http://www.BreakForNews.com/G8-World-Order.htm
Dawn
of the G8
New World Order

Reuters Propaganda
Photo:
Iraqi children from the village of Al-Shohadaa --Source
BreakForNews.com,
10th June, 2004
by Fintan Dunne,
Editor
In the last few days
the totalitarian domination of the developing world has solidified
around the
annexation of Iraq. And the G8 elite have moved swiftly on to outline
the next phase of their New World Order.
Just days ago, the U.N. rubber-stamped an Iraqi puppet government
--complete with a CIA-sponsored Iraqi president --and a U.S. ambassador
with a blind spot about death squads.
It was the ultimate bad-cop: the USA, and the pseudo good-cop: the
UN --dropping the facade and carving up Iraq together.
Now the G8 summit in Georgia has just
announced a 50,000 strong global "peacekeeping" force
--aimed first at Africa.
And
they simultaneously declared a "partnership" with a zone
called "Broader Middle East and North Africa."
U.S. Centcom, in other words.
You already know the Middle East incorporates Iraq, Israel, Palestine
and neighboring countries. Now the Middle East has been miraculously
enlarged to become the ominously named "Broader Middle East and
North Africa."
A briefing
on the G8 meeting between Bush and Tony Blair sheds light on the now
very clear modus operandi of the G8.
Question: I wonder if you saw Afghanistan, in a sense,
as a model for what could now happen in Iraq where there's an independent
military force still under US command, and then a NATO peacekeeping
force, and whether there's any possibility that the European Union
could substitute for NATO in that sort of role in Iraq?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Well, I don't think anyone has seriously
considered the possibility of the ESDP taking over a military role
in Iraq. The European Union is going to take over the Bosnia mission,
which NATO is going to close out successfully, and that's going to
be quite enough, I think, for the ESDP to handle for the moment. So
I don't think anybody has contemplated this.
As in the case of Bosnia,
now Iraq, the G8 first send in the Americans --whose population is
unaware that their armed forces are the expendable storm-troopers
of the new world order. The invasion phase.
Depending on the desired economic level of the target country, the
civil society structures and physical infrastructure are deliberately
degraded to the appropriate level. Mild destruction --as in Serbia--
enables profitable reconstruction.
Severe degradation --as in Iraq-- is unleashed on zones which are
rich in natural resources. These zones are to be denied development
and merely used for resource plunder.
Then, NATO or UN or Multinational Forces are sent in for the "peacekeeping"
phase of permanent colonial occupation.
All the while, the G8 act out fake dramatics on the stage of international
public opinion. The US acts the bully. The UN/EU role is to be the
good guys. This charade has worked well.
A just-released
survey conducted by the international polling firm Globescan,
found global public confidence in the United Nations is now at a high
of 59%.
That marks a dramatic improvement over the 40% confidence in the U.N.
in the Globescan poll of August, 2002.
That's what the posturing by the U.N. was all about. Improving public
confidence in the institution --while soaking up the inevitable dissent
against the latest G8 imperial venture conquest campaign.
The posturing ended the moment the G8 "set aside their differences"
and well and truly nailed Iraq at the U.N. --ending the EU/UN pretence
as the conscience of the international community.
For "international community," read instead: "G8 monopoly
market capitalism."
But you cannot pretend to be the conscience of G8 capitalism. That's
a non sequitor. Capitalism is simply an amoral utilitarian economic
system. By definition, it has no conscience.
As events at the UN and the G8 summit have just illustrated.
Next comes the carve up of Africa, and the rest of the Middle East.
Next comes the continuation of genocidal policies against the world's
poor. Next comes the global corporate order. Resource pillage.
The G8 just
announced a fast-track program to create an AIDS vaccine. The
new plan aims to encourage the growth of HIV vaccine development centers
and to stimulate vaccine manufacturing capabilities around the world.
All this is a smokescreen for covert population control by means of
contaminated vaccines. Africa, whose population is already surging
despite the claimed "AIDS epidemic," is already in that
spotlight.
Another key G8 announcement is a new
global aviation-security plan, under which the United States will
hand personal data on U.S. air travellers to G8 (and other countries)
security services, including Russia.
Therby, ironically, U.S citizens' data will now end up in the hands
of the KGB. Hardly surprising as former KGB heads are already consultants
to U.S. Homeland Security.
Meanwhile the globalization-induced readjustment of U.S. living standards
continues --under the smokescreen of war, even as the corporates raid
the treasury before finally departing the U.S. for lower cost shores.
With hardly a whimper from the betrayed U.S. middle and lower classes
--thanks to the diversionary War on Terror.
So, rather than: "Down with the parasitic fat cats."
And: "You won't get me, I'm part of the Union."
It's: "Down with Osama the terrorist."
And: "Al-Quaida won't get me, I'm part of Homeland Security."
Wag,
Wag, Wag.
The tail wags the dog.
It's all been a movie, with players and a script.
Deranged Dictator Bush.
Fickle Foreign Frenchies.
Abusive U.S. soldiers.
Savages who behead.
And you --in the middle.
Being played like a sucker.
The "News" is a scripted movie.
9/11 was a scripted movie.
You are living in a Wag the Dog movie.
Welcome to the G8 New Word Order.
More
Stories:
BreakForNews Homepage
R E F E R E N C E S

Partnership
for Progress
and a Common Future
with the Region of the
Broader Middle East and North Africa

WhiteHouse.gov
Sea Island,
Georgia June 9, 2004
1. We the leaders of the G8 are mindful that peace,
political, economic and social development, prosperity and stability
in the countries of the Broader Middle East and North Africa
represent a challenge which concerns us and the international community
as a whole. Therefore, we declare our support for democratic, social
and economic reform emanating from that region.
2. The peoples of the Broader Middle East and North
Africa have a rich tradition and culture of accomplishment in government,
trade, science, the arts, and more.... We welcome recent statements
on the need for reform from leaders in the region, especially the latest
statement issued at the Arab League Summit in Tunis, in which Arab leaders
expressed their determination "to firmly establish the basis for democracy."
... As the leaders of the major industrialized democracies in the world,
we recognize our special responsibility to support freedom and reform,
and pledge our continuing efforts in this great task.
3. Therefore, we commit ourselves today to a Partnership
for Progress and a Common Future with the governments and peoples of
the Broader Middle East and North Africa.
This partnership will be based on genuine cooperation with the region's
governments, as well as business and civil society representatives to
strengthen freedom, democracy, and prosperity for all.
5.8. Supporting reform in the region, for the benefit
of all its citizens, is a long-term effort, and requires the G-8 and
the region to make a generational commitment.
8. The Partnership we launch today builds on years
of support for reform efforts in the region through bilateral and multilateral
cooperation programs. The Euro-Mediterranean Partnership ("Barcelona
Process"), the U.S. Middle East Partnership Initiative, and the
Japan-Arab Dialogue Initiative are examples of our strong commitment
to supporting democratic and economic development. More

G8
seeks to help create
world peacekeeping force

Reuters
The Group of Eight (G8) industrial nations intends to help create
a global peacekeeping force of more than 50,000 people over the next
five to six years, senior US officials have said.
The two officials, briefing reporters at the G8 summit, said the initiative
grew out of African requests for assistance in ending the wars that
plague the continent.
"The centerpiece of this initiative will be a pledge by the G8 countries
to train a certain number, we hope well in excess of 50,000 peacekeepers
around the world, but beginning in Africa, over the next five or six
years," said one of the officials, who spoke on condition that they
not be identified.
"And it really is sort of unique it's the first time the G8 has
taken on a specific a pledge like this, and has said we are going
to train this number of peacekeepers over this time frame, and we're
going to seek to equip them, and we're going to seek to help them
get to where they want to be."
"Security is a necessary condition for all the reforms and progress
that we hope to promote around the world ... It's not for a lack
of willingness that African nations and other nations are unable to
sometimes deal with the peace support operations that they find themselves
charged with."
They said that although the initiative would be launched in Africa,
where the need was greatest, its scope was global. "The idea is to
train peacekeepers and equip them and enable them to get to where
they're needed all over the world," one official said.
One of the officials said Italy was offering the use of a training
center.
The Bush administration would seek $US660 million from Congress to
spend over the next five years for training and equipment, the US
officials said. More
Also

Industrialised
nations intend to create
global peacekeeping force
G8 summit marks a new step in
trans-Atlantic rapprochement

SAVANNAH, Georgia,
June 9 (AFP):
If the Group of Eight summit is aimed at restoring harmony among the
world's powers after the turmoil of Iraq, it has also spotlighted
lingering tensions over a range of issues.
The unanimous UN Security Council vote Tuesday endorsing plans for
the restoration of Iraqi self-rule has given the gathering here a
promising start, unlike the prickliness that marked last year's talks
in France.
After last week's D-Day commemorations in France, and ahead of the
US-European summit in Ireland and NATO summit in Turkey, this year's
G8 gathering on Sea Island marks a new step in trans-Atlantic rapprochement.
The chorus of diplomatic satisfaction sounding from the posh resort
island was welcome music to US President George W Bush who was hoping
to refurbish his statesman credentials ahead of his re-election bid
in November.
"The international community showed that it stands side by side
with the Iraqi people," Bush exulted for reporters.
Even opponents of last year's US-led invasion of Iraq were more or
less upbeat. Russian President Vladmir Putin called the resolution
a "major step forward" and France expressed satisfaction
at the unanimous vote.
The tone contrasted markedly with the diplomatic venom that flowed
before and just after the March 2003 invasion when many analysts said
US-European relations had hit their lowest point since World War II.
But despite the cheery pronouncements of a squad of US officials stalking
summit journalists to predict a series of breakthroughs on all sorts
of subjects, the talks here are still full of potential pitfalls.
For all the words of support for Iraqi reconstruction, neither France,
nor Russia, nor Germany, nor Canada show any sign of easing in their
refusal to send soldiers to Iraq to give the Americans a hand.
Even if all the G8 partners support a prosperous Iraq, US plans for
forgiving the "vast majority" of Iraqi debts have run up
against deep reservations from Paris and Moscow, reluctant to go so
far for a country drenched in potential oil riches.
US ambitions to spur democracy in the Middle East, once suposed to
be the highlight of the summit, have also been scaled back by the
United States in the face of fierce resistance from key Arab states
and a tepid welcome in Europe.
Europeans, keen to preseve their own dialogue with the Arab world,
seem unwilling to go much further than an expression of support for
the general principle of the battered US scheme.
European Commission president Romano Prodi said US policy in the Middle
East, particularly over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, was far
from commanding unanimous support.
A Russian official here said the summiteers had yet to reach agreement
on at least two other major issues.
Meanwhile, Bush, fresh from gaining passage of a critical UN resolution
on Iraq, introduces the new president of Iraq to fellow leaders at
the Group of Eight summit today.
At the same time, G8 negotiators were working to complete the details
of an initiative urging Arab and Muslim leaders in the Middle East
and North Africa to adopt democratic reforms.
Iraq's new president, Ghazi al-Yawar, will make his first entrance
on the world stage when he has lunch with Bush and leaders from Afghanistan,
Bahrain, Jordan, Tunisia, Turkey and Yemen. He will then be introduced
to the other G8 leaders. More
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