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Found: 433 articles, showing 230 - 240
...THE NAMELESS WAR - Appendix 6...

... German White Book on the Last Phase of the German-Polish Crisis Archibald Maule Ramsay The Nameless War From the: GERMAN WHITE BOOK DOCUMENTS Concerning the Last Phase of the German-Polish Crisis GERMAN LIBRARY OF INFORMATION NEW YORK Note on the German White Book (pp 3-6) The German White Book, presented herewith, is a collection of official documents and speeches, not a collection of...

...! Great Britain naturally attempts to becloud this fact. Official British statements on the outbreak of the war place great emphasis on the allegation that England did not give a formal "guaranty" to Poland until March 31, 193, whereas the German demand on Poland, which Poland rejected, was made on march 21st. Britain contends that the British "guaranty" was merely the consequence of the German demand...

..., culminating in threats of war, Chancellor Hitler made one more desperate attempt to prevent the conflict. He called for a Polish plenipotentiary to discuss the solution presented in Document 15 of the German White book. This solution envisaged the return of Danzig to the Reich, the protection of Polish and German minorities, a plebiscite in the Corridor under neutral auspices, safeguarding, irrespective of...

... respective Governments would fulfill their obligations to Poland without further delay (Documents 18 and 19). 11). In order to banish the menace of war, which had come dangerously close in consequence of these two notes, the Duce made a proposal for an armistice and a subsequent conference for the settlement of the German-Polish conflict (Document 20). The Germans and the French Government replied in the...

..., in the event of a refusal, declared themselves to be at war with Germany after this time limit had expired (Document 23). The British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs on September 3rd, 1939, at 11:15 a. m. delivered a note to the German Charge d'Affairs in London in which he informed him that a state of war existed between the two countries as from 11 a. m. on September 3rd (Document 24). On...

... the same day, at 11:30 a. m. the Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs handed to the British Ambassador in Berlin a memorandum from the Reich Government in which the Reich rejected the demands expressed by the British Government in the form of an ultimatum and in which it was proved that the responsibility for the outbreak of war rested solely with the British Government (Document 25). On the afternoon...

... Minister for Foreign Affairs could only regret this fact. Germany had always sought understanding with France. Should the French Government, despite this fact adopt a hostile attitude towards Germany on account of their obligations towards Poland, the German people would regard this as a totally unjustifiable aggressive war on the part of France against the Reich. The French Ambassador replied that he...

...THE NAMELESS WAR...
...THE NAMELESS WAR - Appendix 4...

... Copy of leaflet designed by the Author after the Munich Agreement Copy of leaflet designed by the Author after the Munich Agreement Archibald Maule Ramsay The Nameless War Are You Aware that . . . MR. CHAMBERLAIN was Burnt in Effigy in Moscow   as soon as it was known that he had secured Peace, show- ing very clearly WHO WANTED WAR and who are still working ceaselessly to stir up strife all...

...THE NAMELESS WAR...
...THE NAMELESS WAR - Regulation 18b...

... Regulation 18B Regulation 18B Archibald Maule Ramsay The Nameless War On the 23rd May, 1940, within the first fortnight of Mr Churchill's Premiership, many hundreds of British subjects, a large proportion of them ex-Servicemen, were suddenly arrested and thrown into prison under Regulation 18B. For some days the entire press had been conducting a whirlwind campaign, in rising crescendo, against...

...: As you read this, consider the lies about alleged weapons of mass distruction stockpiled by Saddam Hussein (pdf format), to justify the massacre in Iraq. There were none or they would have been used, yes? And remember G.W. Bush's comment early on, when he was declaring "war on terror":  "If you aren't for us, you are against us". So those against the neverending war are suspected and accused of...

...] Though the I.R.A. were pleaded as an excuse to the House for a Regulation, hardly any of their members were ever arrested under it; but in due course it was employed to arrest and hold for 4 or 5 years, uncharged, very many hundreds of British subjects, whose one common denominator was that they opposed the Jewish power over this country in general; and its exertion to thrust her into a war in purely...

...THE NAMELESS WAR...
...) Tobias da Magdeburg and cruel ritual murder of Little Simon of Trent Policy of refusing to grant permanent residence to Jews Italian and German Jews Prohibition to priests to proselytize among Jewish children The immediate removal from the city of so-called "Jews turned Christian" Italian Jews are pushed away by German Jews - Ashkenazi A classic ritualistic code, Arba'a Turim is printed "Rothschild...

... Majesty invested the Bishop of Trent with a thousand temporal solemnities and celebrations" [5]. But Hinderbach was not the only person to have undertaken the uncomfortable journey from Trent to Venice during the German Emperor’s distinguished presence in the city. Tobias da Magdeburg and cruel ritual murder of Little Simon of Trent Tobias da Magdeburg was an obscure Jewish herb alchemist who...

..., after traveling down from his native Saxony and finding exile among the mountains of the region of Trent, practiced the art of medicine and surgery with some success, at least on the local market. A few years later, he was to meet Hinderbach under much unhappier circumstances, under indictment for participation in the cruel ritual murder of Little Simon and admitting his guilt, he was to meet a cruel...

... the first Venetian-Turkish War [24]. It is possible that, in 1468, on the eve of Friedrich’s imperial visit to Venice, Mavrogonato may have accompanied a vessel, loaded with goods owned by himself, from Candia to the Venetian landing place. In June of 1465, a decree signed by the Council of Ten officially admitted that Mavrogonato had been sent to the capital of the Great Turk to spy on the...

... accused of little Simon’s martyrdom had ended with the condemnation and execution of the principal defendants, who were burnt at the stake or decapitated in June of 1475. Other defendants, including the women of the small community, were waiting to learn their final fate, after which the trial proceedings were suspended in April by order of Sigismundo IV, Count of Tyrol, and were then newly...

... raffinatissime che conducono l'inquisito in punto di morte" ["with exceedingly refined methods of torture which practically kill the person under investigation"], but he nonetheless considers it a document rich in details of indubitable truthfulness. [7] "Tempore quo Serenissimus Imperator erat Venetiis, modo possunt esse VI vel VII anni, ipse Thobias reperit se Venetiis [...] et dicit quod tunc erat ibi magna...

...] In 1476, as shall see below, Manno offered to pay an assassin to kill the bishop of Trent, offering him a sum which would have had to be paid to him in part out of the bank in Venice. Cfr. Divina, Storia del beato Simone da Trento, cit., vol. II, p. 167. [68] "Dum ipse Presbyter Paulus esset Papiae, Man Judaeus ibi habibator dedid sibi Presbytero Paulo certas litteras, quas deferre debebat Venetias...
... tendencies and influences, which, if they are not checked, mean the destruction of a moral society. The persecution of the Jew to which Disraeli refers is that of the Spanish Inquisition, which rested on religious grounds. Tracing the Sidonia family through a troubled period of European history, our Jewish author notes: “During the disorders of the Peninsular War * * * a cadet of the...

...; “Sidonia had foreseen in Spain that, after the exhaustion of a war of twenty-five years, Europe must require capital to carry on peace. He reaped the due reward of his sagacity. Europe did require money and Sidonia was ready to lend it to Europe. France wanted some; Austria more: Prussia a little; Russia a few millions. Sidonia could furnish them all. The only country which he avoided was Spain...

... * * *” (p. 213.) Here the prime minister of Great Britain, from the wealth of his traditions as a Jew and the height of his observation as prime minister, describes the method of the Jew in peace and war, exactly as others have tried to describe it. He puts forward the same set of facts as others put forth, but he does it apparently for the Jews’ glorification, while others do it...

... to enable the people to see what goes on behind the scenes in war and peace. Sidonia was ready to lend money to the nations. But where did he get it, in order to lend it? He got it from the nations when they were at war! It was the same money; the financiers of war and the financiers of peace are the same, and they are The International Jews, as Benjamin Disraeli’s book for the glorification...

...;If we are so powerful, why do we suffer in the disorder of the world?” The disorder is always a step to a new degree of Jewish power. Jews suffer willingly for that. But even so, they do not suffer as the non-Jews do. The Soviets permit relief to enter Russia for the Jews. In Poland, the “starving war-sufferers” are able to glut all available ships in taking high-priced passage to...

... interpose when affairs of state were on the carpet. Otherwise I never interfere. I hear of peace and war in newspapers, but I am never alarmed, except when I am informed that the Sovereigns want treasure; then I know that monarchs are serious.” It will be remembered that Sidonia held no governmental position. The time had not come for that. Power was exercised behind the scenes long before the...
... one of the most power and actual causes of the universal anti-Semite movement." (Le Probläme Judic, (1921), Georges Batault). 262 "A bestial tyranny establishes itself over the peoples weakened by the war. The flood-tide carries away, in its endless billings, cities, nations, and parts of continents. Underground it breaks forth through burst sewers, invading houses, ascending the marble...

... order coming out of the collapse of the U.S.-Soviet antagonisms." (Brent Scowcroft (August 1990), quoted in the Washington Post (May 1991)). 272 "We can see beyond the present shadows of war in the Middle East to a new world order where the strong work together to deter and stop aggression. This was precisely Franklin Roosevelt's and Winston Churchill's vision for peace for the post-war period...

... of the war in the Persian Gulf, press for a comprehensive Middle East settlement and for a 'new world order' based not on Pax Americana but on peace through law with a stronger U.N. and World Court." (George McGovern, in the New York Times (February 1991)). 276 "... it's Bush's baby, even if he shares its popularization with Gorbachev. Forget the Hitler 'new order' root; F.D.R. used the phrase...

... difference that now it is driven underground, which aggravates the malady." (The Patriot). 290 "It is quite evident that the key of the solution of this hoary problem lies in finding ways how to overcome the obstacles of the formidable, both numerically and energetically, revolutionary section of Jewry." (The Patriot). 291 "World War II was fought for the abolition of racial exclusiveness, equality of...

..., 1942, on the 25th anniversary of the October Revolution; War! War! War!, Cincinnatus, Foreword by Eustace Mullins) 292 "I found so many Jews and speculators here trading in cotton, and sessionists had become so open in refusing anything but gold, that I have felt myself bound to stop it. The gold can have but one use - the purchase of arms and ammunition... Of course, I have respected all permits by...

... act as agents for someone else, who will be at a military post with a Treasury permit to receive cotton and pay for it in Treasury notes which the Jew will buy up at an agreed rate in gold." (Grant, addressed the Assistant Secretary of War, C.P. Wolcott, December 17, 1862, from the Headquarters of the Thirteenth Army Corps at Oxford, Mississippi). 295 "The Jews, as a class violating every regulation...
... 1.1 The Balfour Declaration 1.1 The Balfour Declaration Leslie Fry Waters Flowing Eastward The world war had entered its fourth year in the latter part of 1917, with no indication of a rapid settlement in sight. The complexity and variety of events, increasing with the years, had emphasized its universal character. Every country engaged—whether America, Germany, Russia, Greece, France, Italy, or...

... in sufficient numbers to be of real military value. The scale on which the war was waged made all usual methods of reaching a settlement out of the question: no outside Power could be invoked as mediator; the Pope had issued a peace proposal on August 1, but the allies regarded it as inspired by Germany and turned a deaf ear. Allied statesmen had cast about for some principle on which an honourable...

... peace could be proposed, if a crushing defeat could not be inflicted on the enemy. The principle of nationalities, viz., the right of small nations to form their own government, had been advanced, and had met with general acceptance. Thus America's object in entering the war, according to President Wilson, was "to deliver the peoples of the world from autocracy," "to make the world safe for...

... England in 1915. The Balfour declaration was a direct violation of this promise. But for every miracle there are unbelievers! More than a decade has passed, and, looking back, one is inclined to ask a few questions: Why was it that the British cabinet with a war on its hands resolved to set aside a national home for the Jews ? Had the cabinet proposed a home in the Near East to the Armenians first, and...
... immediate vicinity. The Germans had already effectively exploited the same principle in magnetic mines and torpedoes, so causing the Allied fleets serious losses in the early days of the war. In the case of a rocket the problem was complicated by the much greater velocity both of the missile and of its target, by the smaller dimensions of the target, and by the fact that an aeroplane is constructed mainly...

... current problems. During the war he had worked in the research laboratories of several important electro-technical firms concerned with telemechanics and television. He had been working on his invention for a number of years, but the plans had only begun to take practical shape towards the end of the war, by which time the German military authorities were no longer interested in such things. He began to...

... students... do you remember Volodia?" He mentioned the name of a mutual friend who had graduated from the Naval Academy shortly before the war broke out. "He used to talk to me openly. But you were always silent. And all the time it went on like that. I joined the Young Communists. You didn't. Now I'm in the Party. You're not. I'm a major in the State Security Service, and at the same time I'm a bigger...

... in the S. E. D. on our recommendation. "Ah, here's a case of love in the service of the State," he remarked as he opened another file. "Baroness von... Since 1928 has been running a matrimonial agency for higher society and has simultaneously owned brothels. A Gestapo agent since 1936. Registered with us since July 1945. Has two sons prisoners of war in the U. S. S. R. The head of the prisoner of...

... war camp has been ordered not to release them without the special instructions of the M. V. D. Are you interested in pretty girls? Look!" He handed a portfolio and a card index across the desk. On the portfolio cover was a series of numbers and pseudonyms; they corresponded with similar references in the card index, which contained personal details. At the top of the portfolio was the photograph of...

... approach every single case individually. And in addition almost every one of these women has a relative in our hands. Our system is the cheapest in the world." "You must have seen men condemned to death," I remarked. 'Tell me, have you often met men who died believing in the truth of what they were dying for?" At the beginning of the war I often saw S. S. men about to be shot," he said thoughtfully...

... wiped the blood on the edge of the desk. "Listen, Kaliuzhny..." the captain said in a pleasant tone. "I'm terribly sorry you're so pigheaded. You were a model citizen of the Soviet Union, the son of a worker, a worker yourself. A hero of the patriotic war. Then you go and make one mistake...." "That was no mistake!" The words came hoarsely from the other side of the desk. "We know how to value your...

... against you!' All through the war he was with us, from the very first to the very last day. He was wounded several times, decorated several times. He was to be demobilized after the war, but he voluntarily signed on for longer service. And then, a month ago, he was arrested for anti-Soviet propaganda in the army. His arrest was the last straw. He tore his shirt at his breast and shouted: 'Yes, I'm...

... against you!' " "How do you explain his change?" "Not long before he had had leave in Russia. He went home - and found the place deserted. His old mother had been sent to Siberia for collaboration with the Germans. To avoid starving, during the war she had washed crockery for them. And in 1942 they send his young brother to work in Germany; after the lad's repatriation he was condemned to ten years in...

... the clear evidence that every man is an enemy," he continued in a monotonous tone. "Outwardly he was an exemplary Soviet man. One of the sort that during the war died with the shout 'Long live Stalin!' on their lips. But when you go deeper... " "So you regard him as an ideological enemy?" I asked. "He hasn't any idea yet," Major Kovtun answered. "But he's already come to the point of saying 'no' to...

... you to read it," he answered. "It's the only German book about the Soviet Union that every German ought to read. I personally find it particularly interesting because she spent four years in prison; she was held for interrogation by the M. V. D." Later I did read the book. The writer, Irene Kordes, was living with her husband in Moscow before the war. During the Yezhovshchina period (The period of...

... a brilliant future seemed to turn a little dim. He handed her a pen. She signed. Thus she achieved her desire for a brilliant life. And thus the N. K. V. D. added one more to its list of agents. Before long, without interrupting her studies at the Institute, Lisa was transformed into a model siren. During the war there were no Germans in the true sense of the words living in Moscow. So she was...

... end of 1945 all the Russian women who had been brought to Germany during the war and had later been employed by the Soviet authorities to fill subordinate positions were sent back home. To everybody's astonishment Dusia remained behind. People assumed that she owed this to the general's protection. But when the general returned to Moscow while Dusia still remained in Karlshorst it was assumed that...
... opportunity to purge their crime against the Fatherland with their blood. Let them fight! There would be time to deal with them properly after the war! Those who survived the ordeal by fire were usually sent straight from hospital-freedom from a storming battalion was gained only at the price of blood-to the K. U. K. S. for final retraining. A number of my comrades in the K. U. K. S. had paybooks which...

... occupied areas. The majority of my K. U. K. S. comrades were men almost literally from the other world. One youngster had fled right across Europe from a German prisoner-of-war camp in France. When he reached the Russian area under German occupation he was captured a second time, put into a concentration camp, and then escaped again. Twice he had been set up against a wall and had fallen seriously...

.... And that is the case wherever war is waged. But now we felt grateful to our Allies, not only for their mountains of canned foods, soldiers' greatcoats, and even buttons, but for the blood they were shedding in the common cause. An iron grip had closed round Germany's throat. Even though life was hard, though hungry women and children held out their hands, begging, at every railway station, despite...

... cheerful song. ..." All the songs of the pre-war period, about the 'Leader', the 'proletariat', and similar eyewash, had been swept out of the army as though by the mighty incantation of a magician. Instead, the genuine Russian marching songs conquered the soldiers' hearts. Even quite unmusical fellows bawled them out, simply because they were now again allowed to sing about neighing steeds, old mothers...

... by quite insignificant tests in philosophy and dialectical materialism, in general and military history, the Russian language, and economic geography. All this procedure left me pretty indifferent. There was no knowing when the war would end, but one thing was certain: it had already passed its critical phase and was coming to its close. My one idea was to get out of uniform as soon as possible...

... after it was over. Against that, this educational establishment might prolong my time of service in the army, if not extend it into eternity. For the majority of the youth, this school was a means of learning a profession, which would enable them to earn their living after the war. I was less interested in that aspect. But the army was the army; here orders were supreme, and one could only obey them...

.... It was a fierily hot summer. Entire caravans of barges laden with timber were being hauled along the River Moskva. All through the war Moscow had been heated exclusively with wood, even the locomotives were burning wood instead of coal. The city was uncommonly still and peaceful. The only variety was provided by the patrols of the town command, which checked your papers at every step. They treated...

... life. And now, during my aimless wanderings around the battlemented walls of the Kremlin, I felt only a vague yearning and an empty void. Just one thing seemed to be clear: the war must be brought to an end. For so long as this war lasted there would be room neither for private life nor for personal interests. After I had passed the questionnaires and the tests I was summoned to the head of the...

... Pedagogical Department at that? Didn't you like being an engineer?" The colonel was well posted in all the subtleties of the changes of interests and professions which so frequently occur in present-day Soviet society. Owing to the comparative ease with which one could get higher technical education in pre-war days, the students at the technical high schools included quite a large percentage who were...

... grouped round the Kremlin in concentric rings. It was said that Stalin often went up one of the Kremlin belfries to enjoy the sight. Our Military-Diplomatic College had been founded in the war years, when changed international relations necessitated the extension of military-diplomatic ties with countries abroad. By the repeated changes in the college curriculum it was possible to trace the course of...

... had particularly distinguished themselves in the war, and celebrities generally were the exception to this rule. All the college knew the young Tadjik girl named Mamlakat. During the 'thirties her picture had been distributed all over the Soviet Union. In distant Tadjikistan the little Mamlakat had achieved a record in cotton picking. About that time a conference of Stakhanovite workers on...

... Moscow-Gorky main road, and gave them orders to shoot at sight anybody who tried to flee without an evacuation pass. This order was published only after the Narcomvnudel forces had been posted, and the result was hecatombs of Jewish bodies on both sides of the Moscow high road. During the war years the unity of the peoples of the Soviet Union was put to a severe test. The national minorities had not...

... justified the Kremlin's hopes. In the army a new, incomprehensible insult came into use: 'Yaldash'. In the language of the Asia Minor peoples the word means 'Comrade'. Introduced to them during the revolutionary period as an official form of address, it was now transformed into a term of contempt. Another Asiatic word, which enriched the Soviet army vocabulary during the war, was 'Belmeydy'. In the early...

..., but during the war they had had an opportunity to view events from the national aspect, and they appreciated even their enemies' fight for national freedom. "They hold on, the devils!" they frequently remarked with more respect than anger in their tones. Some months after the war had begun, during the construction of the second ring of landing grounds around the city of Gorky, I came across...
... dissension today. And yet no one ever thought of charging the Ten Tribes of Israel with "anti-Semitism." Zionism is challenging the attention of the world today because it is creating a situation out of which many believe the next war will come. To adopt a phraseology familiar to students of prophecy, it is believed by many students of world affairs that Armageddon will be the direct result of...

... evidenced by public utterances made in Russia after the Revolution in which the Kehillah is extolled. At the time the war was declared in 1914, the Inner Actions Committee was spread about in various countries. For example: Dr. Schmarya Levin, of Berlin, was in the United States and remained here. He was Russian rabbi, German scholar, and cosmopolitan. Although his headquarters were Berlin, he remained in...

... usefulness to the Zionists by transmitting information and funds." (Guide to Zionism, page 80.) In fact, the entire Inner Actions Committee, with headquarters at Berlin, moved freely through a war-locked world, the only exceptions being Warburg and Hantke — and there was no need for the Berlin Warburg to move about, for there were others who represented him. Dr. Levin gave his sanction for the...

... shifting of the center of Jewish gravity from Berlin to America, and "as early as August 30, 1914, a month after the outbreak of war, an extraordinary conference of American Zionists was called in New York." What this change of seat meant, has formed the subject of much discussion. In 1914 the Jews apparently knew more about the probable duration of the war than did the principals. It was not...

... have arisen among the leaders over money — it is the war of "interest" against "capital" — but also because of the light it throws on the two great armies of Jews in the world, the way in which they use their power where they can, and the trouble that always embroils the nations which become Jewish tools. People sometimes ask why Jewry, which is capitalistic, should...

... as will fill the world with indignation once the world fully understands what is being done. And that it is done with the knowledge and approval of the Zionist Commissioner is indicated by the fact that he suspended the activities of the British officer who endeavored to stop the abuse. It was the old game of lending money at an exorbitant rate of interest to people hard pressed by war and crop...

... 2,000 years. There are in Palestine 500,000 Moslems, 105,000 Christians and 65,000 Jews. The industry of the land is agriculture. Engaged in this are 69 per cent of the Moslems, 46 per cent of the Christians and 19 per cent of the Jews. Neither numerically nor industrially have they held the land. Yet, as the result of a war bargain, it is handed over to them as regardless of the native inhabitants as...

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