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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2003 11:13:26 -0500
From: John Perna <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: John Birch Discuss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Inside the United Nations by Bonta

http://www.jbs.org/visitor/products/bkiun.htm
Inside the United Nations

            Inside the United Nations by Bonta - $4.95


               The United Nations has been in existence for more than a half-century, 
but its origins and objectives remain misunderstood by many Americans. This book is a 
brief, readable introduction to the United Nations, and to the people who created it 
and support it. Inside the United Nations goes beyond the public relations campaign of 
the UN to examine the hard reality of the UN system-and its dangerous objectives. 
(2003, 127pp, pb)

            Expected ship date is March 26, 2003.

            1 copy - $4.95 - Order
            10 copies - $39.50 - Order





BOOK REVIEW
Reprinted with permission from The New American magazine, March 24, 2003

Inside the United Nations - A Critical Look at the UN, by Steve Bonta, Appleton, 
Wisconsin: The John Birch Society, 2003, 127 pages, paperback.

At a February 21st press conference, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer was asked if 
U.S. support of the UN Security Council was "conditional in the future on their 
agreeing with the United States on the course of action in Iraq." Fleischer responded 
by pointing out that "the President said to [UN Secretary-General] Kofi Annan this 
morning that the role the Security Council plays is important and continues to be 
important." Dissatisfied with this noncommittal answer, the reporter then pressed for 
a more definite statement. "Well," Fleischer responded, "the President has said what 
is important is that the word of the United Nations be honored."

This has been the Bush administration's position from the beginning of the current 
Iraq "crisis." The impending war or occupation will not be carried out to defend the 
United States, but to enforce the UN's will and bolster its power and authority. In 
his September 12, 2002 address to the UN General Assembly, President Bush himself 
declared that this was his administration's goal. "Iraq has answered a decade of U.N. 
demands with a decade of defiance," said the president. "All the world now faces a 
test, and the United Nations a difficult and defining moment. Are Security Council 
resolutions to be honored and enforced, or cast aside without consequence? Will the 
United Nations serve the purpose of its founding, or will it be irrelevant?"

The American people should consider this question as well, especially since it is they 
who will bear the burden of underwriting, through their blood and treasure, the 
expansion of the world body's authority and power. To this end, the publication of 
Steve Bonta's new book Inside the United Nations is particularly timely. The book 
presents an overview of the UN covering its history, its foundational documents, and 
the activities and initiatives of its major departments and divisions. While only 
meant to serve as a brief introduction to the UN, the book nevertheless convincingly 
dispels the myth of UN benevolence. Mr. Bonta reveals instead that the UN's founders 
clearly intended for the UN to become an eventual world government, an objective 
rapidly being realized.

Born of Secrecy

Pundits and politicians have long portrayed the UN as an organization dedicated to 
peace and justice. Yet, for an organization supposedly dedicated to such a noble 
cause, its origins were peculiarly secretive. Early in the book, Bonta revisits the 
almost covert conference (now euphemistically referred to as "conversations") at 
Dumbarton Oaks that gave rise to the UN. Held in 1944 when national and international 
attention was focused on momentous events in Europe and the Pacific, the conference 
largely escaped public notice. Those media organs attempting to cover the conference 
were barred from the tightly controlled proceedings. Hidden behind the closed doors of 
the stately federal-style mansion was an American delegation composed largely of 
Communist spies and sympathizers. "A number of them," Bonta writes, "including the now 
notorious Alger Hiss, who served as secretary of the conference, were eventually 
unmasked as spies and traitors." Also in the American delegation were Soviet agents 
Victor Perlo - KGB codename RAIDER - and Noel Field, who eventually took refuge behind 
the Iron Curtain. Notably among the Soviet delegation were then-ambassador and later 
foreign minister Andrei Gromyko and the man who at the time was the Soviet foreign 
minister, Vyacheslav Molotov. Note that just a few years before collaborating with 
Hiss in creating the United Nations, Molotov and his Nazi counterpart Joachim von 
Ribbentrop signed the notorious German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact resulting in the 
joint German-Russian partition of Poland at the outset of World War II.

The UN founders' objective was to create an organization that could "take effective 
collective measures for the prevention and removal of threats to the peace and 
suppression of acts of aggression or other breaches of the peace...." Put simply, says 
Bonta in Inside the United Nations, "the United Nations was to be a mechanism for the 
entire world to gang up on any country thought to be a threat." Or, in other words, in 
good Communist fashion, the UN would bring peace to the world through war.

War and Peace

As Bonta notes, the UN's essentially war-like and aggressive nature was apparent to 
seasoned observers from the beginning. Former Undersecretary of State J. Reuben Clark 
argued as early as 1945 that the UN Charter "is a war document not a peace 
document...." Clark predicted that the UN would "not prevent future wars, [and make] 
it practically certain that we shall have future wars, and as to such wars it takes 
from us the power to declare them, to choose the side on which we shall fight, to 
determine what forces and military equipment we shall use in the war, and to control 
and command our sons who do the fighting."

Clark was incredibly prescient. As Bonta writes, "modern warfare since World War II 
has been almost exclusively a by-product of our relationship with the UN." Undeclared 
wars and military engagements fought by U.S. troops under UN authority since 1945 
include Korea, the first Persian Gulf War, Somalia, and the Balkans. None of these 
wars ended in a militarily satisfactory manner, but each affirmed UN authority to wage 
war. Indeed, in 1991 President George Bush predicted that UN success in the first Gulf 
War would provide a "real chance at this new world order, an order in which a credible 
United Nations can use its peacekeeping role to fulfill the vision and promise of the 
UN's founders."

As Inside the United Nations convincingly demonstrates, the vision of the UN's 
founders, and the goal still unerringly sought by the world body and its 
internationalist promoters in America and abroad, is nothing less than the creation of 
a full-fledged world government. Already the UN has progressed far down this road. In 
having an executive branch in the office of the secretary-general, a semblance of a 
parliament in the General Assembly, a sort of Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Security 
Council, central banking institutions in the IMF and World Bank, and a kind of 
judicial system in the World Court and the new International Criminal Court, the UN 
has all the trappings of a modern state.

Steve Bonta is an erudite and accomplished scholar. With penetrating analysis he 
probes all these topics and more. Yet he does so with a light and accessible style, 
making the book an easy read. This was intentional, as the book was conceived and 
designed to reach as wide an audience as possible. The author's clear and lucid prose 
and frank discussion of the issues, as well as his remarkable brevity, will ensure 
that the issue of the UN, the drive for world government, and the future of the United 
States will finally be placed with honesty before the American people.

In sum, Inside the United Nations is a book all Americans should read as the nation 
once again contemplates war on behalf of the UN.

(END OF REVIEW)

I am sending this out to those who I think care enough to read this review and 
consider the purchase of the book.

Knowledge is power...lack of it must be weakness.

To be forewarned is to be forearmed.

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