The Continuing Breakup of Nations

02 Nov 2007

November 2, 2007 (LPAC)--For the Financial Times to devote attention to three particular fronts of the oligarchy's strategy for the "Breakup of Nations," reflects both processes engineered by City of London circles as well as the role of the City "ministry for propaganda" in spreading self-fulfilling prophecies. Balkans, Caucasus and, of course, Belgium are the target of attention. On the Belgian front next Tuesday, the 1988 record length for a government crisis will be hit, with 149 consecutive days. The stalemate is provoked by the separatist drive on the Brussels district issue which, if conceded, can unleash the breakup of Belgium altogether.

The newest development is in Georgia, where Rupert Murdoch just bought the main opposition TV and, with it, the main opposition leader, Patarkatsishvili. Although the current Georgia government is hostile to Russia, the Kremlin was the first to react saying that Murdoch is buying the opposition. The fact is that Patarkatsishvili is reported to be close to Berezovsky, and that his long-term plan is to bring monarchy back to Georgia! The FT interviews the head of Murdoch's NewsCorp for Europe, whose name is Marty Pompadur.

In the Balkans, yesterday the head of the Bosnian government resigned. The whole situation there is rigged from the outside, if one realizes that the EU high commissioner for Bosnia is a Slovenian, Miroslav Lajcak, which guarantees partiality on post-Jugoslavian affairs from the start. Also, one should ask whose hand is using the Slovenian glove in this highly intricate situation, where a regional-only approach is aimed at failure. The EU, by applying policies of supranational government, is working as a tool of the British Empire.

Bosnian premier Nikola Spiric, in resigning yesterday, said that with Lajcak's role, "it does not matter if I am the head of that state, or Bart Simpson." Apparently, the current issue is Lajcak's decision to enforce a majority rule system seen by the "Republika Serbska" as discriminatory.

In the Balkan context, a major provocation was defused by the Italian government last Monday, when it stopped the planned issue of a postal stamp featuring the former Italian city of Fiume (Rijaka), currently part of Croatia. The stamp, planned by a minister of the previous Berlusconi government, would have unleashed an uproar in Croatia adding fuel to the flames.

To round up the picture, two days ago, the US.. issued an ultimatum on Kosovo, soliciting the EU and Russia to agree on a solution for independence at the next meeting on Nov. 10, or the US will withdraw its troops next January. That is the message that both Stephen Hadley and Robert Gates delivered to visiting Italian Defense minister Arturo Parisi on Oct. 29-30, according to Il Giornale.