Showing posts with label Oder-Neisse Line. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oder-Neisse Line. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout 3



Germany: The dispute over Erika Steinbach
By Justus Leicht
9 December 2009

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/dec2009/stei-d09.shtml

Since taking office, the new German government has been involved in a conflict over the filling of one particular post. The roots of the controversy can be traced back to decades-old political and historical issues. It concerns the membership of the supervisory board of the government foundation, “Flight, Expulsion, Reconciliation,” or, more precisely, the appointment of Erika Steinbach, president of the Association of Displaced Persons (Bund der Vertriebenen—BdV), onto the board of this otherwise insignificant body.

Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle (FDP—Free Democratic Party), like his predecessor Frank-Walter Steinmeier (SPD—Social Democratic Party), has rejected Steinbach’s appointment to the foundation’s board. He fears a serious conflict with Poland, where Steinbach is seen as the embodiment of “revanchist” German claims. (“Revanchism,” from the French word for revenge, describes the drive by a particular country or social forces within a country to reverse territorial losses, often following defeat or conquest in a war.)

On the other hand, the right wing of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and, above all, its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), are insisting on Steinbach’s appointment. They advocate a more aggressive foreign policy, without regard to the sensitivities of neighbouring countries. Chancellor Angela Merkel (CDU) has so far not taken a clear position.

The fate of approximately 12 million ethnic Germans who were forced to leave Poland, Czechoslovakia and other Eastern European countries, as well as the Soviet Union, at the end of World War II has been misused for political ends for decades. The transfer of the German population from these countries to Germany had been agreed between the Western allies and Stalin, and was carried out with extreme brutality. Millions lost their homes and often all their possessions. Large numbers of people were killed, mistreated or raped.

In this way, Stalin confirmed how far removed the Soviet regime was from the elementary principles of socialism, foremost among which is the international unity of the working class. Ethnic Germans were deported regardless of whether they were workers, capitalists or Junkers (wealthy landowners); whether they had been supporters or opponents of Hitler. The resentment this generated was then exploited for decades by anti-communist forces for their own ends.

Although the displaced were integrated relatively quickly into the economy and society of West Germany in the 1950s and early 1960s (about one quarter remaining in East Germany), influential political circles sought to preserve them as a special interest group. With the aid of various “displaced persons’ associations,” these circles kept alive the demand for the return of Germany’s eastern territories lost in the war and sabotaged all efforts for the recognition of the existing borders.

In the expellees’ associations, formed in the late 1940s and heavily subsidised by the government ever since, Social Democrats and Catholic conservatives could be found alongside old Nazis and revanchists by the end of the 1960s. The SPD and the trade unions sought to foster close collaboration with the associations and took advantage of their anti-communism in the fight against leftist movements in their own ranks.

In 1963, for example, greetings from SPD leaders Willy Brandt, Herbert Wehner, and Erich Ollenhauer sent to a meeting in Germany of those expelled from Silesia—a region of central Europe that historically encompassed parts of Poland, Czechoslovakia and Germany—took on clearly revanchist tones. “Abandonment is a betrayal, who would deny that,” the greetings say about the “lost” territories.

In 1969, when Brandt’s “Ostpolitik” (an effort to improve relations with the Stalinist regimes, including East Germany) meant a change in course by the SPD—and, for all intents and purposes, the official recognition of Germany’s existing eastern borders—the expellees’ associations reacted with bitter opposition. Since then, they have stood on the right wing of the CDU-CSU.

From 1970 to 1994, the BdV was headed by Herbert Czaja, about whom the conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung said the “term revisionism is far too innocuous,” when describing his political positions. Shortly before his death in 1997, Czaja summarised his views in a book, in which he called for the restoration of Germany’s 1937 borders, and added that this was “by no means the end point.”

Erika Steinbach comes from this political tradition. The CDU Bundestag (parliament) deputy was born in 1943 in Rumia (called Rahmel in German), which had been part of Poland prior to the German invasion of 1939. Her father came from Hanau in the German state of Hesse, and, as a soldier in Hitler’s Wehrmacht (army), took part in the invasion of Poland. Her mother moved there from Bremen in Germany. The fact that the daughter of a family that only came to Poland in the wake of the Nazi invasion is now a spokeswoman for the expellees meets with special outrage in Poland.

Steinbach’s family background was first made public only some years ago by Polish journalists. She herself had never discussed it, and sought later to justify it with the cynical phrase, “one doesn’t have to be a whale to speak up for whales.” In Poland, where virtually every family has relatives that were killed, imprisoned or forced into hard labour by the Wehrmacht, it is regarded as relevant whether someone belonged to the indigenous German minority or to the German occupying army.

In 1974, Steinbach joined the CDU in Hesse, which under Alfred Dregger pursued an extremely right-wing agenda. From 1977 to 1990, she represented the CDU in Frankfurt’s city government and has sat in the Bundestag since 1990. She consistently campaigns against abortion and same-sex marriage, and was associated with the right-wing grouping “Voice of the Majority,” formed at the end of 1996, which agitates “against the epidemic abuse of welfare and asylum.”

In 1991, Steinbach voted in parliament against the “Treaty of Good Neighbourship and Friendly Cooperation,” which confirmed the Oder-Neisse line (established after World War II) as the definitive German-Polish border. In 1997, she also rejected the Czech-German Declaration, in which both sides said they would “not burden their relations with past political and legal issues.” To this day, she justifies her earlier voting record with reference to “open questions, such as the compensation issue,” thus deliberately leaving open the question whether she will continue seeking the return of expropriated property. That is the major reason for the massive opposition she encounters in Poland and the Czech Republic.

With her appointment as president of the BdV in 1998, Steinbach gained greater prominence. At that time, openly revanchist positions, such as those expressed by Czaja, were regarded as outmoded. The state borders of Poland and the Czech Republic had also been recognised by Germany under international law. Both countries joined NATO in 1999 and, in 2004, the European Union (EU).

Steinbach tried to block this, too. She spoke out against the EU accession of Poland and the Czech Republic, as long as the demands of the German expellees were not met. In 2002, she said: “There is no need for fighter aircraft. A simple veto against unrepentant candidate-states is sufficient.”

Even now, BdV staff work closely with the “Prussian Trust,” seeking the return to their former German owners of properties that were expropriated after 1945 in Poland. An (unsuccessful) appeal was also submitted to the European Court of Human Rights. Although Steinbach has distanced herself from this case, she has not done so in court actions brought by individual plaintiffs.

Steinbach systematically uses the fate of the expellees to push the government to adopt a more aggressive line against Germany’s eastern neighbours. Although she does not deny the crimes of Nazi Germany, she relativises them by placing the suffering of the expelled Germans on a par with that of the Nazi regime’s victims.

In a 2008 speech, she accused Tito’s partisans, who fought in Yugoslavia against the German occupiers, of having “committed genocide” against Germans.

For years, Steinbach has sought the erection of a memorial to the German expellees, much like those honouring victims of the Holocaust and other war crimes. In the end, the government gave way. To placate Polish and various other reservations, a “Centre Against Expulsions” was agreed, dedicated to all displaced persons of the twentieth century. The initiative for this can be traced back to the period when the SPD-Green Party government of Gerhard Schröder, sent German troops to Yugoslavia under the guise of combating “expulsions” and ethnic cleansing.

So, finally, the “Flight, Expulsion, Reconciliation” foundation was created, with an exhibition and a documentation centre to be built in Berlin. Officially, the purpose of the foundation is to “keep alive the memory of flight and expulsion in the 20th century in a spirit of reconciliation.” According to the words of Culture Minister Bernd Neumann, thus “the fate of millions of displaced persons in Europe and especially the displacement of 14 million Germans are to be commemorated appropriately and with dignity.”

The foundation’s supervisory board includes, in addition to the BdV, the churches, the Jewish community, parliament and the government. The individual organisations nominate their own representatives, but they are subject to approval by the government. It is the nomination of Steinbach for membership of this body around which the current dispute now revolves. The BdV and the right-wing forces that stand behind it are using Steinbach specifically to put the government under pressure.

BdV officials want Steinbach to take one of the three seats in the 13-member board to which their organisation is entitled, but has so far not officially nominated her. In March, Steinbach described the vacancy of “her” seat as a “wonderful sword of Damocles” and left open whether she would be nominated “in three weeks, three months, three years.” This question can always be harnessed for nationalist campaigns, as the need arises.

Thus, during his first visit to Poland, Westerwelle, the new foreign minister, attempted to dampen fears of Germany’s claims and strengthen the country’s pro-EU prime minister, Donald Tusk, against the Polish nationalist opposition, when he declared: “We want it [the “Centre Against Expulsions”] to be a project that will bring our countries together, a contribution to reconciliation. We will refrain from anything that precludes this notion.”

On the other hand, quite different noises can be heard from the BdV. Steinbach’s nomination campaign is meant to send a signal that other countries’ political concerns should not be taken into account in the formulation of policy. “It is the responsibility of the new foreign minister to set a new course here, rather than buying the trust of neighbouring countries through the sacrifices of his own citizens or organisations,” the BdV president told Bild Zeitung.

Other conservative newspapers and politicians from the CDU-CSU similarly declared that Westerwelle should be representing Germany’s interests and not Poland’s. For example, the domestic policy spokesman for the CDU-CSU parliamentary faction, Hans-Peter Uhl (CSU), declared, “Westerwelle must seriously ask himself whether he is foreign minister of Germany or Poland.” This controversy has ominous political overtones.


Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout

Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout 2



German Foreign Minister's Row Puts Merkel in Tough Spot
By MARCUS WALKER

BERLIN -- Guido Westerwelle is making his first mark as Germany's new foreign minister by blocking a controversial appointment by the lobby of Germans expelled from Eastern Europe after World War II -- a move that puts Chancellor Angela Merkel in a bind.

Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Chancellor Angela Merkel and Foreign Minister and Guido Westerwelle meet in Meseberg, north of Berlin.

Mr. Westerwelle, head of Ms. Merkel's governing partner, the Free Democratic Party, vowed to veto an effort by the lobby's leader, Erika Steinbach, to join the board of a planned state museum about the expulsions, saying her appointment would jeopardize reconciliation with Poland.

The foreign minister's stance, part of his effort to boost Germany's ties with Eastern Europe, leaves Ms. Merkel at risk of alienating part of her conservative base.

The chancellor has avoided taking sides in the row, which has revived debate in Germany over what is an extremely delicate subject here. About 12 million ethnic Germans were forced out of Eastern Europe after the war, including from German territories ceded to Poland in 1945. Some 600,000 of the refugees died, many as a result of rape and acts of revenge -- carried out by Soviet soldiers, Poles, Czechs and others -- for the Nazi conquest of the region, historians say.

Germany has struggled for decades to find a way to commemorate the dispossessed Germans' loss without arousing fears, particularly in Poland and the Czech Republic, of a German campaign to reclaim property. Ms. Steinbach has long advocated for a museum.

Ms. Steinbach, a lawmaker in Ms. Merkel's Christian Democratic Union, demanded Thursday that the cabinet clear the way for her appointment by year-end, calling it "a question of freedom" and "a test of democracy."

Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Erika Steinbach addressed a news conference in Frankfurt on Tuesday.

Many Poles fear that Ms. Steinbach and her organization, the Federation of Expellees, want to rewrite history, casting Germans as victims instead of aggressors. Ms. Steinbach says she recognizes the Nazis' crimes, but says those crimes don't justify the collective punishment of German civilians.

Blocking Ms. Steinbach's bid to sit on the board has allowed Mr. Westerwelle to establish himself as a champion of improving Germany's historically fraught relations with its eastern neighbors. But some say he has gone too far. "One has to wonder if Westerwelle has lost sight at times of which country he is supposed to be serving as foreign minister," Germany's conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung said in a front-page editorial this week. The newspaper said Ms. Steinbach has made the expellees' lobby more moderate, and kept its more nationalistic elements in check.

Mr. Westerwelle had little to say about foreign affairs before he took office last month, but since then he has called for building a German-Polish relationship that is as strong as the Franco-German alliance.

"There is a feeling in Eastern Europe that the Germans, who exercise so much care and attention on reconciliation with France, have never bothered to make the same kind of effort with Poles and Czechs," said Jonathan Eyal, director of studies at the Royal United Services Institute, a London foreign-affairs think tank.

Ms. Steinbach voted in parliament against a 1991 treaty to finally recognize Poland's western border with Germany, saying it left open questions of expellees' property. For Mr. Westerwelle, that vote disqualified Ms. Steinbach from sitting on the board that will oversee the museum.

Polish politicians and media protested this year when the German expellees put forward Ms. Steinbach for the museum board. One objection is that she wasn't a part of the former German community in the territory of today's Poland. Rather, she is the daughter of a Luftwaffe sergeant from western Germany who was part of the Third Reich's army of occupation.

"She came with Hitler, and she had to leave with Hitler," Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said earlier this year. Ms. Steinbach retorted that "one doesn't have to be a whale to fight for the whales."

Write to Marcus Walker at marcus.walker@wsj.com

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A5


Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout

Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout 1




Group says to name disputed Merkel ally to museum
BERLIN, Nov 16 (Reuters) - A German lobby group plans to nominate controversial conservative Erika Steinbach to head a new World War Two museum, in a move likely to heighten tensions in Chancellor Angela Merkel's cabinet and alienate Poland.

The vice president of the German League of Expellees told the Augsburger Allgemeine newspaper that the group would name Steinbach, a member of Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU), as its nominee to the board of the museum.

"On Tuesday, we will make use of our right to propose a candidate and naturally we will select Frau Steinbach," Christian Knauer told the paper.

Steinbach is head of the League and the driving force behind the planned "Centre for Expulsions", a museum which will depict the plight of Germans and other groups forced out of eastern Europe after the war.

She has been a hated figure in Poland ever since she voted against recognising Germany's current border with Poland in a symbolic parliamentary vote in 1990.

The Polish government long opposed the museum, which it saw as an attempt to portray Germans as victims of a war they started. Last year it agreed not to stand in the way of the project, but made clear it would not accept a board seat for Steinbach.

Merkel's cabinet, which meets north of Berlin on Tuesday for a two-day session to resolve divisive policy issues, must approve the nomination but is deeply divided.

Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, a member of the Free Democrats (FDP), vowed at the weekend to veto Steinbach's appointment if the League nominated her, saying the move risked damaging Berlin's relations with Warsaw.

However, Steinbach is supported by some CDU officials and by the other party in Merkel's coalition, the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU), who have said that a veto by Westerwelle would seriously damage ties in the new German government.

Merkel has avoided taking sides on the issue, concerned about hurting ties with Poland but also fearful of a backlash from members of her own party.

Poland's borders were shifted west by international treaty after the war and German communities were forced to leave their homes in Poland, Hungary and the former Czechoslovakia.

Earlier this year, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk personally lobbied Merkel to drop Steinbach, saying a role for her on the museum's board would be painful for Poland.

(Writing by Noah Barkin)


Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout

Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout

Over Wlodimir Ledochowski's 'aim' of the counter reformation, resulting in the 'transfer' of millions of primarily Protestant peoples from the lands of pre-1945 Eastern Germany




Wlodimir Ledochowski Counter-Reformation 'Aim' In Art?!


Wlodimir Ledochowski: Mission, Motivation, Geopolitical Chessboard


Wlodimir Ledochowski's Plausible Childhood Inspiration
Wlodimir Ledochowski's Plausible Childhood Revenge Vow To Destroy Prussia

Wlodimir Ledochowski Deranged Polish Roman Catholic Religious War

Wlodimir Ledochowski's Plausible Inspiration: his uncle Mieczyslaw Ledochowski

(imprisioned by Bismarck 1874-1876)


What The New York Times wrote about Mieczyslaw Ledochowski in 1892


Wlodimir Ledochowski's Goal 'Prophesized' by Maximillian Kolbe

Maximilian Kolbe on WW2: "God is Cleansing Poland"

Maximillian Kolbe- more


East Prussia- Europe's 1st Lutheran State (1525)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert,_Duke_of_Prussia

(excerpt)

Albert
(German: Albrecht; Latin: Albertus; 16 May 1490 – 20 March 1568) was the 37th Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights and, after converting to Lutheranism, the first duke of the Duchy of Prussia, which was the first state to adopt the Lutheran faith and Protestantism as the official state religion. Albert proved instrumental in the political spread of Protestantism in its early stage.









Yalta division of Germany, Prussia erased, Austria treated as innocent


Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout 1

Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout 2

Amber Path North: Oder-Neisse Fallout 3

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Wlodimir Ledochowski's Plan Versus Patton

U.S. General George Patton wanted to drive to Berlin and further east, threatening Ledochowski's plan to place eastern Europe under USSR domination with westward shift of Poland and mass wholesale theft of Protestant lands with Oder-Neisse Line

General George S. Patton was assassinated to silence his criticism of allied war leaders claims new book

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/3869117/General-George-S.-Patton-was-assassinated-to-silence-his-criticism-of-allied-war-leaders-claims-new-book.html

George S. Patton, America's greatest combat general of the Second World War, was assassinated after the conflict with the connivance of US leaders, according to a new book.

'We've got a terrible situation with this great patriot, he's out of control and we must save him from himself'. The OSS head General did not trust Patton

The newly unearthed diaries of a colourful assassin for the wartime Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the forerunner of the CIA, reveal that American spy chiefs wanted Patton dead because he was threatening to expose allied collusion with the Russians that cost American lives.

The death of General Patton in December 1945, is one of the enduring mysteries of the war era. Although he had suffered serious injuries in a car crash in Manheim, he was thought to be recovering and was on the verge of flying home.

But after a decade-long investigation, military historian Robert Wilcox claims that OSS head General "Wild Bill" Donovan ordered a highly decorated marksman called Douglas Bazata to silence Patton, who gloried in the nickname "Old Blood and Guts".

His book, "Target Patton", contains interviews with Mr Bazata, who died in 1999, and extracts from his diaries, detailing how he staged the car crash by getting a troop truck to plough into Patton's Cadillac and then shot the general with a low-velocity projectile, which broke his neck while his fellow passengers escaped without a scratch.

Mr Bazata also suggested that when Patton began to recover from his injuries, US officials turned a blind eye as agents of the NKVD, the forerunner of the KGB, poisoned the general.

Mr Wilcox told The Sunday Telegraph that when he spoke to Mr Bazata: "He was struggling with himself, all these killings he had done. He confessed to me that he had caused the accident, that he was ordered to do so by Wild Bill Donovan."

"Donovan told him: 'We've got a terrible situation with this great patriot, he's out of control and we must save him from himself and from ruining everything the allies have done.' I believe Douglas Bazata. He's a sterling guy."

Mr Bazata led an extraordinary life. He was a member of the Jedburghs, the elite unit who parachuted into France to help organize the Resistance in the run up to D-Day in 1944. He earned four purple hearts, a Distinguished Service Cross and the French Croix de Guerre three times over for his efforts.

After the war he became a celebrated artist who enjoyed the patronage of Princess Grace of Monaco and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.

He was friends with Salvador Dali, who painted a portrait of Bazata as Don Quixote.

He ended his career as an aide to President Ronald Reagan's Navy Secretary John Lehman, a member of the 9/11 Commission and adviser to John McCain's presidential campaign.

Mr Wilcox also tracked down and interviewed Stephen Skubik, an officer in the Counter-Intelligence Corps of the US Army, who said he learnt that Patton was on Stalin's death list. Skubik repeatedly alerted Donovan, who simply had him sent back to the US.

"You have two strong witnesses here," Mr Wilcox said. "The evidence is that the Russians finished the job."

The scenario sounds far fetched but Mr Wilcox has assembled a compelling case that US officials had something to hide. At least five documents relating to the car accident have been removed from US archives.

The driver of the truck was whisked away to London before he could be questioned and no autopsy was performed on Patton's body.

With the help of a Cadillac expert from Detroit, Mr Wilcox has proved that the car on display in the Patton museum at Fort Knox is not the one Patton was driving.

"That is a cover-up," Mr Wilcox said.

George Patton, a dynamic controversialist who wore pearl handled revolvers on each hip and was the subject of an Oscar winning film starring George C. Scott, commanded the US 3rd Army, which cut a swathe through France after D-Day.

But his ambition to get to Berlin before Soviet forces was thwarted by supreme allied commander Dwight D. Eisenhower, who gave Patton's petrol supplies to the more cautious British General Bernard Montgomery.

Patton, who distrusted the Russians, believed Eisenhower wrongly prevented him closing the so-called Falaise Gap in the autumn of 1944, allowing hundreds of thousands of German troops to escape to fight again,. This led to the deaths of thousands of Americans during their winter counter-offensive that became known as the Battle of the Bulge.

In order to placate Stalin, the 3rd Army was also ordered to a halt as it reached the German border and was prevented from seizing either Berlin or Prague, moves that could have prevented Soviet domination of Eastern Europe after the war.

Mr Wilcox told The Sunday Telegraph: "Patton was going to resign from the Army. He wanted to go to war with the Russians. The administration thought he was nuts.

"He also knew secrets of the war which would have ruined careers.

I don't think Dwight Eisenhower would ever have been elected president if Patton had lived to say the things he wanted to say." Mr Wilcox added: "I think there's enough evidence here that if I were to go to a grand jury I could probably get an indictment, but perhaps not a conviction."

Charles Province, President of the George S. Patton Historical Society, said he hopes the book will lead to definitive proof of the plot being uncovered. He said: "There were a lot of people who were pretty damn glad that Patton died. He was going to really open the door on a lot of things that they screwed up over there."

Wild Bill Donovan,
graduate of St. Joseph's Collegiate Institute
and member of the fraternal order Phi Kappa Psi















New Book Surfaces Claiming Gen. George Patton Assassinated - Greg Szymanski

By Greg Szymanski, JD

Dec.21, 2008

Rarely a day goes by when a new book or news article doesn’t bring to light more Jesuit intrigue in the political, social, religious and financial worlds.

The only problem is the Jesuits are never mentioned, conveniently left out so these “masters of decption” can live to kill another day.

Such is the case with the latest book written about the assassination of Gen. George S. Patton by military historian Robert Wilcox.

In his book, Wilcox claims Patton was assassinated, not killed in a European car crash, because Patton was going to blow the whistle on Allied Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower for unnecessarily prolonging the war and conspiring with the Russians and Germans, costing many American lives.

Wilcox goes on to connect high-level American officials to the Patton assassination, including “Wild Bill” Donovan, head of the Office Of Strategic Services (OSS) which was the forerunner to the CIA.

However, he doesn’t go far enough up the New World Order ladder to find out the real bosses who ordered the trigger be pulled on Patton. If Wilcox did his homework, the murder trail he was following would have led directly to the doorstep of Georgetown University Jesuit Edmund Walsh, first head of the School of Foreign Service.

Athough hidden from all history books, Walsh was the power behind putting Franklin Roosevelt into power as well as handpicking Eisenhower to become Allied Commander even though many other qualified officers were passed over.

Jesuit Walsh was the kingpin never mentioned by Wilcox even though, if the truth be known, he was the power behind Donovan, Roosevelt, Eisenhower and many others orcehestrating both sides of World War II just like every other war in American history.

If Walsh, the Jesuits and the Vatican were added to the list of perpetrators in the Patton assassination the record would be complete. However, when reading the following Telegraph newspaper review of Wilcox’s book, just read between the lines and add Walsh and Jesuits while reading:

“The newly unearthed diaries of a colourful assassin for the wartime Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the forerunner of the CIA, reveal that American spy chiefs wanted Patton dead because he was threatening to expose allied collusion with the Russians that cost American lives.

“The death of General Patton in December 1945, is one of the enduring mysteries of the war era. Although he had suffered serious injuries in a car crash in Manheim, he was thought to be recovering and was on the verge of flying home.

“But after a decade-long investigation, military historian Robert Wilcox claims that OSS head General “Wild Bill” Donovan ordered a highly decorated marksman called Douglas Bazata to silence Patton, who gloried in the nickname “Old Blood and Guts”.

“His book, “Target Patton”, contains interviews with Mr Bazata, who died in 1999, and extracts from his diaries, detailing how he staged the car crash by getting a troop truck to plough into Patton’s Cadillac and then shot the general with a low-velocity projectile, which broke his neck while his fellow passengers escaped without a scratch.

“Mr Bazata also suggested that when Patton began to recover from his injuries, US officials turned a blind eye as agents of the NKVD, the forerunner of the KGB, poisoned the general.

“”Mr Wilcox told The Sunday Telegraph that when he spoke to Mr Bazata: “He was struggling with himself, all these killings he had done. He confessed to me that he had caused the accident, that he was ordered to do so by Wild Bill Donovan.

“Donovan told him: ‘We’ve got a terrible situation with this great patriot, he’s out of control and we must save him from himself and from ruining everything the allies have done.’ I believe Douglas Bazata. He’s a sterling guy.”

“Mr Bazata led an extraordinary life. He was a member of the Jedburghs, the elite unit who parachuted into France to help organize the Resistance in the run up to D-Day in 1944. He earned four purple hearts, a Distinguished Service Cross and the French Croix de Guerre three times over for his efforts.

“After the war he became a celebrated artist who enjoyed the patronage of Princess Grace of Monaco and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.

“He was friends with Salvador Dali, who painted a portrait of Bazata as Don Quixote.

“”He ended his career as an aide to President Ronald Reagan’s Navy Secretary John Lehman, a member of the 9/11 Commission and adviser to John McCain’s presidential campaign.

Mr Wilcox also tracked down and interviewed Stephen Skubik, an officer in the Counter-Intelligence Corps of the US Army, who said he learnt that Patton was on Stalin’s death list. Skubik repeatedly alerted Donovan, who simply had him sent back to the US.

“You have two strong witnesses here,” Mr Wilcox said. “The evidence is that the Russians finished the job.”

“The scenario sounds far fetched but Mr Wilcox has assembled a compelling case that US officials had something to hide. At least five documents relating to the car accident have been removed from US archives.

“The driver of the truck was whisked away to London before he could be questioned and no autopsy was performed on Patton’s body.

“With the help of a Cadillac expert from Detroit, Mr Wilcox has proved that the car on display in the Patton museum at Fort Knox is not the one Patton was driving.

“That is a cover-up,” Mr Wilcox said.

“George Patton, a dynamic controversalist who wore pearl handled revolvers on each hip and was the subject of an Oscar winning film starring George C. Scott, commanded the US 3rd Army, which cut a swathe through France after D-Day.

“But his ambition to get to Berlin before Soviet forces was thwarted by supreme allied commander Dwight D. Eisenhower, who gave Patton’s petrol supplies to the more cautious British General Bernard Montgomery.

“Patton, who distrusted the Russians, believed Eisenhower wrongly prevented him closing the so-called Falaise Gap in the autumn of 1944, allowing hundreds of thousands of German troops to escape to fight again,. This led to the deaths of thousands of Americans during their winter counter-offensive that became known as the Battle of the Bulge.

“In order to placate Stalin, the 3rd Army was also ordered to a halt as it reached the German border and was prevented from seizing either Berlin or Prague, moves that could have prevented Soviet domination of Eastern Europe after the war.

“Mr Wilcox told The Sunday Telegraph: “Patton was going to resign from the Army. He wanted to go to war with the Russians. The administration thought he was nuts.

“He also knew secrets of the war which would have ruined careers.

“I don’t think Dwight Eisenhower would ever have been elected president if Patton had lived to say the things he wanted to say.” Mr Wilcox added: “I think there’s enough evidence here that if I were to go to a grand jury I could probably get an indictment, but perhaps not a conviction.”

“Charles Province, President of the George S. Patton Historical Society, said he hopes the book will lead to definitive proof of the plot being uncovered. He said: “There were a lot of people who were pretty damn glad that Patton died. He was going to really open the door on a lot of things that they screwed up over there.”

Here is a short bio of Walsh and it should be noted he was present at the Nuremburg trials with his job being to cover up any Vatican connection to the orcehstration of World War II and their connection to backing the Nazi Party and handpicking Hitler for the job.

Edmund A. Walsh

(October 10, 1885October 31, 1956)[1] was an American Jesuit Catholic priest, professor of geopolitics and founder of the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service, which he founded in 1919–six years before the U.S. Foreign Service itself existed–and served as its first dean.

He directed the Papal Famine Relief Mission to Russia in 1922, worked on behalf of the Vatican to resolve long-standing issues between Church and State in Mexico in 1929, negotiated with the Iraqi government to establish an American College in Baghdad in 1931, and served as Consultant to the U.S. Chief of Counsel at the Nuremberg Trials.

Notably during the last task, he interrogated the Germangeopolitician General Karl Haushofer after World War II to determine whether or not he should stand trial at Nuremberg for war crimes, eventually finding that Gen. Haushofer ought not stand trial

His career then stagnated for five years until in 1929 he was appointed Executive Assistant to General George Moseley, then Secretary of War. In 1933, he was then appointed chief military aide to General Douglas MacArthur and accompanied him to the Philippines.

It was through MacArthur that Eisenhower first came to the attention of the all-powerful American Jesuit Fr. Edmund A. Walsh. MacArthur was educated by the Jesuits and Walsh was his influential patron. Eisenhower quickly became an even more deeply devoted fan of Fr. Walsh and his geopolitical mind than his superior General MacArthur. At the outbreak of World War II in 1939, Eisenhower returned from the Philippines at 49 but a Lt. Colonel.

By June 1941, six months before the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbour, Col. Eisenhower was appointed to the War Department General Staff in Washington D.C. and to a role holding the temporary rank of Brigadier General. Whatever his role in the events leading up to Pearl Harbour, he soon held favour with President Franklin D. Roosevelt, another staunch supporter of Fr. Edmund A. Walsh S.J.

In December 1943, President Roosevelt announced Eisenhower, still then only officially holding the rank of Colonel would be the Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, being promoted immediately to being a four star Major General - one of the most dramatic rise in promotions in American history. The announcement sent shockwaves through the US and even the Allied forces as Eisenhower was promoted over the heads of over fifty seasoned military leaders, including his former friend and mentor Douglas MacArthur - all of whom had far greater skill and merit.

Upon his arrival in England in 1943, a controversial claim has been made that Eisenhower received a communique from senior members of the SS offering clear and specific terms of unconditional surrender of all German forces, including the assassination of Hitler, if the Americans would help halt the Soviet advance into Central Europe. Whether true or false, there is no question that Eisenhower quickly shelved the Churchill plan of a 1943 invasion while the Nazi forces were in a state of disarray and allowed the Germans a full six months to re-arm and re-equip their French forces ahead of any invasion. In 1944, Eisenhower was confirmed as a Five Star General and Chief of the Army. In spite of the massive logistical superiority of the Allied forces, the Eisenhower D-Day plan very nearly failed. Again, during the Battle of the Bulge Eisenhower inexplicably ordered the halt of the encirclement of German forces enabling up to 150,000 to escape and prolonging the war a further twelve months. No rational, military or political explanation for this order has ever been given.

The effect of Eisenhowers deliberate decisions to prolong the war cost an additional 100,000 allied personnel and effectively handed Eastern Europe to the Soviet Union. One man that did know the truth was Gen. George Smith Patton. On December 9th 1945, the day before he was due to fly back to Washington to meet with President Truman with proof that Eisenhower was a traitor who had costs the lives of thousands of American soldiers and millions of civilians, he was seriously injured in a “road accident” near Mannheim, Germany on 9 Dec 1945 (dying in hospital 21 December 1945). Miraculously the other occupants of the car in which Patton was critically injured escaped unharmed.

To counter the claims and rumour mills, Eisenhower authorised the leak of stories to damage the character of Patton including blaming Patton for the escape of the 150,000 soldiers of the German army and that Patton was mentally unstable. These false rumours still persist today. However, there can be no doubt about the direct orders of Eisenhower in Operation Keelhaul- the repatriation of over two million former Russian prisoners of war to Joseph Stalin. While the actions of Eisenhower have always been maintained as a fact of life following the Yalta Agreement between Churchill, Stalin and Roosevelt, the manner and clear fate of these poor souls was nothing short of Genocide on the same level as Adolf Hitler and the SS.

Eisenhower deliberately used the same logistical infrastructure of the Nazis used to murder millions to transport the millions of Russian prisoners of war to concentration camps until they could be handed across to the Soviets for mass execution. During this time, tens of thousands died from malnourishment, from ill treatment and sickness at the hands of Eisenhowers “special units” in charge of the operation. Many simply died in the same manner as the Jewish victims who had also been carted like sardines in the same train carriages years before. Following the end of the war Eisenhower was appointed Military Governor of the US Occupation Zone. He was instrumental in dismantling key evidence of the live human sacrifice of millions via the ovens at concentration camps.

Eisenhower also played a crucial role in eliminating as much evidence as possible concerning the direct role of the Catholic Church and the Jesuits in World War II. He was rewarded in being made a Knight of Malta by the Vatican. In 1953 Eisenhower won the Presidency of the United States in a landslide along with his young Vice President Richard Nixon. His Presidency was notable for the closeness the world came to Nuclear war. The original and official standard of the United States was changed under his presidency to “In God we Trust” a direct and deliberate heresy against the fundamental tenets of the Declaration of Independence that sought the United States to be a secular society. He died in 1969.


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Pres. Dwight D. Eisenhower with Father Edward Bunn
at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C..
unveiling bust of Rev.Edmund A. Walsh, October 1958


Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Wlodimir Ledochowski's Masonic Tool FDR

http://www.hnn.us/blogs/comments/27592.html

Keith Halderman

Consequences of Hate

In his post below David Beito quotes Franklin Roosevelt as saying "We have got to be tough with Germany and I mean the German people not just the Nazis. We either have to castrate the German people or you have to treat them in such a manner so they can't go on reproducing." This quotation has elicited two comments of defense from Craig J. Bolton. In the first he recalls “only two recorded incidents of opposition by the German people” and he ends the second one with the adage; “Ideas have consequences. Bad ideas have bad consequences.” I agree with this line and the notion expressed in the above Roosevelt comment was a bad idea with bad consequences for both Germans and Americans.

I am now in the process of reading The New Dealers’ War: FDR and the War Within World War II by Thomas J. Fleming. This book is doing something I would have thought impossible, it is lowering my opinion of FDR even further.

While Craig Bolton may or may not be correct about there being only two overt incidents of opposition to the Nazis there certainly was a great deal of high level covert support for internal regime change including a very famous assassination attempt in East Prussia. According to Fleming Admiral Wilheim Canaris head of the German Military intelligence organization, the Abwehr, met secretly in Spain, during the summer of 1943, with the heads of American and British intelligence. They hammered out a peace plan which included a cease fire and the elimination of Hitler. Roosevelt rejected this offer refusing to negotiate with “these East German Junkers” and all other overtures from Germans yearning for the Nazis’ downfall.

In fact, when Roosevelt unexpectedly announced, against the opposition of Churchill and his own military commanders, that unconditional surrender was the only acceptable end to the war, he created a great obstacle for those Germans who wished Hitler gone and the carnage over. The policy proved to be a big unifier of the Hitler’s people. We can never know if some Allied encouragement and a different set of demands might have been enough for the success of Admiral Canaris and like minded Germans in their goal of ending the war sooner. However it is not unreasonable to say that FDR’s hatred and determination to punish may very well have cost tens of thousands of Americans their lives.


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FDR's attitude would be strategically critical for the Oder Neisse line, the destruction of Prussia and the expulsion of its peoples.












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