Tuesday, September 01, 2015

LORD MILNER'S SECOND WAR (AGAIN)

Reading Lord Milner's Second War by John Cafferky again, and it does do a very good job in pinning the blame for WW1 on Great Britain.

Cafferky's thesis is that Russia encouraged Apis and The Black Hand to start a war with Austria Hungary, but Russia would not have done this without an agreement that France would back Russia, and France agreed to back Russia because Great Britain had agreed to back France.

Now the problem here is how could a Russian Freemason select Ferdinand as the target, as stated in September 1912, because Freemasonry was banned in Russia at the time.

So assuming that Freemasonry did select Ferdinand as the target for Apis, and that Russia was involved in engineering the war, then how could Freemasonry have done this if Freemasonry was banned in Russia?

But as the Grand Orient Lodge (which is named by Wilhelm in his memoirs) is the main suspect, this had its HQ in Paris, and as Joseph Brewda writes:
In 1917, British author C.H. Norman reported that the Grand Orient Masons were behind the murder of the archduke, in his pamphlet "Some Secret Influences behind the War":

"Somewhere about the year 1906 I was invited to attend a meeting of Englishmen fot the purpose of discussing a proposal to form an English lodge of the Grand Orient...The lodge was 'to be engaged in propaganda on behalf of the Entente Cordiale'... with this apparently innocent object I found myself in sympathy. But, nevertheless, I decided to discover whether it was all its benevolent program pretended.

"To my astonishment I found the Grand Orient was about to embark upon a vast political scheme in alliance with the Russian Okhrana, which could only be brought to fruition by a terrible European war." Norman reported that the Grand Orient included many leading Frenchmen, notably "M. Poincare, Combes, Delcasse, Briand, Viviani, Millerande." He further reported that the London agent of the Grand :Orient was involved in planning the murder of the archduke.

[source : How the British Crown created the Balkan powderkeg, EIR, Volume 22, Number 13, March 24, 1995]

Or perhaps it is mere coincidence that it was Ferdinand who was assassinated. The initial target of The Black Hand was the then Governor of Bosnia, General Potiorek, but the assassin dumped his weapons off a train when it was stopped by police while he was on his way to kill Potiorek. It was only then, allegedly, that Ferdinand was proposed as the target.

But by whom?



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