25 October 2002. Thought for the Week: "In early 1975
some twelve articles appeared in American newspapers and magazines on 'How we
can solve our economic problems'. The basic idea was that we could occupy the
Arab oil fields from Kuwait to Dubai (not Iraq), expel the indigenous populations,
'not more than two million', bring in Texan and Oklahoma oil men who would produce
the oil... It was clear that the articles came from a single 'deep background' briefing. I assumed it was given by some idiot in the Pentagon or the CIA (Central Intelligence Agency), and said on American television that 'anyone who proposes solving our domestic problems in this manner is a madman, a criminal or an agent of the Soviet Union'.... I wrote a long report on the subject ... Congress subsequently did a study on the same subject and backed me at every point. Subsequently several of those who were present at the briefing revealed that Henry Kissinger was the one who gave it. Many assumed that I was fully aware of this when I made the statement... This was untrue; I may be daring, I am not suicidal; had I known the identity of the briefer I would still have opposed the idea but I would have been more cautious in my choice of words. Kissinger was not amused and my diplomatic career was terminated shortly thereafter." The Hon. James E. Akins, USA Ambassador to Saudi Arabia 1973-75 and expert on the Middle East quoted British On Target, March 9th & 23rd, 2002 |
REAPING WHAT WE'VE SOWNby Jeremy Lee Indonesia is a different proposition to Iraq or Afghanistan. There are no wide open spaces that lend themselves to an aerial war. Instead, 14,000 islands, within reach of Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines, and the considerable Muslim population in Australia, make up the most populous Islamic nation on earth. It is a nation that has been traumatized by financial crisis and the Timor conflict. Its centralized and corrupt administration is an easy prey to fundamentalist Islamic groups. Evasion from efficient intelligence is probably easier in Indonesia than anywhere else on earth. Among the many 'gripes' Islam has with the West, the Israel-Palestine conflict is first. The blatantly pro-Israel position of the US, and the fact that many of the spokesmen and envoys it sends to the capitals of Arab nations are Zionists has not been lost on Islamic leaders. The pulverized ruins of the Occupied Territories have been compared to the rubble of New York's World Trade Centre, and the partiality when it comes to sympathy and sorrow wryly noted. The attempt to portray Iraq as a major threat to the security of the West is absurd. Even hawkish Israelis scorn the gross exaggerations. Israeli Defence Minister Binyamin Eliezer recently stated: "One should not overstate the Iraqi threat. True, Baghdad has certain capabilities in the strategic sphere that could combine surface-to-surface missiles with chemical and biological capabilities but, as far as can be assessed, the number of transport platforms planes or missiles is not big." (Australian Financial Review, 9/10/02) |
FEARFUL POLITICIANSWhat is so disturbing is the apparent
fear among all Australia's party politicians to address the real issues. Take
this report on the debate in the Parliament over Iraq, which appeared in The
Sydney Morning Herald (21/9/02): Even the Labor Party squibbed it, despite spirited speeches by some of its own people (Carmen Lawrence, Lindsay Tanner, Janet Crosio, Daryl Melham, Harry Quick, Arch Bevis, Tanya Plibersek, Laurie Ferguson and Anthony Albanese). An ultra-cautious Opposition leader, Simon Crean, wanted to become 'flexible' Labor did not support Andren...... "But it was Andren who laid into US policy with a sledgehammer. An excerpt: "US interests in the Middle East are two oil and Israel. Israel, of course, has also a nuclear capability, but that is apparently OK, is it? It does not have a destabilizing effect on the region, does it? From a purely Western perspective that may be the case, but I wonder what the Palestinians, the Lebanese, the Syrians, the Iranians, and indeed the Iraqis might think of that Israeli capacity. At last count, Israel was estimated to have somewhere between 100 and 200 nuclear weapons. The US has adopted a three wise monkeys approach to Israel's nuclear arsenal ....." During the same debate Labor's Lindsay Tanner highlighted the double standards: "There are many evil regimes in the world Burma is a good example. Its military regime enslaves its own people. And last night we were here [at a parliamentary dinner] applauding and lauding a man widely acknowledged as one of the architects of the Tiananmen Square massacre in China, which surely would have to be at least comparable with Saddam's gassing of citizens in Iraq. And we as a nation stood silent (for 25 years) while approximately 200,000 Timorese died on our own doorstep at the behest of the Suharto regime in Indonesia ...." But note the difference between Peter Andren and Lindsay Tanner. Andren, as an Independent, can vote where his conscience lies. Tanner, despite his accurate description, is shackled by all the party constraints which turn him from a representative into a party hack, voting as his bosses both political and financial tell him. And so, until courage, truth and honesty begin to prevail among those who shape Australia's destiny, the sad bodies will be brought home to grieving and bewildered families perhaps next time from a disaster within Australia itself. |
WHAT IF?Two Professors, Johan Galtung and Dietrich Fischer, both directors of TRANSCEND, a peace and development network (www.transcend.org) in a powerful argument for an alternative to military force as an answer to international problems, concluded their article with the following proposition (4/9/02): ".... If the USA had limited itself to a military campaign, leaving policing to the UN Security Council and the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, without US bases and leaving rights to oil pipelines to the Afghan people, they might even have won their war. Now it is lost. The Islamic fundamentalists' long-term goal seems to be respect for religious sensitivities. The US seeks free trade and military protection. Trade with basic need priority, including religious sensitivities, could achieve both. Imagine Bush had said 'That evening 1.3 billion Muslims
would have embraced America, and the few terrorists left would have no water in
which to swim. It would have taken a speech writer half an hour, and ten minutes
to deliver it; as opposed to, say $60 billion for the Afghanistan operation. Psychologically,
this is not easy, but the benefits are immeasurable." |
EUROPEAN COMMISSIONER SPEAKS OUTThe former Governor of Hong Kong, and present External Relations Minister for the European Union, Chris Patten, has spoken out strongly against Israel's non-compliance with United Nations resolutions. Speaking in Egypt after talks with Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher, Patten said there could have been peace in the Middle East had Israel complied with the resolutions. ".... I think it is extremely regrettable," Mr. Patten said. "I think if it had complied with Security Council resolutions, we might well have had peace some time ago." (The Australian, 15/10/02)To misquote George Orwell's words: "All nations are equal but some are more equal than others." |
YOU'RE BETTER OFF WALKINGThe
Victorian Bracks Government the "friend of the people" has raised to new levels
the fine art of extracting money from the populace. According to Tim Blair (The
Australian, 10/10/02): Any connection with road safety is now highly questionable with such punitive fines. It is widely and cynically accepted that the process is now another form of taxation, raising revenue for the party in power. Isn't it about time fines were withheld from politicians and diverted into a form of incentive for responsible motorists? Reduction on driving and vehicle licenses, a bonus for each year without offence, even a system of "consumer price discounts" on petrol and diesel for drivers who have earned a "gold card" for good behaviour? A government with a policy of punitive bullying will, in the end, earn the enmity of ordinary people, particularly so when it is such an obvious form of taxation. |
WHAT THE WORLD NEEDS NOWby Antonia Feitz Yippee! With a geomagnetic reversal the US's and every other nation's military technology would be rendered useless. If they wanted to fight they'd have to do it the old fashioned way and it's highly unlikely any modern army would have the skills let alone the stomach for slogging it out in long campaigns of face to face combat. Killing Iraqis from 30,000 feet via remote control from Tampa, Florida, is very different to killing Iraqis face to face. According to Ian Plimer such a geomagnetic reversal has previously happened in as few as 15 days though they may take up to tens of thousands of years. There's hope yet. |
THINGS BUSH & HOWARD SHOULD KNOW ABOUT AL-QA'EDAThe following excerpt was taken from our sister publication, the British On Target, July 13th & 27th, 2002. For the full article tap into the League's website: www.alor.org/ or type in League of Rights and look under 'On Target Britain'. "Before going into the causes of the India-Kashmir threat there are things President Bush should know about al-Qa'eda which neither he nor the American public have ever been told. Al-Qa'eda is a global force made up of a patchwork quilt of national organizations painstakingly put together by native or immigrant Moslems in countries while citizens slept. A communications system perfected over the years kept immigrants without national loyalties in contact with Moslem lodges making up the whole. At the bottom was Jamiat, an Arabic and Turkmin word for organisation. In America it was formed in the '40s. In countries where the language has regional changes Jamiat is deformed. In Indonesia it is Jamiyaa Islamiyaa. The earliest branch I have found of Jamiat al-Islam in America is the California order founded by Ahmed Kamal in the '40s, though there must have been many others. Ahmed Kamal, born Cimaron Hathaway, in Denver, Colorado, should have attracted American attention in Peking in August of 1945, when he was seeking to establish contact with leaders of China's forty million Moslems, known as the Hui-hui. General Pai Chung-tsi, the Generalissimo's chief-of staff, was a Hui-hui and one of China's finest generals. Hathaway was of partly Turkish origin and a Prussian tutor is said to have given him his ideas. He became a Moslem and legally changed his name to Ahmed Kamal. Some years before the war he went to the Turkic region of North-West China, married a Russian woman and became an authority on the Turkic nations surrounding the old kingdom of Tashkent, famous for its apple orchards and irrigation system. When the war came he was interned by the Japanese but was never tortured as a spy, as an American would expect to be in an area where the Japanese saw no other reason for his being. After V-J Day he and other internees were brought to Peking where dignitaries of the Sarts and the Uigers and other tribes in the Turkic region between China and south-east Russia had come with Prince Teh of the Mongols, to negotiate treaties with the Chinese victors. In mid-October Kamal was taken to Shanghai on the troop transport MS Lavaca and successfully boarded a ship for America before consular services were fully re-established. Never lacking for money he founded Jamiat al-Islam with an office in San Mateo, California, and a base in San Francisco where Mrs. Rauza I. Rogard was the Organization's Secretary-Treasurer. Where Jamiat al-Islam got its backing has never been established and large sums passed through Kamal's hands after the Algerian revolt started in November 1954. America was still following the Roosevelt policy of anti-colonialism and Washington backed the Algerians, though Algeria's Bashagha Bualern, the hereditary Lord of the Oursenais, was President of the French Senate and thirty thousand of his followers were massacred for preferring French rule and employ. Roger Paillat, on page 71 of his book Dossier Secret De L 'Algerie, disclosed a meeting in Geneva in 1955 where Kamal gave 25 million francs (approximately $75,000), to the rebel leaders, Ferhat Abbas and Ben Bella. Frank Taylor, one of America's most popular syndicated columnists, reported that Kamal was bringing money from behind the Iron Curtain on another passport to fund the Algerians' rebellion. The report was true but Mr. Taylor could not call on a foreign intelligence service to back his statements and Kamal (who may still be alive), threatened a libel suit. Mr. Taylor's syndicate was terrified, fearing an immense award to the plaintiff. Kamal, knowing publicity would end his game, settled out of court for a thousand dollars.
Robert Kennedy's assassin a member of Jamiat al-Islam The files
of Bernard Fensterwald's Committee To Investigate Assassinations, in Washington,
carried details of Sirhan's membership in Kamal's Jamiat al-Islam, the name of
the family he lived with during his training period in Egypt, and details of his
having been trained by Algerian terrorists in the Middle East. None of this appeared
in the investigations into Bobby Kennedy's death but since September 11th of last
year one must ask if Sirhan Sirhan's assassination of the candidate who pledged
support for Israel was the work of a lone fanatic, a militant commanded by Kamal
and Jamiat al-Islam or a member of even a higher group. The
India-Pakistan struggle Granted, the Moslem nations were bent on destroying Israel when 68 percent of Palestine was taken from the people who lived there, to give those of another faith a home. Had Israel not embarked on her policy of expansion and colonization by settlements, other Arab states would have followed Egypt and Jordan in accepting the new nation. Employment and fair treatment would in time have brought peace and relocation of those whom the new arrivals drove out. President Bush is an intelligent man and a fine President but he can only go as far as Senators and Congressmen obedient to a biased press and a multitude of America Israel Political Action Committees will let him. After spending June 7th in Camp David with Ariel Sharon, the paper which carried Nidal Farhat's declaration reported: 'Rebuffing calls from Arab leaders, he (President Bush), refused yesterday to set out a political timetable for the creation of a Palestinian state. We are not ready to lay down any specific calendar, except to say we have to get started quickly, he said.' "The Financial Times' comment of June 13th was: 'Mr. Sharon says he will not return to the 1967 borders. At some stage Mr. Bush will have to stand up to the Israeli Prime Minister if there is ever going to be a compromise... Without a peace process the present violence will never be halted... The time has come for a clear lead from the White House.' "With that discouraging note we leave the Middle East for the conflict, in Kashmir." Andrew Roberts, who wrote an excellent book, The Great Churchillians, stated in The Sunday Telegraph of June 9th: "Two of the most dangerous crises facing the world today can be traced to a single cause. Both the India-Pakistan nuclear stand-off and the continuing Middle Eastern conflict stem from decisions taken in 1947-48 by Clement Atlee's post-war (Labour) government..." |
LETTER TO THE EDITORDear Mrs. Luks, We were delighted
to read and digest your short article "Just for the Record" in the September 13th
issue of On Target. We have great respect and admiration for Mr. Reed's work and
those people that have seriously studied and accepted his tremendous gift and
Christian insight in matters of religio/political history. Your article is really
a fundamental, in-depth summing up of the evil, ancient symbolism we and the world
face in our time, and the League is doing well to highlight this. Another pertinent matter is that of giving a generous forum in League literature to people that may feel that the League's basic Christian principles must be changed to suit those particular individuals' obscure reasoning. To be a Monarchist is very commendable but hardly tenable at the expense of Christianity. We would much appreciate your comments without you compromising yourself. Yours sincerely, G.W. & F. B..., Devonport, Tasmania, October 14th, 2002 Editor's
response First, Douglas Reed's incomparable work, "The Controversy of Zion". Yes there are too few who have read it. If more had done so, and understood it, we may not have seen the rise of Judaeo-Christianity, especially in America; maybe we would have seen more people going back to their own historical roots and discovering traditional Christianity. As for the Monarchist's
'forum at the expense of Christianity', I would encourage you to read at least
two books the League Book Services carry "The Australian Heritage Series" and
"Responsible Government in a Free Society". Both books deal with the corresponding,
intertwining growth of Constitutional Monarchy and Common Law and the outworking,
that is, the practical application of the Christian Faith. Whilst reading Geoffrey
Dobbs' essay, "The Church and the Trinity" please look afresh at your own nation's
history. C.H. Douglas put it this way: "It must be insisted that Christianity
is either something inherent in the very warp and woof of the universe, or it
is just a set of interesting opinions..." In which case, we have to think as closely
as we can, and as practically as we can, along the true grain of the universe.
The Challenge
Be encouraged |
SYDNEY CONSERVATIVE SPEAKERS' CLUBYou are invited to the next meeting of the Sydney Conservative Speakers' Club to be held on Wednesday, October 30th, 2002, commencing at 7.30pm. The venue is the Lithuanian Club, 16 East Terrace, Bankstown; it is situated only 600 metres from the Bankstown Railway Station. The guest speaker is Mr. John Stafford, B.A., M.A., M.Ed., and the subject is: "Northern Ireland and Law and Order"; with the prospect of the return of direct rule by Britain and the exposure of a spy ring linked to Sinn Fein, the world's attention is again directed to the troubles in Northern Ireland. Cost of attendance is $4 and books will be on display from the Heritage Book Service. For those who wish to do so, an excellent meal can be obtained from the Polish Club, which is directly opposite the venue. Date for your diary: Wednesday, November 27th, 2002. Guest speaker Mr. David Hooper who will speak on "Aspects of British Israel". This will be the last meeting for the year of 2002. |
AUDIO TAPES OF NATIONAL WEEKEND NOW AVAILABLEThe speakers
were brilliant, informative, challenging! The 56th New Times Dinner "Celebrating
the Year of Jubilee": Seminar: Opening address
Betty Luks, National Director, Australian League of Rights Six tapes posted for $30. Single tape $6 posted. Order from:- MEA Tapes, Box 248, East Caulfield, Vic., 3145. Phone/Fax: (03) 9576 0105 |