FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
with England’s. On October 23, 1954, it was replaced with the Western
European Union, who merged their armies into a multi-national armed
force.
Jean Monnet said: “As long as Europe remains divided, it is no match
for the Soviet Union. Europe must unite.” He established a pressure
group in 1955 called the Action Committee for the United States of
Europe. He also said: “Once a Common Market interest has been
created, then political union will come naturally.”
On March 25, 1957, the European Atomic Energy Community
(EURATOM) and the European Economic Community (EEC) was
established with a 378-page Declaration of Intent, called the Treaty of
Rome, to facilitate the removal of barriers, so trade could be
accomplished among member nations; eventual coordination of
transportation systems, agricultural and economic policies; the
removal of all measures restricting free competition; and the
assurance of the mobility of labor, capital, and entrepreneurship. The
partnership began with six countries: France, West Germany, Italy,
Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. George McGhee, the
former U.S. ambassador to West Germany, said that “the Treaty of
Rome, which brought the Common Market into being, was nurtured at
the Bilderberg meetings.” In 1967, the ECSC, EURATOM, and EEC were
brought together into a single group that was known as the European
Community.
In 1973, Henry Kissinger, Nixon’s Secretary of State (known to favor
one-world government) urged the Common Market to include four
more nations: Norway, United Kingdom, Denmark, and Ireland. Norway
eventually backed out, but on May 28, 1979, in Athens, Greece became
the tenth nation to join the Common Market. When they officially
became a member in January, 1981, Europe was as unified as it was in
814, when Charlemagne, founder of the Roman Empire, died.
A French foreign minister said: “The Europe of the future, when it
finally unites politically as well as economically, will be the mightiest
force on earth.” Walter Hallstein said: “Make no mistake about it, we
are not in business, we are in politics. We are building the United
States of Europe.” Time magazine wrote: “If the Europe of tomorrow
could muster the political will, it could become a co-equal of the other