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communist and ‘neutralist’ countries came to $7 billion. In the February 25, 1961 edition of<br />

People’s World, and the March 10, 1961 issue of Time, Robert Welch, founder of the anticommunist<br />

John Birch Society, charged that the Eisenhower Administration was a tool of the<br />

communists.<br />

THE VIETNAM CONQUEST<br />

As the communists moved forward with their plan for world domination, Southeast Asia was<br />

to be the next target. In July, 1954, Indo-China fell. William Zane Foster, Chairman of the U.S.<br />

Communist Party, said in February, 1956, that they “constitute the beginning of a new socialist<br />

world.”<br />

They moved on to Vietnam, where the U.S. was pulled into a conflict, which was to become<br />

the longest in U.S. history. American intervention actually began in 1954 with economic and<br />

technical assistance, after the Geneva Accords ended the Indo-Chinese War.<br />

Kennedy increased the military budget, and escalated the War just for the purposes of<br />

impressing the Russians after being embarrassed and humiliated by the failed Bay of Pigs<br />

invasion of Cuba. Later, Kennedy planned to begin scaling back.<br />

Vietnam escalated into a major war by 1964, with casualties peaking in 1969.<br />

In 1964, with a possibility that ultra-conservative Barry Goldwater might win the presidency,<br />

a coalition of liberal forces, under the guidance of Illuminati advisors, worked for the election of<br />

former Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, who had taken over after Kennedy’s assassination in<br />

1963. Johnson was urged to pursue “peace at any price,” but the Illuminati didn’t want peace,<br />

and Johnson further escalated the War. At the height of the war, there were about 543,000<br />

American soldiers in Vietnam.<br />

On July 25, 1965, President Johnson told an American television audience that the military<br />

build-up was to administer “death and desolation” to the communists, yet he made agreements to<br />

provide the Soviet Union, and her communist satellite countries, with millions of dollars worth<br />

of food, computers, industrial plants, oil refinery equipment, jet engines, military rifles, and<br />

machine tools for an $800 million automobile production facility. At the same time, our Supreme<br />

Court ruled that communists could teach in our schools, and work in our defense plants; and the<br />

Senate and State Department allowed them to open diplomatic offices in major American cities,<br />

even though FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover warned that their embassies were part of an espionage<br />

network.<br />

Johnson’s war policies severely damaged his chances for re-election, and he was forced to<br />

drop out of the 1968 Primary race.<br />

In 1966, after Averill Harriman had made a 22-day, 12 nation peace tour for Johnson, he was<br />

asked by a television reporter how the Russians felt about the Vietnam War, and Harriman said<br />

they were “embarrassed by the war. They don’t like it and they would like to see it stopped.” A<br />

brilliant piece of propaganda, considering the fact that the Russians were shipping guns,<br />

ammunition, missiles, and MiG fighters to the North Vietnamese.<br />

In 1968, the Congress increased ‘foreign aid’ of war materials to communist bloc countries<br />

by over 80% from the previous year, and this ‘aid’ was then redirected by railroad, to North<br />

Vietnam, who used it to manufacture military equipment.<br />

A peace treaty was signed on January 23, 1973, by the U.S., North and South Vietnam, and<br />

the Vietcong (National Liberation Front, later referred to as the Provisional Revolutionary

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