Here Come the UN Army & Police
by Thomas R. Eddlem
October 17, 2005
http://www.getusout.org/artman/publish/article_189.shtml?TNA051017
The liberal media have long portrayed the Bush administration as
hostile to the United Nations. Yet, Bush's State Department
signed a document on September 15 that would result in an
unprecedented militarization of the United Nations.
The 2005 World Summit Outcomes document would (among other
things) strengthen the military "stand-by arrangements" already
in existence with 80 nations (for the United Nations to call up
troops from national armies) and would initiate a new standing
UN police force. World Summit Outcomes stipulates: "We endorse
the creation of an initial operating capability for a standing
police capacity to provide coherent, effective and responsible
start-up capability for the policing component of the United
Nations peacekeeping missions and to assist existing missions
through the provision of advice and expertise."
The proposed UN "police capacity" would be charged (at first)
with keeping order in zones where UN forces have already been
deployed. It's no great stretch, however, to see this gradually
mutating into a de facto global police force enforcing UN
mandates and arresting individuals for prosecution and trial by
UN institutions. Along these lines, it should be especially
noteworthy to American gun owners that World Summit Outcomes
champions a favorite UN theme: the elimination of civilian
ownership of small arms and light weapons. As we have reported
extensively in past issues, the 2001 UN "Conference on the
Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its
Aspects" left no doubt as to the organization's animus toward
private ownership of firearms, making no distinction between
criminals, terrorists, and law-abiding citizens.
The enhanced new UN "peacekeeping" army call-up arrangements
would be roughly analogous to the U.S. National Guard system,
whereby states maintain soldiers who can be called up by the
federal government. In order to implement the world police and
"world guard"-style global army, the document requires the
United Nations to establish a Peacebuilding Commission that
would be partnered with the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund.
This raises the possibility that a standing UN army may soon be
possible without the approval of national governments, even
though our governments are providing the funding through the IMF
and World Bank. The international banking system could loan the
UNDPKO (United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations)
funds to hire and equip their own army. The United Nations
September summit specifically lauded the efforts of the European
Union and the African Union to make such a rapid reaction force
ready for the UN's deployment at a moment's notice.
The proposals to enhance the military capabilities of the UN --
and to give it a standing police force for the first time -- did
not arise out of nowhere. Much of the content of the UN World
Summit Outcomes was drawn from the Congressional Task Force on
the United Nations and its May 2005 report, American Interests
and UN Reform. The Task Force on the United Nations membership
was composed of a "balance" of socialists/leftists who supported
strengthening the United Nations, on the one hand, and Bush
administration-style neo-conservatives such as Newt Gingrich, Ed
Feulner of the Heritage Foundation, and Danielle Pletka of the
American Enterprise Institute who also agreed that the United
Nations should be strengthened. Some balance! The guiding hand
above and behind all of this was the Council on Foreign
Relations (CFR). Most of the Task Force members (including the
two co-chairmen, Newt Gingrich and George J. Mitchell), as well
as a large number of the individuals assigned to help as their
"experts," are CFR members.
The CFR, which has accurately been called the "invisible
government" running America, has been one of the most potent
elite forces pushing for world government for the past eight
decades. Thus it is not surprising that the Task Force document
called for more funding and power for the United Nations,
including endowing the UN with a ready-made army using precisely
the methods described in World Summit Outcomes. The official UN
Outcomes document also follows the Task Force recommendation
that "member-states must substantially increase the availability
of capable, designated forces, properly trained and equipped,
for rapid deployment to [UN] peace operations."
The real concern for the American people should be that
President George Bush already has gone even further in pushing
for a world army and police force than did the UN in its World
Summit Outcomes report. As we have reported here previously, the
Bush administration publicly proposed the creation of an immense
UN military force in April 2004. The Bush proposal, named the
Global Peace Operations Initiative, pledged some $600 million --
mostly from the cash-strapped U.S. Defense budget -- to train
and equip roughly 75,000 foreign military personnel in
peacekeeping and peace enforcement operations over five years.*
In other words, our own president is on record in favor of
stripping resources from our own military in order to use them
to build a military force for the United Nations, an
organization composed largely of regimes run by terrorists,
criminals, deadbeats, and dictators who despise us.
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What you need - and what you don't - to stay alive during a
catastrophe...
NEWSWEEK: Be Prepared!
http://charlesgoyette.com/component/option,com_frontpage/Itemid,1/
An Interview with James Bamford
Inventing a Pretext for War
By KEVIN B. ZEESE
For more than two decades James Bamford has been a noted
investigative journalist focusing on intelligence gathering in
the United States. He exposed the ultra secret National Security
Agency two decades ago in The Puzzle Palace and Body of Secrets,
both award winning best sellers. He has testified as an expert
witness on intelligence issues before committees of both the
Senate and House of Representatives as well as the European
Parliament in Brussels and the International Criminal Tribunal
for the former Yugoslavia. His most recent book is A Pretext for
War : 9/11, Iraq, and the Abuse of America's Intelligence
Agencies? examines intelligence gathering related to the Iraq
War and 9/11. In addition to writing, he spent most of the
decade of the 1990s as the Washington Investigative Producer for
the ABC News program World News Tonight with Peter Jennings.
full report:
http://www.counterpunch.org/zeese05232005.html