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The Rothschild Dynasty 115<br />

addition to this treachery, England and France, by <strong>the</strong><br />

terms of <strong>the</strong> Sykes Picot Treaty agreed to divide <strong>the</strong> Arab<br />

lands between <strong>the</strong>m at <strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong> war.<br />

I pondered for months over <strong>the</strong> statement of Toynbee,<br />

because Toynbee's background and affiliations made it highly<br />

unlikely that he would express feelings in <strong>the</strong> least bit critical of<br />

<strong>the</strong> Zionists or of his mentors, Rockefeller and Rothschild.<br />

According to documents in <strong>the</strong> War Office files (and copies in <strong>the</strong><br />

British Museum) Toynbee was <strong>the</strong> protege of Lord Bryce, a<br />

follower of <strong>the</strong> Philosophical Radicals. Toynbee followed in <strong>the</strong><br />

footsteps of Bryce by writing an article for <strong>the</strong> Encyclopedia<br />

Britannica, 9 th Edition.<br />

The article was entitled German Terror in France: A<br />

Historical Record and it was an unabashed exercise in anti-<br />

German propaganda, published, significantly in New York in<br />

1917. Obviously, it was an incitement to help President Wilson<br />

with his battle to drag America into <strong>the</strong> war in Europe. Though<br />

none of <strong>the</strong> claims of German brutality could be substantiated —<br />

never<strong>the</strong>less, <strong>the</strong> article was widely accepted as true.<br />

It was just <strong>the</strong> kind of justification Wilson needed from a<br />

Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford, as <strong>the</strong> reason why America<br />

needed to send her sons to die in France "to make <strong>the</strong> world safe<br />

for democracy."<br />

We next hear of Toynbee when he was appointed as a<br />

Member of <strong>the</strong> British Delegation to <strong>the</strong> Paris Peace Conference,<br />

- hardly <strong>the</strong> prestigious position that he would jeopardize at <strong>the</strong><br />

time of his planned future with <strong>the</strong> Royal Institute for<br />

International Affairs, <strong>the</strong> Foreign Policy arm of <strong>the</strong> Committee of<br />

300.<br />

As such, Toynbee must have been intimately familiar<br />

with <strong>the</strong> promises made to <strong>the</strong> Sheriff of Mecca, Hussein bin Ali<br />

and Colonel Lawrence, and <strong>the</strong> magnitude of <strong>the</strong> subsequent<br />

betrayal of <strong>the</strong> trust of <strong>the</strong>se two men, who had made possible<br />

British victory over <strong>the</strong> Turks.

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