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THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS<br />

Before World War I, the Illuminati, using various influential groups in the United States and<br />

Great Britain, urged the creation of an organization to promote world peace, even though George<br />

Washington warned against involvement with foreign nations. President Wilson favored the idea,<br />

and echoed those sentiments in his famous “Peace Without Victory” speech before the Senate.<br />

He proposed his idea of a League of Nations to the Senate in 1917, seeing it as a means of<br />

preventing another World War. It would provide “collective security,” or in other words, an<br />

attack on one, would be considered an attack on all. The League would also help in the<br />

arbitration of international disputes, the reduction of armaments, and the development of open<br />

diplomacy.<br />

The armistice ending World War I on November 11, 1918, was negotiated on the basis of<br />

Wilson’s “Fourteen Points” and on June 28, 1919, was included in the Treaty of Versailles, a 20year<br />

truce which divided up Europe, setting the stage for World War II. It demanded that<br />

Germany pay war reparations to the victorious countries. The Allies maintained that “since<br />

Germany was responsible for the War she was liable for the costs and damages incurred by the<br />

victors.” This amount was set at $32 billion, plus interest; which called for annual payments of<br />

$500 million, plus a 26% surcharge on exports. The agreement forced Germany to forfeit some<br />

of her prime provinces, colonies, and natural resources. They signed away their rights, had to<br />

make trade concessions, and lost what property they had in those foreign countries.<br />

The Treaty was widely criticized. David Lloyd George, the Prime Minister of England, said:<br />

“We have written a document that guarantees war in 20 years ... When you place conditions on a<br />

people (Germany) that it cannot possibly keep, you force it to either breech the agreement or to<br />

war. Either we modify that agreement, and make it tolerable to the German people, or when the<br />

new generation comes along they will try again.” Lord Curzon, the British Foreign Secretary,<br />

said: “This is no peace, this is only a truce for twenty years!” Even President Wilson was<br />

reported to have said: “If I were a German, I think I should never sign it.”<br />

The League of Nations was signed and sealed at the Paris Peace Conference. Even though the<br />

United States was represented by Wilson, Col. House was calling the shots. Bernard Baruch,<br />

who, as head of the War Industries Board made about $200,000,000 for himself, was also in the<br />

American delegation at the Paris Conference; as well as, Walter Lippman (who later became a<br />

syndicated newspaper columnist), Allen Dulles (who was appointed Director of the CIA in<br />

1951), John Foster Dulles (brother of Allen, who later became the Secretary of State under<br />

Eisenhower), and Christian Herter (who became Secretary of State after the death of Dulles).<br />

English Prime Minister George was accompanied by Sir Philip Sassoon, a member of the British<br />

Privy Council and a direct descendant of Amschel Rothschild. Georges Clemenceau, the French<br />

Prime Minister, had at his side, his advisor, Georges Mandel, also known as Jeroboam<br />

Rothschild.<br />

The citizens of the United States refused to accept the League of Nations, because they felt it<br />

would draw them into future European conflicts. Frank B. Kellogg (who in 1925 became<br />

Secretary of State under Coolidge), inspired by the American “outlawry of war” movement, and<br />

supported by those who were disappointed at the failure of the United States to enter the League,<br />

proposed a pact to the French Foreign Minister, Aristide Briand in the spring of 1927. Its purpose<br />

was to create alliances directed against a possible resurgence of German aggression. This Pact of<br />

Paris was signed on August 27, 1928, by 65 nations, who promised to settle all international<br />

disputes by peaceful means.

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