http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/01/31/hillary-clintons-prescription-make-the-world-a-nato-protectorate


Stop NATO
January 31, 2010


Hillary Clinton's Prescription: Make The World A NATO Protectorate
Rick Rozoff


U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was busy in London and Paris last week 
advancing the new Euro-Atlantic agenda for the world.

As the top foreign policy official of what her commander-in-chief Barack Obama 
touted as being the world's sole military superpower on December 10, she is no 
ordinary foreign minister. Her position is rather some composite of several 
ones from previous historical epochs: Viceroy, proconsul, imperial nuncio.

When a U.S. secretary of state speaks the world pays heed. Any nation that 
doesn't will suffer the consequences of that inattention, that disrespect 
toward the imperatrix mundi.

On January 27 she was in London for a conference on Yemen and the following day 
she attended the International Conference on Afghanistan in the same city.

Also on the 28th she and two-thirds of her NATO quad counterparts, 
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband and French Foreign Minister Bernard 
Kouchner (along with EU High Representative Catherine Ashton), pronounced a 
joint verdict on the state of democracy in Nigeria, Britain's former colonial 
possession.

Afterwards she crossed the English channel and delivered an address called 
Remarks on the Future of European Security at L'Ecole Militaire in Paris on 
January 29. That presentation was the most substantive component of her 
three-day European junket and the only one that dealt mainly with the continent 
itself, her previous comments relating to what are viewed by the United States 
and its Western European NATO partners as backwards, "ungovernable" 
international badlands. That is, the rest of the world.

While in Paris, Clinton held a joint press conference with her counterpart 
Kouchner and said, "we...discussed the results of the London meetings on Yemen 
and Afghanistan. We have a lot of work ahead of us. We appreciate greatly the 
support that France has given in developing a European police force mission to 
support NATO in its effort to train police.

"We will be consulting even more closely. Our work in Africa is particularly 
important. I applaud France for resuming diplomatic relations with Rwanda, and 
I also appreciate greatly the work that Bernard and the government here is 
doing in Guinea and in other African countries." [1]

Rwanda and Guinea (Conakry) are former French colonies.

Two days before she made a similar joint appearance in London with British 
Foreign Secretary David Miliband and Yemeni Foreign Minister Abu Bakr Abdullah 
al-Qirbi. Yemen is a former British colony. The conference on that country held 
on January 27 also included the Foreign Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi 
Arabia, Prince Saud Al-Faisal, but not Secretary General Amr Moussa or any 
other representative of the 22-member Arab League.

Having the foreign minister of the unpopular government in Yemen that the U.S. 
is waging a covert - and not so covert - war to defend against mass opposition 
in both the north and south of the nation and the foreign minister of the 
nation that is bombing villages and killing hundreds of civilians in the north 
was sufficient for the Barack Obama and Gordon Brown governments. A war on the 
Arabian peninsula whose three major belligerents are the Yemeni government, 
Saudi Arabia and the U.S. is not viewed by Washington and London as a matter 
that 20 other Arab nations need to be consulted about.

Clinton delivered comments on the occasion that were exactly what were required 
to obscure the real state of affairs in Yemen in furtherance of her nation's 
military campaign there: "The United States is intensifying security and 
development efforts with Yemen. We are encouraged by the Government of Yemen’s 
recent efforts to take action against al-Qaida and against other extremist 
groups. They have been relentlessly pursuing the terrorists who threaten not 
only Yemen but the Gulf region and far beyond, here to London and to our 
country in the United States." [2] 

Bombing Shia civilians in the country's north and resorting to the preferred 
"diplomatic" intervention of the last four American secretaries of state - 
cruise missiles - in the south in the name of protecting London from Osama bin 
Laden is yet another illustration of how a nation behaves when it doesn't have 
a formal diplomatic corps.

In the same breath she added "The Yemeni people deserve the opportunity to 
determine their own future," when there was nothing further from her mind.

She acknowledged that "a longstanding protest movement continues" in the south 
and that fighting in the north "has left many thousands dead and more than 
200,000 displaced" - without in any manner alluding to Saudi armed assaults in 
the north and U.S. cruise missile attacks in the south - but her focus remained 
firmly on "extremists who incite violence and inflict harm." American bombs and 
missiles, of course, are nonviolent and harmless in the Secretary's 
us-versus-them view of statecraft.

Clinton didn't miss an opportunity to dress down her nation's client Yemeni 
President Ali Abdullah Saleh - "This must be a partnership if it is to have a 
successful outcome" - for his failure to adequately "protect human rights, 
advance gender equity, build democratic institutions and the rule of law." The 
U.S. may extend its Afghanistan-Pakistan war into the Arabian Peninsula and the 
Horn of Africa [3] in nominal support of the Yemeni head of state and his 
Somali counterpart President Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed, but they and their like 
- Afghanistan's Hamid Karzai and Pakistan's Asif Ali Zardari - should not for a 
minute forget who is in charge and who makes the rules. 

The secretary of state had nothing to say about the condition of human rights, 
gender equality and so forth in Saudi Arabia and America's other military 
vassals in the Persian Gulf. Medieval monarchies and hereditary autocracies 
that host American military bases, buy billions of dollars of advanced weapons 
from Raytheon, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman and are home to the U.S. 
5th Fleet are not subjected to homilies on human rights and "democratic 
institutions." 

On the day of the London conference on Afghanistan Clinton, flanked by the 
foreign ministers of Africa's two former major colonial masters, Britain's 
David Miliband and France's Bernard Kouchner, also delivered a lecture to the 
government of Nigeria, ordering it to address "electoral reform, post-amnesty 
programs in the Niger Delta, economic development, inter-faith discord and 
transparency." [4]

At the January 28 International Conference on Afghanistan, attended by the 
foreign ministers of all 28 NATO member states and dozens of NATO partnership 
underlings with troops in the South Asian war zone - the "international 
community" as the West defines it - Clinton complemented the Pentagon's allies 
and satraps:

"I think that what we have seen is a global challenge that is being met with a 
global response. I especially thank the countries that have committed 
additional troops, leading with our host country, the United Kingdom, but 
including Italy, Germany, Romania." [5]

She will need yet more troops in the near future for a far larger conflict than 
those the U.S. and NATO are currently involved with in Afghanistan, Pakistan, 
Yemen and Somalia if the following comments contribute to the results they 
appear to intend:

"I also had a chance to discuss Iran’s refusal to engage with the international 
community on its nuclear program. They continue to violate IAEA and Security 
Council requirements. 

"The revelation of Iran’s secret nuclear facility at Qom has raised further 
questions about Iran’s intentions. And in response to these questions, the 
Iranian Government has provided a continuous stream of threats to intensify its 
violation of international nuclear norms. Iran’s approach leaves us with little 
choice but to work with our partners to apply greater pressure...."

Washington and its main NATO partners Britain, France and Germany along with 
miscellaneous allies around the world - "rogue" nuclear powers India, Israel 
and Pakistan among them (who know who to align with and purchase arms from) - 
dictate the terms on matters ranging from the proper holding of elections to 
which nation can develop a civilian nuclear power program. Any country outside 
the "Euro-Atlantic" and "international" communities faces censure, threats, 
"greater pressure" and ultimately military attack.

The U.S. has a population of 300 million and the European Union of 500 million, 
combined well under one-eighth that of the world. Yet the two, whose military 
wing is NATO, hold "international conferences" on Asia, the Middle East and 
other parts of the world and presume to deliver ultimatums to all other nations.

To cite a recent example, the New York Times reported that "Secretary of State 
Hillary Rodham Clinton warned China on [January 29] that it would face economic 
insecurity and diplomatic isolation if it did not sign on to tough new 
sanctions against Iran for its nuclear program, seeking to raise the pressure 
on Beijing to fall in line with an American-led campaign." [6] On the same day 
"The Obama administration notified Congress on Friday of its plans to proceed 
with five arms sales transactions with Taiwan worth a total of $6.4 billion. 
The arms deals include 60 Black Hawk helicopters, Patriot interceptor missiles, 
advanced Harpoon missiles that can be used against land or ship targets and two 
refurbished minesweepers." [7]   
 
Clinton has joined in the U.S. chorus of hectoring of China since she took up 
her current post last year, in May even raising the specter of Chinese 
penetration of Latin America.

China is not Afghanistan or Yemen. It is not even Iran. The last generation's 
foreign policy hubris and megalomania of the West, epitomized by its wars in 
Southeast Europe and South Asia and the Middle East, may be headed into far 
more dangerous territory.

Grandiosity, arrogance and perceived impunity blind those afflicted with them, 
whether individuals or nations.

No clearer example exists than Secretary Clinton's remarks in Paris on January 
29.

To demonstrate the worldview of those she represents - that the United States 
and Europe are the incontestable metropolises and rulers by right of the planet 
- early in her address Clinton said "I appreciate the opportunity to discuss a 
matter of great consequence to the United States, France, and every country on 
this continent and far beyond the borders: the future of European security." [8]

That is, the U.S. arrogates to itself the prerogative of not only speaking with 
authority on the security of a continent 3,500 miles away but intervening 
around the world in its alleged defense.

Flattering her hosts, she further said: "As founding members of the NATO 
Alliance, our countries have worked side by side for decades to build a strong 
and secure Europe and to defend and promote democracy, human rights, and the 
rule of law. And I am delighted that we are working even more closely now that 
France is fully participating in NATO’s integrated command structure. I thank 
President Sarkozy for his leadership and look forward to benefiting from the 
counsel of our French colleagues as together we chart NATO’s future."

Regarding the phrase "to defend and promote democracy, human rights, and the 
rule of law," evocative of almost identical terms used two days earlier in 
reference to Yemen, Clinton's Paris speech was fairly overflowing with similar 
language.

The words recently have been tarnished and debased so thoroughly by the use 
they have frequently served - justifying war - that they are at risk of 
deteriorating into not so much noble as suspect abstractions.

Worse yet, they are incantations employed to praise oneself for uniquely 
possessing them and to castigate others who don't. ["Our work extends beyond 
Europe as well....European and American voices speak as one to denounce the 
gross violations of human rights in Iran." But not in Saudi Arabia, Western 
Sahara, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, post-"independence" Kosovo, Estonia 
and Latvia, etc.]

Clinton's speech contained these terms and phrases in the following sequence:

democracy, human rights, and the rule of law

unity, partnership, and peace

global progress

reconciliation, cooperation, and community

security and our prosperity

importance of liberty and freedom

peace and security 

development, democracy, and human rights 

human potential

democratic institutions and the rule of law

progress and stability

democracy and stability

accountable, effective governments

economic and democratic development

expanding opportunity 

development and greater stability 

defend and promote human rights 

peace and opportunity and prosperity

defending and advancing our values in the world

a Europe transformed, secure, democratic, unified and prosperous

The last is a variant of A Europe Whole And Free [9] first employed by 
President George H.W. Bush in 1989 to inaugurate his putative new world order.

As will be seen by further excerpts from her address (as well as its location 
and context), Clinton's use of the above expressions was, as noted, both 
self-congratulatory and in contradistinction to the implied lack of what they 
pertain to in the world outside of the Euro-Atlantic community and its approved 
allies elsewhere.
  
Again taking up the theme of Western superiority and the need for the 
Euro-Atlantic precedent to be enforced on others, she said "European security 
is, not only to the individual nations, but to the world. It is, after all, 
more than a collection of countries linked by history and geography. It is a 
model for the transformative power of reconciliation, cooperation, and 
community."

However, "much important work remains unfinished. The transition to democracy 
is incomplete in parts of Europe and Eurasia." The subjugation of Europe's 
eastern "hinterlands" will be explored later in relation to her comments on the 
European Union's Eastern Partnership and related matters.

"The transatlantic partnership has been both a cornerstone of global security 
and a powerful force for global progress. 

"NATO is revising its Strategic Concept to prepare for the alliance’s summit at 
the end of this year here at (inaudible). I know there’s a lot of thinking 
going on about strategic threats and how to meet them. Next week, at the Munich 
Security Conference, leaders from across the continent will address urgent 
security and foreign policy challenges. 

"The United States, too, has also been studying ways to strengthen European 
security and, therefore our own security, and to extend it to foster security 
on a global scale."

To elite trans-Atlantic policy makers the above paragraphs' meaning is 
indisputable: The use of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization military bloc - 
the true foundation of the "transatlantic partnership" - in waging war in and 
effectively colonizing the Balkans and in expanding into Eastern Europe, 
incorporating twelve new nations including former Warsaw Pact members and 
Soviet republics, is the worldwide paradigm for the West in the 21st century.

That mechanism, using Europe as NATO's springboard for geopolitical 
aggrandizement in the east and the south, is being applied at the moment 
against larger adversaries than the bloc has tackled before now:

"European security remains an anchor of U.S. foreign and security policy. A 
strong Europe is critical to our security and our prosperity. Much of what we 
hope to accomplish globally depends on working together with Europe....And so 
we are working with European allies and partners to help bring stability to 
Afghanistan and try to take on the dangers posed by Iran’s nuclear ambition."

"We have repeatedly called on Russia to honor the terms of its ceasefire 
agreement with Georgia, and we refuse to recognize Russia’s claims of 
independence for Abkhazia and South Ossetia. More broadly, we object to any 
spheres of influence claimed in Europe in which one country seeks to control 
another’s future. Our security depends upon nations being able to choose their 
own destiny."

The final sentence is galling beyond endurance, coming as it does from the 
foreign policy chief of a nation with hundreds of thousands of troops in 
Afghanistan and Iraq and which with its NATO allies waged war against 
Yugoslavia and tore the nation apart.

The one preceding it is equally absurd, as Clinton repeatedly insists on the 
right of the U.S. to be not only a major player on the European continent but 
the main arbiter of military, security, political, energy and other policies 
there while denouncing Russia - it didn't need to be named - for alleged 
designs to establish a "sphere of influence" in neighboring states.

"Security in Europe must be indivisible. For too long, the public discourse 
around Europe’s security has been fixed on geographical and political divides. 
Some have looked at the continent even now and seen Western and Eastern Europe, 
old and new Europe, NATO and non-NATO Europe, EU and non-EU Europe. The reality 
is that there are not many Europes; there is only one Europe. And it is a 
Europe that includes the United States as its partner....We are closer than 
ever to achieving the goal that has inspired European and American leaders and 
citizens – not only a Europe transformed, secure, democratic, unified and 
prosperous, but a Euro-Atlantic alliance that is greater than the sum of its 
parts...." 

For decades, indeed since the end of World War II, American leaders have been 
"inspired" by a vision of a Europe transformed and unified - under NATO 
military command and a European Union serving as the civilian, and increasingly 
military, complement to the Alliance.

"NATO must and will remain open to any country that aspires to become a member 
and can meet the requirements of membership," even Ukraine where the 
overwhelming majority of its citizens oppose being pulled into the military 
bloc. ["We stand with the people of Ukraine as they choose their next elected 
president in the coming week, an important step in Ukraine’s journey toward 
democracy, stability, and integration into Europe. And we are devoting 
ourselves to efforts to resolve enduring conflicts, including in the Caucasus 
and on Cyprus."]

And should a nation be incorporated into the bloc even against the will of its 
people, then the U.S. "will maintain an unwavering commitment to the pledge 
enshrined in Article 5 of the NATO treaty that an attack on one is an attack on 
all. When France and our other NATO allies invoked Article 5 in the aftermath 
of the attacks of September 11th, 2001, it was a proclamation to the world that 
our promise to each other was not rhetorical, but real....And for that, I thank 
you. And I assure you and all members of NATO that our commitment to Europe’s 
defense is equally strong.

"As proof of that commitment, we will continue to station American troops in 
Europe, both to deter attacks and respond quickly if any occur. We are working 
with our allies to ensure that NATO has the plans it needs for responding to 
new and evolving contingencies. We are engaged in productive discussions with 
our European allies about building a new missile defense architecture...."

Washington is uncompromisingly bent on expanding NATO even further along 
Russia's borders - Ukraine, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Finland - despite 
misgivings among some NATO allies in Europe, and will use the Alliance's 
Article 5 war clause to "protect" those new outposts. It will also drag all of 
Europe into its worldwide interceptor missile system.

And not against military threats - there is no military threat to any European 
nation - but against a veritable plethora of phantom pretexts, including 
so-called cyber and energy security, both of which are subterfuges for the U.S. 
to intervene against Russia. A host of other ploys for NATO intervention were 
added, many from NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen's 17-point list 
of last year [10]: Iran's nuclear program, "confronting North Korea’s defiance 
of its international obligations," "tackling non-traditional threats such as 
pandemic disease, cyber warfare, and the trafficking of children" and the "need 
to be doing even more, such as in missile defense, counternarcotics, and 
Afghanistan." Anything and everything is grist to the U.S.'s and NATO's mill.

As Clinton put it, "In the 21st century, the spirit of collective defense must 
also include non-traditional threats. We believe NATO’s new Strategic Concept 
must address these new threats. Energy security is a particularly pressing 
priority. Countries vulnerable to energy cut-offs face not only economic 
consequences but strategic risks as well. And I welcome the recent 
establishment of the U.S.-EU Energy Council, and we are determined to support 
Europe in its efforts to diversify its energy supplies."

Diversifying energy supplies is a code phrase for driving Russia and keeping 
Iran out of oil and natural gas deliveries to Europe. If the tables were turned 
the U.S. would view - and treat - such a policy as an act of war.

The global expansion of the American agenda in Europe was indicated further in 
Clinton's remarks that "This partnership is about so much more than 
strengthening our security. At its core, it is about defending and advancing 
our values in the world. I think it is particularly critical today that we not 
only defend those values in the world. I think it is particularly critical 
today that we not only defend those values, but promote them; that we are not 
only on defense, but on offense."
  
And placing the current world situation in historical perspective, she said: 
"We are continuing the enterprise that we began at the end of the Cold War to 
expand the zone of democracy and stability. We have worked together this year 
to complete the effort we started in the 1990s to help bring peace and 
stability to the Balkans. And we are working closely with the EU to support the 
six countries that the EU engages through its Eastern Partnership initiative."

The Eastern Partnership is a U.S.-backed European Union program to pull six of 
twelve former Soviet repiblics that formed the Commonwealth of Independent 
States into the Western orbit: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova 
and Ukraine. [11] Armenia and Belarus are members with Russia of the Collective 
Security Treaty Organization, a potential counterbalance to NATO's drive into 
the former Soviet Union. Along with Serbia and Cyprus, those nations represent 
the last obstacles to NATO, and behind it the U.S., securing control of all of 
Europe.

Clinton also had the audacity to raise the issues of the Strategic Arms 
Reduction Treaty (START) and the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty (CFE), 
the first almost two months beyond its December 5 expiration and the other, in 
its adapted form, not ratified by a single member state of NATO, which - led by 
the U.S. - is exploiting its suspension for military buildups in new Eastern 
European nations.

"Two years ago, Russia suspended the implementation of the CFE Treaty, while 
the United States and our allies continue to do so. The Russia-Georgia war in 
2008 was not only a tragedy but has created a further obstacle to moving 
forward...." The U.S. and NATO have justified their non-ratification of the 
Adapted Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty by demanding that Russia withdraw 
a small handful of peacekeepers it maintains in post-conflict zones in 
Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Transdniester. Had those forces been withdrawn 
earlier under Western pressure, Georgia's invasion of South Ossetia in 2008, 
coordinated with an attack on Abkhazia, might have proven successful for its 
American-trained army. 

Part of Clinton's self-serving interpretation of the CFE Treaty is "the right 
of host countries to consent to stationing foreign troops in their territory." 
That is, U.S. and NATO and decidedly not Russia troops. There can be no spheres 
of influence in former Soviet space - except the West's.

Her understanding of an autonomous Europe not "besieged" by Russia and Iran - 
and North Korea - includes not only stationing American troops on its soil but 
also nuclear weapons, hundreds of which are still housed in NATO bases in 
several European countries. "President Obama declared the long-term goal of a 
world without nuclear weapons. As long as these weapons exist, the United 
States will maintain a safe, secure, and effective arsenal to deter any 
adversary, and we will guarantee that defense to our allies.

"[W]e are conducting a comprehensive Nuclear Posture Review to chart a new 
course that strengthens deterrence and reassurance for the United States and 
our allies...." Clinton didn't indicate which European nations have requested 
to be placed under the Pentagon's nuclear shield. 

After her presentation Clinton answered questions from the audience at the 
French Military Academy.

Her extemporaneous comments were even more revealing that her prepared text.

They included:

"When it comes to NATO, I think that greater integration on the European 
continent provides even more opportunity for the level of cooperation to 
increase.

"But I think, given the complexity of the world today, closer cooperation and 
more complementarity between the EU and NATO is in all of our interests to try 
to forge common policies – economic and development and political and legal on 
the one hand in the EU, and principally security on the other hand in NATO. But 
as I said in my remarks, they are no longer separated. It’s hard to say that 
security is only about what it was when NATO was formed, and the EU has no role 
to play in security issues."

NATO's new Strategic Concept lays particular emphasis on the advancement - 
indeed the culmination - of U.S.-EU-NATO global military integration. [12]

Regarding the implementation of that project, Clinton stipulated the issue of 
energy wars. "[I]t would be the EU’s responsibility to create policies that 
would provide more independence and protections from intimidation when it comes 
to energy markets from member nations. But I can also see how in certain cases 
respecting energy, there may be a role for NATO as well."

When asked about what in recent years has been referred to as Global NATO 
"extending the boundaries of NATO to non-Western countries, emerging powers 
like Brazil, India, other democracies that might fulfill their criteria," 
Clinton advocated a series of expanding partnerships in addition to the 
Partnership for Peace, Adriatic Charter, Mediterranean Dialogue, Istanbul 
Cooperation Initiative, Contact Country, Trilateral Afghanistan-Pakistan-NATO 
Military Commission and others that take in over a third of the nations in the 
world:

"How do we cooperate across geographic distance with countries in other 
hemispheres, different geopolitical challenges? And there is a modern living 
example of that with the NATO ISAF commitment in Afghanistan.

"In many ways, it’s quite remarkable, the success of this alliance. Yesterday 
at the London conference on Afghanistan, as you know, the United States, under 
President Obama, has agreed to put 30,000 more troops in Afghanistan. And 
member nations, NATO and ISAF – the international partners – have come up with 
a total of 9,000 more troops....NATO is leading the way, but NATO has to 
determine in what ways it can cooperate with others. I think that the world 
that we face of failing states, non-state actors, networks of terrorists, rogue 
regimes – North Korea being a prime example – really test the international 
community. And it’s a test we have to pass. Now, there are some who say this is 
too complicated, it is out of area, it is not our responsibility. But given the 
nature of the threats we face, I don’t think that’s an adequate response.

"[C]yber security breaches, concerted attacks on networks and countries, are 
likely to cross borders. We have to know how to defend against them and we have 
to enlist nations who are likeminded to work with. Similarly, with energy 
problems, attacks on pipelines, attacks on container ships, attacks on electric 
grids will have consequences far beyond boundaries. And it won’t just be NATO 
nations. NATO nations border non-NATO nations."
 
A small consortium of Western nations, two in North America and 26 in Europe - 
though most of the latter are nothing more than slavishly subservient junior 
partners - has appointed itself, for its own interests, the arbiter of world 
affairs in all matters from judging the political legitimacy of governments to 
who receives energy supplies from whom to the most urgent question of all, when 
and against whom wars can be launched. [13]

Clinton's speech in Paris has signaled her country's intention to formalize and 
extend that role throughout the world in the 21st century.


1) http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2010/01/136280.htm
2) http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2010/01/135930.htm
3) U.S., NATO Expand Afghan War To Horn Of Africa And Indian Ocean
   Stop NATO, January 8, 2010
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/01/08/u-s-nato-expand-afghan-war-to-horn-of-africa-and-indian-ocean-2
4) http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2010/01/136151.htm
5) http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2010/01/136159.htm
6) New York Times, January 29, 2010
7) New York Times, January 30, 2010 
8) http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2010/01/136273.htm
9) Berlin Wall: From Europe Whole And Free To New World Order
   Stop NATO, November 9, 2009
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/11/09/berlin-wall-from-europe-whole-and-free-to-new-world-order
 
10) Berlin Wall: From Europe Whole And Free To New World Order
    Stop NATO, November 9, 2009
    
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/11/09/berlin-wall-from-europe-whole-and-free-to-new-world-order
11) Eastern Partnership: The West’s Final Assault On the Former Soviet Union
    Stop NATO, February 13, 2009
    
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/08/26/eastern-partnership-the-wests-final-assault-on-the-former-soviet-union
12) EU, NATO, US: 21st Century Alliance For Global Domination
    Stop NATO, February 19, 2009
    
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/08/26/eu-nato-us-21st-century-alliance-for-global-domination
13) EU, NATO, US: 21st Century Alliance For Global Domination
    Stop NATO, February 19, 2009
    
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/08/26/eu-nato-us-21st-century-alliance-for-global-domination
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