-Caveat Lector-

I am sending this piece in plain text because of the size.  I hope you
will cut and paste the sites and follow thru on the material, as tedious
as it may be.  If you do, you will be way ahead of the crowd that is
waiting for others to tell them what is happening.

Why am I sending this? The European Union is growing and may surpass the
US in power. This can affect the military decisions and economic
position of the United States.  (Read jobs and military decisions.)
Cooperation with the EU and Solana will cause cultural changes which
will affect monotheists.  The European Union is taking a pro-Palestinian
stand.  (Strange as the coincidence may seem, Hitler attempted to
destroy the Jews first because they were the smallest group.)  Javier
Solana is the key player in European Union activities.  There is very
definitely a New Age political face to this power...growth of a single
governmental power, dislike of monotheism and the morality it promotes.
Sounds like another movement that grew in the 20's and '30s.  Many who
read this would like to see monotheistic religion dropped as a
determinant of a culture's morality.  I can only remind them that power
corrupts.

Constance Cumbey has been following Solana's activities since 1995.  She
recently called attention to an important statement by Solana.

This is the story on which the email subject line and the following two
comments are based:

http://straitstimes.asia1.com.sg/world/story/0,4386,165132,00.html

It should be interesting to see how Solana and company want to settle
the situation in the Mideast without taking Judaism and Islam into
account.  Probably all will be told you can have your rituals and
spirituality in public, but keep your own morality in your house, behind
closed doors if it is in disagreement in any way with what the decreed
public morality is ordered to be.

1.  This is a transcript of AM broadcast at 08:00 AEST on local radio.
EU says US letting religion drive its foreign policy
AM - Thursday, January  9, 2003 8:03
LINDA MOTTRAM: America and its allies continue to prepare for a war in
Iraq but Europe is attempting to assert its position more strongly with
the EU's foreign policy chief accusing the US of letting religion drive
its policy on Iraq and terrorism.

The European Union's High Representative on Foreign Policy, Javier
Solana, made the comments as the German media reported that UN weapons
inspectors have failed to find proof of US assertions that Iraq has
resumed production of biological weapons.

Rafael Epstein reports.

RAFAEL EPSTEIN: When President George W. Bush described Iran, Iraq and
North Korea as an axis of evil, it failed to impress the continent where
such a phrase has historical resonance.

EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana says the choice of language of the
two sides of the Atlantic is revealing.

He says the US tendency for its foreign policy to swing between going it
alone and working with bodies like the UN is a tendency that now more
than ever is being swung by religion.

He says the US is increasingly looking at things in a religious context.
He told the Financial Times newspaper, the US stance is "all or nothing,
for us Europeans it's difficult to deal with because we are secular. We
do not see the world in such black and white terms."

That contrasts with his words immediately after the September 11 attacks
when he offered Europe support with a qualification.

JAVIER SOLANA: A blank cheque, we'd never have given a blank cheque to
anybody as far as Europe is concerned. That the American people, the
American government, the American Institutions, they know, that they can
count on the European people, European institutions, European
governments.

RAFAEL EPSTEIN: Europe appears unable to muster enthusiasm for a war.
Today, a German newspaper, Die Tageszeitung, claims the UN's chief
weapons inspector Hans Blix, will reject many of the claims made by the
UK and US governments against Saddam Hussein.

The paper says, UN inspectors have failed to find evidence of claims
that Iraq has resumed production of biological warfare agents at key
sites.

And with Greece now in control of the EU's rotating presidency, their
foreign minister, George Papandreou has announced he'll visit seven Arab
states in February. A time when the weapons inspectors will have
reported to the Security Council and the US could be building support
for a war.

Mr Papandreou says all possible hope for a peaceful settlement has not
been exhausted.

GEORGE PAPANDREOU: We very much want to see that we can follow, we can
have a positive development with Iraq.

That is the full implementation of the UN resolutions and I think this
is what will guarantee that we will have peace. So we certainly would
like to get that message across.


 Transcripts on this website are created by an independent transcription
service. The ABC does not warrant the accuracy of the transcripts. ABC
Online users are advised to listen to the audio provided on this page to
verify the accuracy of the transcripts.


©2003 ABC | Privacy Policy
------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
2.  Solana's 'Theory of Relativity'
Hal Lindsey's commentary
Posted: January 9, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com


I was fascinated to read a report in the London Financial Times
explaining why it is that our erstwhile European allies seem to be on
the opposite side of any equation in which the United States is a
factor...... Solana's view of European morality, there are no absolutes
because God is irrelevant, if he exists at all. Therefore, there is no
good or evil. Everything is relative. The notions of "good" and "evil"
are simply religious superstitions that the "mature societies" of Europe
have long since abandoned.

Solana pooh-poohs the Bush administration notion that terrorism is the
overriding threat to international security and order. He scoffs at the
Bush administration's refusal to deal directly with Yasser Arafat, for
example, simply because Arafat is a terrorist.

It is because of Bush's religiosity, together with the influence of the
Jewish lobby that keeps America from solving the Middle East peace
question. "We just have a very different political analysis over how to
deal with Arafat … where we try to pursue engagement rather than
isolation," says Solana.

Solana's political solution is to view Arab terrorism as a cry for
political legitimacy. Israel's unwillingness to allow the Arabs to be
"legitimate" by destroying them is based in religion, not survival. It
is truly amazing that some 6 million Israelis are able to deny
approximately 120 million Arabs political legitimacy.

Where is Solana's head when al-Qaida states openly that it is really an
Islamic war against Christians and Jews? Is he completely ignorant of at
least the last 100 years of Middle East history?

Solana and all of his sophisticated Europeans need to remember that it
was "the religiously driven American morality" that caused us three
times in the last century to come to their aid and save their bacon –
World War I, World War II and the "Cold War."



In any case, it goes a long way toward explaining why America and Israel
find themselves increasingly isolated in an increasingly hostile world.

Israel and America are the only two nations on earth who claim their
right to exist was granted them by God. That offends the secular
humanist architects of the European superstate.

Apparently, it offends them even more than the terrorists' claim that
their right to threaten their very existence was granted them by Allah.

It isn't all religion that Solana finds offensive. Only the
superstitious American Christians and the evil Zionist Jews......

------------------------------------------------------------------------
---
THE FOLLOWING ARE SIGNPOSTS WHICH CAN BE USED TO JUDGE THE GROWING POWER
OF SOLANA AND THE EUROPEAN UNION.  GO TO THE SITES TO SEE THE ENTIRE
STORIES.

1.Draft Charter for Europe Points the Way to a Bigger World Role
October 29, 2002, Tuesday
By PAUL MELLER
Foreign Desk - 519 words

BRUSSELS, Oct. 28 - A draft constitution for an enlarged European Union
was unveiled today, pointing the way toward creating a greater European
presence on the world stage. But as it heads there, Europe has to decide
on a name.

The draft document was prepared under the leadership of Valéry Giscard
d'Estaing, the former president of France. It seeks to raise Europe's
profile by proposing common foreign, security and defense policies.

These policies are now handled by national governments. Britain and
France, for example, sit on the United Nations Security Council, but the
European Union is not a member of the United Nations.

Eastward enlargement of the 15-nation union was the main factor that
prompted the review of the European Union's constitution. In 2004, the
union is expected to take in 10 new members, largely from the former
Soviet bloc to the east, almost doubling its size.

With about 445 million citizens, the European Union will have a much
larger population than the United States, something the drafters of the
constitution want reflected in its role in international affairs.

The draft constitution leaves many of the questions it poses unanswered.
The 15-page document is little more than a skeleton containing chapter
headings.

The debate about its final shape will continue through to next summer,
when a final version will be handed over to heads of state for
ratification.

The draft constitution examines the role of the European Union's foreign
policy chief, currently Xavier Solana, with a view to elevating the
position to the level enjoyed in the United States by the secretary of
state.

It also suggests creating an elected president for the union and a
Congress of the Peoples of Europe, consisting of members of both
European and national parliaments.

The expansion of the European Union will require new ways for the
organization to operate internally. The draft constitution seeks to curb
member states' rights to veto important union decisions.

''There'll be very few cases left'' that require a unanimous vote, Mr.
Giscard d'Estaing said at a news conference last week after a meeting
with European heads of state.

Then there is the question of what Europe plans to call itself. The
document suggests four names: the European Union, as it is now called,
the European Community, United Europe, or -- most contentious of all --
the United States of Europe.

''This translates into nothing less than a constitution for a federal
E.U. state,'' said Jens-Peter Bonde, a Dane who is a member of the
European Parliament but who is considered a Euroskeptic.

''There will be opposition from those who think there is too little
democracy in this,'' he said, ''and opposition from those who like me
say this is the creation of a state and not cooperation among states.''


2.  http://dawsonspeek.com/

An excellent site looking at Israel's situation from the right.  There
is an excellent article which talks of the Quartet's meeting on the
Middle East paralleled with a similar summit meeting in the '40s.
Another excellent article talks about the Muslim attacks on Christians.
---------------------------------------------------------

3.  EU team plans peace mission

Ian Black in Brussels
Thursday January 9, 2003
The Guardian

Europe is to undertake a diplomatic mission to the Arab world to try to
avert war in Iraq, the first time it has attempted to act collectively
in the crisis.

George Papandreou, foreign minister of Greece, current holder of the
EU's rotating presidency, said yesterday that the effort would seek to
persuade Arab countries to mediate between Baghdad and the US.

Greek officials said the trip, still in the planning stage, would take
place in early or mid February and would include visits to Syria,
Jordan, Lebanon and Sa.....

4.  EU tells America to toe the UN line

'Slippage' in US plans as Solana spells out Europe's misgivings

Ian Black in Athens and Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington Saturday
January 11, 2003 The Guardian

Transatlantic differences over Iraq threatened to set back America's
timeline for an invasion yesterday when the European Union warned the US
that there could be no war against Saddam Hussein without clear proof
that he holds banned weapons.

Javier Solana, the EU's foreign policy chief, issued a blunt reminder to
Washington that only the UN security council could determine whether
military action was justified.

European governments and public opinion believe overwhelmingly at this
stage that it is not justified, because the work of weapons inspectors
has been inconclusive. ......
--------------------------------------
5. http://www.euobserver.com/index.phtml?aid=8928

Solana issues warning over widening EU-US gulf
-------------------
6. http://www.euobserver.com/index.phtml?aid=7919
Solana: Europe to become a Super Power
----------------------
7.EU proposed to have seats on UN security council

"The EU ought to take over the permanent seats on the UN Security
Council," says Göran Persson's secretary of state. (Photo: UN) "The EU
ought to take over the permanent seats of France and Britain in the UN
Security Council", says Lars Danielsson, secretary of state to Swedish
prime minister, Göran Persson. Lars Danielsson also said that he saw no
reason for changing the power balance among the EU institutions.



Press Articles  Löntagarnas Europaportal, in Swedish

09.10.2002 - 08:36 CET
------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
8.  http://www.euobserver.com/index.phtml?aid=5399
04.03.2002 - 08:28 CET

EU to set up intelligence services

The 15 heads of state are expected to approve an extension of the
mandate of the EU rapid reaction force to include the fight against
international terrorism, an objective for which the Spanish presidency
of the EU has been fighting for. (Photo: These Tides) The European Union
countries are set to pool resources to set up an intelligence services
office to give the EU an intelligence arm to complement its budding
defence capabilities to help fight terrorism.

Europe’s foreign affairs chief Javier Solana will head EU’s first
intelligence services, which would gather staff from national
intelligence services across EU. The plans are set to be endorsed by the
EU leaders when they gather in the Spanish city Seville, in June,
reports
The Guardian.

Mandate of EU military force extended
The 15 heads of state are expected to approve an extension of the
mandate of the EU rapid reaction force to include the fight against
international terrorism, an objective for which the Spanish presidency
of the EU has been fighting for. In an interview with The Guardian, the
Spanish defence minister Federico Trillo unveils that Mr Solana is
already preparing to taking over this function and to add new
responsibilities to those of chief of the EU foreign policy.

Other important aspects of the new anti-terror function the EU will take
over include plans to develop a coordinated reaction to biological,
chemical or nuclear terrorist attacks on EU soil and a military element
for air traffic.

"European citizens expect their governments to give the union a capacity
to defend itself against possible terrorist attacks from the exterior,”
Mr Trillo said. "September 11 has shown that Europe as a union does not
have a capacity to confront these sort of threats," added the Spanish
minister. The European Union has developed a defence policy with a
60,000 strong rapid reaction force, military staff and a political and
security committee in Brussels, under the lead of Javier Solana.

EU states reluctance
However, the major shortcoming for the future EU army would be the poor
intelligence gathering capacities, further weakened by the reluctance of
large EU states to share information with the EU defence office.
According to the Spanish defence minister, EU states start overcoming
their reluctance: “This does not weaken any country's intelligence
capabilities. This is not a new intelligence service, nor a joint
intelligence service. It is a question of coordinating the efforts of
the different services relative to information on terrorism from the
outside," reports The Guardian.

Given the sensitive position of Spain in relation to terrorism, Mr
Trillo points out that the future EU intelligence network would only be
used to fight external terrorist threats, and not against groups such as
ETA, the Basque separatist group.

Press Articles  The Guardian

Written by Daniela Spinant
Edited by Lisbeth Kirk

--------------------------------------------------------------
(See the Dawson speaks site for information on the Quartet)

9.  http://europa-eu-un.org/article.asp?id=1890
Joint statement by the Quartet on the Middle East

Summary
December 20, 2002: Joint statement by the Quartet on the Middle East
after the meeting in Washington
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Russian Foreign Minister
Igor Ivanov, Danish Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller, High
Representative for European Common Foreign and Security Policy Javier
Solana, and European Commissioner for External Affairs Chris Patten met
today in Washington with President Bush and Secretary of State Powell.
In his meeting, President Bush expressed strong support for the efforts
of the Quartet and his firm commitment to the Quartet’s roadmap, which
would realize his vision of two states -- Israel and Palestine -- living
side-by-side in peace and security. Etc.

10.  http://www.jpost.com/Editions/2001/11/21/Opinion/Opinion.38489.html

Who are you calling stupid, Dr. Solana?
By Michael Freund November, 21 2001
-------------------------------------------------------------

11. And from [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://search.ft.com/search/article.html?id=030107005768&query=Solana&vs
c_appId=totalSearch&state=Form

Read and be aware.  Which side will Europe take when we are embroiled in
a great war? Lee

Solana fears widening gulf between EU and US
By Judy Dempsey
FT.com site; Jan 07, 2003

The public face of Javier Solana rarely changes.

The European Union's foreign policy chief, or High Representative, is
adept at schmoozing, smiling and patting colleagues on the shoulder,
reluctant to utter a controversial word. It has been his official image
since taking office in etc.

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