use of consultants. While the U.S. is still paying about 25% of
its annual budget of over $1 billion, and about 30% of all peace-
keeping costs, a move was on to force member nations to contribute a
portion of their defense budgets to the UN. According to the January
16, 1996 Washington Times it was announced that “Secretary General
Boutros Boutros-Ghali ... urged the (UN) to consider imposing its own
taxes to become less dependent on the United States...”
We can expect one of two things to happen in the future. Either the UN
will steadily grow in power, until it evolves into a one-world
government; or if perceptions continue that it has not lived up to
expectations, it could be disbanded (perhaps if the United States
would drop out), and replaced by an already burgeoning alliance, such
as the WCPA. Walter Hoffman, the executive Vice President of the
World Federalist Association, wrote in a letter to a national news
magazine, that we need “a new, more effective UN, one that will have
the power to stop wars and arbitrate disputes between national
groups.” It seems likely, that the strength of our economy may
determine how soon our country agrees to become part of a one world