Maybe some keys here to Timothy McVeigh?   And see how Zionists and
Christian Zionists have from the very beginning set out to destroy Arab
Relations with British and Americans.

Orde once attempted suicide.....is it possible some of this suicide
stuff has a little well, wonder who these these Gideons really are?
Only two have I ever met - one in export import and no doubt Mafia type
and the other, elected politician, former military man, high degree
Mason who about jumped out of his skin when I told him of my bible
calendar in a Gideon bible.

Osama bin Laden did not pulll off the World Trade Center or Pentagon
job......look for the hand in the clouds - the one who set off the
religious zealots as someone set off Oswald and Sirhan and this
Hinckley.......

Its all in the cards - and wonder what the Tarot Card Assassins are
doing today?

Slaughter of the Innocents, Falling towers, and the Fool about to go
over the abyss?

The whole world has been programmed to believe that the USA is the evil
Babylon....and Larry Flynt of course the man is a sodomist, committed
sodomy in public and gives huge amounts of money to the ADL and in
California is such big hero now the little corrupt city officials play
games with him - but this sodomist has become a symbol of freedom of
speech....the man who sat with Christian Zionist Jerry Falwell - and how
much money did they make on that one.......

So we  are to believe we are being punished?   All timed date wise to a
calendr in the Gideon bible with more to come.....shades of Daniel and
Ezekial...

It is all organized crime in disguise - like in Kings, put ashes on
their faces ......for all Kings and Masons are brothers?

Orde winston would go to battle with the bible open to Judges, the part
about Gideon - he built first Israeli Special Forces and Zionism was
given heavy hand...yes it is said Orde was sadistic and once he tried to
cut his own throat....

In other words - he could self destruct - and DRUGS made him capable of
this sadistic act.....wonder, drugs and manchuran candidates - keep
thinking of McVeigh and his messages he left in a Gideon Bible.......

What a way to start the war - just like the Titanic - and guess they
just made a movie of that one too.

I am on our side - the USA and these Christian Zionists should be the
ones investigated.....for it is the Christian Zionists and ADL with Bnai
Brith - well look at ADL Hate List prepared for last year's millennium
when they knew God damned well, the millenium was this year.

CONTRACT IS ON AMERICA.

Check out this Mafia thing for many many clues.  Until that
time........consider WWIII has been planned well ahead and it looks like
a little polluted starving country named Afghanistan will again pay the
price......while others will seek to loot the Temples of Mammon......for
wars against camel drivers are very very expensive.

Christian Zionists ...... Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, Jimmy Swaggart -
note none of these bastards seem to have taken vow of poverty and they
peach doom and gloom to America - they are like doomsdayers and do not
forget Tammy and Jimmy Baker .....so see the difference, get the picture
they want this rubbish to be portrayed as CHRISTIANs when they are
actually, Zionists.    Each complement the other in their own way, but
make a fool out of the legitimate Church........and Robertson in to
Banking?

Saba


Israeli stamp honoring Wingate
(courtesy  Sam Zwetchkenbaum)
The Life
Orde Charles Wingate was a brilliant and unorthodox military leader in
the Second World War. His luminary achievements created a legend in
military history, which is enhanced by the uniqueness of the man's
personality. He helped to develop modern warfare. In British Palestine,
his operations in counter-
insurgency were innovative and almost textbook. The stressing of
well-motivated and trained individuals using initiative, speed, and
surprise helped to lay the groundwork for a future nation's survival. In
Ethiopia, he demonstrated the power of insurgency when the conditions
were right. His ideas on the use of insurgency involved creating a shock
force to compliment the practice of bluff and constant harassment. In
Burma, his campaigns were a precursor to modern mobile warfare. On the
strategic level, he was the first military leader who practiced the
linking of air power with ground forces behind enemy lines to force a
conclusive decision.
Wingate's military exploits etched for him a place in the military arts
as a man of creativity, daringness, and foresight, and controversy. His
skill and character, and luck, ensured that in a half dozen years he
rose from the rank of Captain to Major-General. In each of the three
campaigns, Palestine, Ethiopia, and Burma, the military challenges he
faced and the solutions to them grew in scale. In each of case he
overcame tremendous obstacles and conceived and personally led military
operations. And in each case both admiration and questions arose toward
his ideas and his personality.
Orde Wingate was 41 and a Major-General when he died in a plane crash on
March 24, 1944. He is buried in the U.S. Arlington National Cemetery
with the crew of he perished with. After his death, the three leaders
whose nations he fought for personally wrote to President Truman asking
for a more suitable internment. David Ben-Gurion of the Jewish Agency,
Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, and Prime Minister Winston Churchill
of Great Britain, all had been impressed by the man and his devotion to
their causes.
As a military leader he could inspire great confidence in his men. He
would exhort his troops on to challenges, his charisma elevating them
with his speeches. Wingate generated tremendous loyalty in those who
believed in him and his methods. A hard taskmaster who demanded much but
who in return demanded the best for those who followed, inspiring
confidence. One officer who served with him on both of his missions in
Burma declared "He had more than the accepted qualities of leadership. I
do not know of a single man who served under him who would not have gone
anywhere with him...Wingate appealed to the spiritual not to the
material. We knew that for him, as for Joshua, the walls of Jericho
would fall down." (Tulloch, p.5)

Wingate as he was often viewed,
wearing a rumpled and dirty
uniform with a pith helmet,
sporting a beard.
photograph courtesy of the
Imperial War Museum, London
Loyal and kind to the people he cared for, he could be indecent and
intolerant to those whom he felt opposed his quests. To more conformist
and traditional officers who failed to see his point of view or
understand the potential in his ideas, his ferventness and frequent
rudeness created easily made enemies. For decades after the war debate
and controversy swelled over his proper place in history as his many
detractors denigrated his success. Said British Army commander in Burma,
General Slim, "The trouble was, I think, that Wingate regarded himself
as a prophet, and that always leads to a single-centeredness that verges
on fanaticism, with all its faults. Yet had he not done so, his
leadership could not have been so dynamic, nor his personal magnetism so
striking." (Slim, p.269) In contrast to the soldiers under his command,
to his subordinates on his staff he could be distrustful, impatient, and
wrathful at their actual or imagined mistakes. Said one of his staff
officers in Ethiopia, "Wingate was the most complex character I've ever
met. He has a driving passion and was unnecessarily impatient. Generous
yet self-promoting with enlarged claims. He had a phenomenal memory and
loved holding center stage. Some of his personal habits were a bit
outré. He had great strategic vision but his tactics were poor. He was
not a lovable person but he was a great leader." (Sherriff, p.222)
Another characteristic of the man was his noticeable eccentricities. He
often kept an unkempt appearance with ill-fitting uniforms and an
old-style pith helmet. Large quantities of raw onions were ingested with
the belief they were good for one's health. During the organizing of
Gideon Force in Ethiopia he took to wearing a miniature alarm clock
strapped to his wrist so as to time his interviews. During conversations
with visitors he would rub his naked body with a rubber brush, a
grooming method he preferred to bathing. He claimed "With English of a
certain class, the worst crime you can commit is to be different,
unorthodox, unexpected. I am all those things. The only way to get these
qualities tolerated, if not accepted, is to transform one's
'differences' into eccentricities." (Mosher, p.95)
Wingate was an individual who felt and conceived his convictions and
obstacles with passion. His Zionism was one of the strongest
characteristics of the man, " which he always regarded as the mission he
was destined to fulfill during his life." (Tulloch, p.10) He dreamed of
leading a Jewish army during the war and afterwards in a struggle for
Israel's creation. For his service in Palestine he was awarded the
Palestine General Service Medal. He once said he didn't like to wear it
with pride because he disagreed with British policy there. When
campaigning in Ethiopia and Burma, his Zionism never left him. When
given the Ethiopian mission he asked that his Jewish secretary, Avraham
Akavia, whom had served under him in Palestine, be assigned to him. Upon
his arrival he told him that the war in Ethiopia was a war to liberate a
country from unjust occupation, and so was similar to the Zionist
struggle: "Whoever is a friend of Abyssinia [then common name for
Ethiopia] is a friend of the Jews. If I succeed here I can be of greater
help to the Jews later on. You are here for the sake of Zion." Later, in
a letter from Burma to Akavia he included in his writing the Biblical
phrase, "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand wither."
(Sykes, p.260)

Wingate's Burma unit patch
Wingate was mortal and not immune from personal pain and had his times
of self-doubts and blackness. On one occasion after the ignoring of his
success and rejection from the higher command, suffering from depression
and taking medication he tried to commit suicide with a knife. Wingate
could be verbally and physically abusive during dark periods of his
life, impatient with others. On several occasions he struck Ethiopian
soldiers who made mistakes. During the Burma campaign he threw
uncomfortable and violent tantrums. Wingate was not above manipulating
the facts to his advantage when forced to engage in military politics.
Had he survived the war Ben-Gurion said he would have offered him the
top command in the Israeli Defense Forces. In Israel he is remembered
and revered and among many places, there is a settlement named in his
honor. In Ethiopia he is also respectively remembered, and a school is
named for him. In Britain, there is a tablet to his memory at the school
that he attended. Churchill at the dedication of the Memorial Tablet at
the Charterhouse School spoke of the time he first met and talked with
Wingate: "We had not talked for half an hour before I felt myself in the
presence of a man of the highest quality. It was his genius of
leadership which inspired all who served under him. Here indeed is a
name which deserves lasting honor." (Tulloch, p.2)
(Here is a list of  sources consulted for this website
which also includes additional reading)
Wingate's grave site at Arlington Cemetery
(courtesy of Ron Williams)
select photo for more info
Beginnings
The formal details of his life are the following. He was born on
February 26, 1903 in British India. Orde was one of seven children born
to a military family, his father being a Scottish officer long-serving
in the Indian Army, and his mother being related to  T.E. Lawrence of
Arabia. Growing up in a strict religious home the child of Plymouth
Brethren, he was subject to intensive religious beliefs and Bible study.
Memorizing passages of the Bible was a required task while contact with
children of differing faiths was strictly regulated. Cultural exposures,
the freedom to explore the countryside, and opportunity to develop
self-reliance and initiative were abundant. From this developed a strict
religious attitude toward life, one of a belief in the fear of God and
Original Sin balanced with a hatred of oppression and a disdain for the
ordinary - "he despised the ordinary run of mankind not because of their
foolish habits but for not taking themselves as servants of God's will,
and making a whole thing of their lives" (former girlfriend quoted in
Tulloch, p.41). Though he would go through a period of religious
rebelliousness and abandon the formalities of the Plymouth Bretheren,
his religious mind-set would remain.
In 1921 he entered military service with acceptance to the Royal
Military Academy at Woolwich. He was commissioned a gunnery officer.
>From his experiences there more aspects of his character were developed.
He developed a reputation as a non-conformist and a bit anti-social, yet
what also grew was a distrust toward blind acceptance of authority and a
sympathy for the underdog. An act of bullying hazing and a dressing down
from the Academy Commandant created a sense of humiliation and lonliness
in him he was determined never to experience again. One solution to this
was a zeal to become well educated and mentally agile, a driving energy
to ensure he made his mark on the world.
Wingate showed a distinct seriousness and intensity when setting out to
master whatever task he applied himself to, from hunting and riding to
studying Arabic. To some his unconventionality generated hostility or
bemusement, to others he showed a good sense of humor and humility about
himself. He wrangled an appointment to the British-controlled Sudan. His
father's cousin had been Lord Kitchener's successor in the Sudan as
Governor-General. Wingate served there from 1928 to 1933, leading
patrols against ivory poachers and slave traders. At the end of his tour
he set off on a personal expedition into the Libyan Sand Sea at the
eastern end of the Sahara in an attempt to find a legendary oasis.
Marriage came in 1935, his wife Lorna's quick mind and intelligence a
match and challenge for him.
 In 1936 came orders assigning Wingate to British Palestine in a staff
position. Initially he had been rejected for an appointment to staff
college and such a posting was thought to be unobtainable. But he made
an risky and unconvention-
al, but also studied, approach to solving this career impasse. When the
Chief of the Imperial General Staff happened to be in his area of
manuevers, Wingate approached him. With his permission he formerly
brought to the attention of the commander of the British Army the lack
of a staff appointment in spite of his own record and accomplishments,
and then disdained any ambition to achieve one. The general was
intrigued and looked up his record, and being impressed gave him a staff
position without a Staff College qualification. When Captain Wingate
reported for duty as an intelligence officer, there were no visible
clues as to the future of the young and ambitious British officer. It
was assumed by many that this Arab-speaking officer, with blood
relations to a former governor-general of the Sudan and, and with the
then typical English over-romantic pro-Arab feelings, was going to be no
different then any other British military officer assigned to a colony
of the Empire.

Saba Note:   Pull up all under subject matter -I reproduced this for the
Gideon Bible Connection which traces right to McVeigh, for
instance......

Gideon was a cowardly hit and run terrorist - but a hero to Zonists.


(next: return to home and select   Wingate in Palestine)



http://members.aol.com/Ocwingate/summary2.html


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