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Sunday, March 09, 2014

37 DAYS

A three part series on the 37 days after the assassination of Arch Duke Ferdinand was shown last week on BBC 2. I watched the first 15 to 20 minutes or so and knew that it was not going to go anywhere near the true conspiracy. After all, this is the BBC.

But what does the author of the script have to say?

I also think the British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey was in something of an impossible situation.

His instincts were peaceful and I guess he could have been more aggressive to Berlin at the start.

He could have said, ‘We will mobilise for war if you encourage Austria to attack Serbia’, and that might have reined in Germany.

[source : Mark Hayhurst, 37 Days: Changing my perspective of WWI, http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/tv/posts/37-Days, 7th March 2014]

Grey's instincts were peaceful?!

If his instincts were peaceful then he would have made it crystal clear that Britain would join any war, and he would not have cited the obscure Treaty of London 1839 that Great Britain was not legally bound to defend Belgium unilaterally.

Grey could have been more aggressive?!

Read the following telegram from Grey to the British Ambassador to France, Sir Francis Bertie, sent on 31st July 1914. The telegram is available to read at The Great War Primary Documents Archive (GWPDA). It is entitled Sir Edward Grey's Indecisiveness, and links to the previous suggestion by 37 Days writer Hayhurst that Grey's instincts were peaceful.

AND IT STINKS OF (deliberate) INDECISIVENESS!!

And armed with the knowledge that:
1. the assassins of Ferdinand were Freemasons, and had received encouragement and the material for the assassination from foreign Freemasons;
2. Ferdinand had been condemned to death by Freemasonry;
3. Kaiser Wilhelm wrote in his memoirs that WW1 was engineered by Freemasonry to create a power vacuum in central Europe;
4. a secret committee had been created by The British Foreign Office (which surely Grey knew about) to create mayhem in The Balkans;
5. King George V told Kaiser Wilhelm that Great Britain would not become engaged in any war, thus driving the mobilisations to war.

then Grey's obvious 'indecisiveness' suddenly becomes very, very conspiratorial...hoping to entice Germany into invading Belgium.

And as soon as Germany invades Belgium, Grey suddenly finds his aggression, loses his indecisiveness and makes Britain's position crystal clear and calls for war to defend Belgium when there was no legal duty to do so.

COME ONE PEOPLE!!

STOP YOUR OBSESSION WITH THE ONLY WAY IS ESSEX (or the last 3 letters)!!

Sir Edward Grey to Sir F. Bertie

Foreign Office, July 31, 1914

Sir, M. Cambon referred today to a telegram that had been shown to Sir Arthur Nicolson this morning from the French Ambassador in Berlin saying that it was the uncertainty with regard to whether we would intervene which was the encouraging element in Berlin, and that, if we would only declare definitely on the side of Russia and France, it would decide the German attitude in favor of peace.

I said that it was quite wrong to suppose that we had left Germany under the impression that we would not intervene. I had refused overtures to promise that we should remain neutral. I had not only definitely declined to say that we would remain neutral; I had even gone so far this morning as to say to the German Ambassador that, if France and Germany became involved in war, we should be drawn into it. That, of course, was not the same thing as taking an engagement to France, and I told M. Cambon of it only to show that we had not left Germany under the impression that we would stand aside.

M. Cambon then asked for my reply to what he had said yesterday.

I said that we had come to the conclusion, in the Cabinet today, that we could not give any pledge at the present time. The commercial and financial situation was exceedingly serious; there was danger of a complete collapse that would involve us and everyone else in ruin; and it was possible that our standing aside might be the only means of preventing a complete collapse of European credit, in which we should be involved. This might be a paramount consideration in deciding our attitude.

I went on to say to M. Cambon that though we should have to put our policy before Parliament, we could not pledge Parliament in advance. Up to the present moment, we did not feel, and public opinion did not feel, that any treaties or obligations of this country were involved. Further developments might alter this situation and cause the Government and Parliament to take the view that intervention was justified. The preservation of the neutrality of Belgium might be, I would not say a decisive, but an important factor, in determining our attitude. Whether we proposed to Parliament to intervene or not to intervene in a war, Parliament would wish to know how we stood with regard to the neutrality of Belgium, and it might be that I should ask both France and Germany whether each was prepared to undertake an engagement that she would not be the first to violate the neutrality of Belgium. M. Cambon expressed great disappointment at my reply. He repeated his question of whether we would help France if Germany made an attack on her.

I said that I could only adhere to the answer that, so far as things had gone at present, we could not take any engagement The latest news was that Russia had ordered a complete mobilisation of her fleet and army. This, it seemed to me, would precipitate a crisis, and would make it appear that German mobilisation was being forced by Russia.

M. Cambon urged that Germany had from the beginning rejected proposals that might have made for peace. It could not be to England's interest that France should be crushed by Germany. We should then be in a very diminished position with regard to Germany. In 1870, we had made a great mistake in allowing an enormous increase in German strength; and we should now be repeating the mistake. He asked me whether I could not submit his question to the Cabinet again.

I said that the Cabinet would certainly be summoned as soon as there was some new development, but at the present moment the only answer I could give was that we could not undertake any definite engagement.

I am, etc.

E. GREY

[source : Sir Edward Grey's Indecisiveness, The Great War Primary Documents, http://www.gwpda.org/1914/greyegal.html, Accessed 9th March 2014]

Now, why didn't Grey stop arsing around, grab the Germans by the throat and threaten war to stop war?!

After all, the British Empire was still that; an empire, at the time still the greatest, controlling the seas, with the (no don't laugh) Commonwealth to call on for resources; material, financial and human.

But he didn't.

Instead, Grey hummed and haaed, and hinted at this and didn't quite say that, and to different nations.

But as soon as Germany invaded Belgium it was, WAR! WAR! WAR!

WHAT

A

CON (SPIRACY)!!





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