It's Not About Iran
Real Crash- Looking at the Financial System and the War Drive:
It's not about Iran. The British Financial Empire instinctively goes to war, and seeks a world war, when their financial power is ending. They are told that such a war would be nuclear. They know that they have no adequate way to stop Russian and even Chinese missiles from hitting the United States. Yet, they keep playing their game, until we put these bastards into bankruptcy. As long as Obama is still not impeached or thrown out, every day we are in peril of total war. Israel could trigger it, but something weird could trigger the war too. Something about Argentina vs. the British Falkland islands, or North Korea, or the South China Sea, or the US missile deploymet in Eastern Europe. Anything.
Both Russian and Chinese leaders are keenly aware of the danger of a thermonuclear war, triggered by an Israeli attack on Iran, or other provocations aimed at pitting the United States against the Eurasian superpowers. While Russian-Chinese relations have their own long history of friction, the two nations have reached a consensus that the war danger must be defeated, and have signaled, in a series of public statements and actions, that they are aware of the threats, and will work towards a common war-avoidance effort.
On Dec. 26, in one indicative action, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin held a televised meeting with Dmitri Rogozin, until recently the Russian Ambassador to NATO. Rogozin was recently named deputy prime minister in charge of the defense sector, the nuclear power sector, and the space program. In the meeting, Rogozin pledged to lead a rapid "rebirth of the defense industry," with "one of the most important aspects being, in effect, a new industrialization of the defense industry, which should function as a locomotive to pull the entire Russian economy."
A month before his promotion to deputy prime minister, Rogozin had visited the restricted city of Krasnoznamensk to deliver an address before the Aerospace Forces, in which he clearly spelled out the war danger emanating from NATO's pursuit of a missile defense shield in Europe, minus the earlier cooperation with Moscow on a joint defense shield.
Rogozin warned that "NATO continues to live by the principles set down by NATO Secretary-General Lord Ismay [1952-57]: 'To keep the Russians out, the Americans in, and the Germans down'.... They understand that the Germans may always develop into a force that will consolidate Europe around itself."
Zeroing in on the recent agreement reached between the U.S. and Romania, where an important component of the anti-missile system will be installed on Russia's southeastern tier, Rogozin told the Aerospace Forces assembled, "We have scrutinized the agreement the Americans have signed with the Romanians. The Romanians may think they are important interception missile operators, but even the base commander, a Romanian serviceman, has the right to enter only the lobby." Rogozin warned that the Europeans have become "hostages and targets of a retaliatory attack."
Both Russian and Chinese leaders are keenly aware of the danger of a thermonuclear war, triggered by an Israeli attack on Iran, or other provocations aimed at pitting the United States against the Eurasian superpowers. While Russian-Chinese relations have their own long history of friction, the two nations have reached a consensus that the war danger must be defeated, and have signaled, in a series of public statements and actions, that they are aware of the threats, and will work towards a common war-avoidance effort.
On Dec. 26, in one indicative action, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin held a televised meeting with Dmitri Rogozin, until recently the Russian Ambassador to NATO. Rogozin was recently named deputy prime minister in charge of the defense sector, the nuclear power sector, and the space program. In the meeting, Rogozin pledged to lead a rapid "rebirth of the defense industry," with "one of the most important aspects being, in effect, a new industrialization of the defense industry, which should function as a locomotive to pull the entire Russian economy."
A month before his promotion to deputy prime minister, Rogozin had visited the restricted city of Krasnoznamensk to deliver an address before the Aerospace Forces, in which he clearly spelled out the war danger emanating from NATO's pursuit of a missile defense shield in Europe, minus the earlier cooperation with Moscow on a joint defense shield.
Rogozin warned that "NATO continues to live by the principles set down by NATO Secretary-General Lord Ismay [1952-57]: 'To keep the Russians out, the Americans in, and the Germans down'.... They understand that the Germans may always develop into a force that will consolidate Europe around itself."
Zeroing in on the recent agreement reached between the U.S. and Romania, where an important component of the anti-missile system will be installed on Russia's southeastern tier, Rogozin told the Aerospace Forces assembled, "We have scrutinized the agreement the Americans have signed with the Romanians. The Romanians may think they are important interception missile operators, but even the base commander, a Romanian serviceman, has the right to enter only the lobby." Rogozin warned that the Europeans have become "hostages and targets of a retaliatory attack."









