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Vatican Assassins

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Chapter 37 509<br />

follies – ‘the blunders’ – tragic to so many allied soldiers and their<br />

families (including Shriner Freemason Bob Dole). For much of the next<br />

year, the Allies fought against stiff resistance up the spine of the<br />

mountains, an excuse being made that they lacked boats to make the<br />

strategically obvious landing near Rome. But that such was just an<br />

excuse is made plain by the way in which the one major amphibious<br />

landing in Italy at Anzio was conducted. They landed, and waited on<br />

the beach for forty-eight hours for the Germans, caught by surprise, to<br />

arrive. Reconnaissance jeeps went out, reaching the outskirts of Rome<br />

and the invasion force could have followed; but instead, the force stayed<br />

put so they could have several months of World War I style trench<br />

warfare which resulted in the deliberate sacrifice of all but six of<br />

Darby’s seven hundred U.S. Rangers, betrayed by their High Command.<br />

The policies of Roosevelt and Churchill [Churchill, like Hitler, also<br />

advocated the 19 th Century Jesuit doctrine of an “International Jewish<br />

Conspiracy”] – who throughout the war maintained an active personal<br />

correspondence with Mussolini (the man who restored the Temporal<br />

Power to the Jesuits’ “infallible” Pope) – were carried out to perfection,<br />

and the taking of Rome with its <strong>Vatican</strong>, the second capital of the Axis,<br />

was delayed until June 5, 1944, one day before ‘D-Day’. So rather than<br />

the Roman Catholic hierarchy being embarrassed for its support of the<br />

Axis, its shame was quickly driven off the front pages by the Normandy<br />

Invasion, the Allies having ‘failed’ to timely capture Rome.<br />

July 1944 to April 1945<br />

The Division of Europe, placing Lutheran Protestant Prussia and<br />

East Germany under the Inquisition of Atheistic Communism.<br />

At least three major ‘blunders’ had to take place to keep the American-<br />

English Allies from taking Berlin and Eastern Germany. First, there<br />

was the failure to destroy the critical core of the German army in the<br />

West by the basic maneuver of an encircling action, the closing of ‘the<br />

Falaise Pocket’ in France allowing two hundred thousand Germans to<br />

escape while ensuring the blood-bath called ‘The Battle of the Bulge’.<br />

Secondly, there was the complete intelligence ‘breakdown’ on the side<br />

of the Allies that ‘failed’ to recognize that the beefed up and returned<br />

German Army was about to attempt the breakthrough known as ‘the<br />

Battle of the Bulge’. Thirdly, there was the prevention of General<br />

Patton’s Army from blitzkrieging into Berlin and East Germany (where<br />

the German people were ready to welcome Americans and surrender to<br />

them, as this was the hope of the German Army in the East, fighting<br />

The Jesuits – 1914 - 1945

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