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Rothschild Money Trust

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190<br />

no longer obtains, since England is now at war with France.<br />

False Albion treacherously turned upon her former ally,<br />

France, and destroyed many of her ships and killed more than<br />

1200 of her seamen. The battle, if it may be so dignified, is thus<br />

described by the magazine "Time" :<br />

"In the night of July 2-3 (1940) at various ports of<br />

England and Scotland, armed parties of British officers and<br />

men quietly boarded all major French ships berthed with the<br />

home fleet, mostly at Portsmouth and Plymouth."<br />

They were not able to do this at Oran, which is in French<br />

waters, and so they slipped up in the night and mined the waters<br />

around the French ships while they were riding peacefully and<br />

unsuspectingly at anchor. The British commander then demanded<br />

their surrender and upon being refused opened up a<br />

murderous fire without warning that destroyed and damaged<br />

a number of French ships and killed 1200 men. The British<br />

sustained no losses for the reason that the French did not expect<br />

an attack by their former ally, their ships were not steamed<br />

up and consequently they were in no position to maneuver their<br />

guns and to fight.<br />

This was another great British victory () and so hailed<br />

by the Jew press of England and America. It was another Altmark<br />

victory. The only two British victories in this war to date<br />

have been against an unarmed foe and in violation of the rules<br />

of civilized warfare. No savage would have attacked a prostrate<br />

friend without provocation.<br />

French Foreign Minister Baudouin said of it: "Mr. Churchill<br />

is guilty of an act of aggression, which is without precedent<br />

in the history of the world;" that Britain "must shoulder the<br />

blame for the loss of the war for she selfishly thought of the<br />

defense of the British Isles and provided only a minimum military<br />

aid to France." He later stated that France had furnished<br />

three million men and Britain only two hundred thousand.<br />

Baudouin said further that "the British saved four-fifths of<br />

their troops from Flanders, embarking them from Dunkerque,<br />

while the French lost half of their forces; that the British furnished<br />

only 14,000 troops for rear guard operation and the rest<br />

of the 200,000 were French." He might have added that the<br />

French lost 1,900,000 men in killed, injured and prisoners, which<br />

is nine times the number of soldiers furnished by Britain, and<br />

more than forty times British casualties.<br />

And now the British have several French ships bottled up

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