FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
prominent Europeans from 16 countries called for the establishment of
a United Europe. Dr. Joseph Retinger, who had helped organized the
meeting at the Hague, came to the United States in July, 1948, along
with Winston Churchill, Duncan Sandys, and former Belgian Prime
Minister Paul-Henri Spaak, to raise money for the movement. This led
to the establishment of the American Committee on a United Europe
(ACUE) on March 29, 1949. Their first Chairman was William Donovan,
the first Director of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS, the
forerunner of the CIA); the Vice-Chairman was Allen Dulles, who later
became the Director of the CIA; and the Secretary was George S.
Franklin, who was a Director in the Council on Foreign Relations, and
later a coordinator with the Trilateral Commission.
Lord James Edward Salisbury, the conservative British statesman,
said: “Federation is the only hope of the world.” The historic address
on June 5, 1947, by Gen. George C. Marshall, the Secretary of State,
which made proposals for European aid known as the Marshall Plan,
also called for the unification of Europe.
On March 17, 1948, a 50 year treaty was signed for “collaboration in
economic, social, and cultural matters and for collective self defense,”
in Brussels, by England, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, and
Luxembourg. In 1950, its functions were transferred to NATO, and in
May, 1955, a military alliance, known as the Council of Western
European Union was established, made up of the foreign ministers
from Belgium, France, West Germany, Italy, the Netherlands,
Luxembourg, and England, who met every three months. There was
also a Western European Union Assembly made up of delegates to the
Consultive Assembly of the Council of Europe in Paris.
The Western European Coalition began on June 8, 1948, with the
signing of the Benelux Agreement by Luxembourg, Belgium, and the
Netherlands, to unite their economic and domestic policies.
On May 5, 1949, Foreign Ministers from ten European countries signed
a Treaty in London, for the purpose of working for “greater European
unity, to improve the conditions of life and principle human value in
Europe and to uphold the principles of parliamentary democracy, the
rule of law and human rights.” The Treaty sought to promote unity,
both socially and economically, among its first members were: