The true origins of the two World Wars have been deleted from all our history books and replaced with mythology. Neither War was started (or desired) by Germany, but both at the instigation of a group of European Zionist Jews with the stated intent of the total destruction of Germany. The documentation is overwhelming and the evidence undeniable. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)
That history is being repeated today in a mass grooming of the Western world’s people (especially Americans) in preparation for World War III – which I believe is now imminent.
On September 20, 1961, in the city of Belgrade, the
United States and the Soviet Union signed the McCloy-Zorin Accords. This
remarkable agreement, which calls for “War No Longer”, set guidelines for not
only nuclear disarmament, but complete and general disarmament of all nations
of the world. Should the political will be found to achieve it, the ideas
contained in these Accords can still be used to reach this goal.
John F. Kennedy, the 35th President of the United
States, gave a speech to the United Nations five days after the McCloy-Zorin
Accords were signed. During his speech, he made these statements:
Mr. President, honored
delegates, ladies and gentlemen:
We meet in an hour of grief
and challenge. Dag Hammarskjold is dead. But the United Nations lives. His
tragedy is deep in our hearts, but the task for which he died is at the top of
our agenda. A noble servant of peace is gone. But the quest for peace lies
before us.
The problem is not the death
of one man--the problem is the life of this organization. It will either grow
to meet the challenges of our age, or it will be gone with the wind, without
influence, without force, without respect. Were we to let it die, to enfeeble
its vigor, to cripple its powers, we would condemn our future.
For in the development of
this organization rests the only true alternative to war--and war appeals no
longer as a rational alternative. Unconditional war can no longer lead to
unconditional victory. It can no longer serve to settle disputes. It can no
longer concern the great powers alone. For a nuclear disaster, spread by wind
and water and fear, could well engulf the great and the small, the rich and the
poor, the committed and the uncommitted alike. Mankind must put an end to
war--or war will put an end to mankind.
So let us here resolve that
Dag Hammarskjold did not live, or die, in vain. Let us call a truce to terror.
Let us invoke the blessings of peace. And, as we build an international
capacity to keep peace, let us join in dismantling the national capacity to
wage war.
This will require new
strength and new roles for the United Nations. For disarmament without checks
is but a shadow-and a community without law is but a shell. Already the United
Nations has become both the measure and the vehicle of man's most generous
impulses. Already it has provided--in the Middle East, in Asia, in Africa this
year in the Congo--a means of holding man's violence within bounds.
But the great question which
confronted this body in 1945 is still before us: whether man's cherished hopes
for progress and peace are to be destroyed by terror and disruption, whether
the "foul winds of war" can be tamed in time to free the cooling
winds of reason, and whether the pledges of our Charter are to be fulfilled or
defied-pledges to secure peace, progress, human rights and world law.
In this Hall, there are not
three forces, but two. One is composed of those who are trying to build the
kind of world described in Articles I and II of the Charter. The other, seeking
a far different world, would undermine this organization in the process.
Today of all days our
dedication to the Charter must be maintained. It must be strengthened first of
all by the selection of an outstanding civil servant to carry forward the
responsibilities of the Secretary General--a man endowed with both the wisdom
and the power to make meaningful the moral force of the world community. The
late Secretary General nurtured and sharpened the United Nations' obligation to
act. But he did not invent it. It was there in the Charter. It is still there
in the Charter.
However difficult it may be
to fill Mr. Hammarskjold's place, it can better be filled by one man rather
than by three. Even the three horses of the Troika did not have three drivers,
all going in different directions. They had only one--and so must the United
Nations executive. To install a triumvirate, or any panel, or any rotating
authority, in the United Nations administrative offices would replace order
with anarchy, action with paralysis, confidence with confusion.
The Secretary General, in a
very real sense, is the servant of the General Assembly. Diminish his authority
and you diminish the authority of the only body where all nations, regardless
of power, are equal and sovereign. Until all the powerful are just, the weak
will be secure only in the strength of this Assembly.
Effective and independent
executive action is not the same question as balanced representation. In view
of the enormous change in membership in this body since its founding, the
American delegation will join in any effort for the prompt review and revision
of the composition of United Nations bodies.
But to give this
organization three drivers-to permit each great power to decide its own case,
would entrench the Cold War in the headquarters of peace. Whatever advantages
such a plan may hold out to my own country, as one of the great powers, we
reject it. For we far prefer world law, in the age of self-determination, to world
war, in the age of mass extermination.
Today, every inhabitant of
this planet must contemplate the day when this planet may no longer be
habitable. Every man, woman and child lives under a nuclear sword of Damocles,
hanging by the slenderest of threads, capable of being cut at any moment by
accident or miscalculation or by madness. The weapons of war must be abolished
before they abolish us.
Men no longer debate whether
armaments are a symptom or a cause of tension. The mere existence of modern
weapons--ten million times more powerful than any that the world has ever seen,
and only minutes away from any target on earth--is a source of horror, and
discord and distrust. Men no longer maintain that disarmament must await the
settlement of all disputes--for disarmament must be a part of any permanent
settlement. And men may no longer pretend that the quest for disarmament is a
sign of weakness--for in a spiraling arms race, a nation's security may well be
shrinking even as its arms increase.
For 15 years this
organization has sought the reduction and destruction of arms. Now that goal is
no longer a dream--it is a practical matter of life or death. The risks
inherent in disarmament pale in comparison to the risks inherent in an
unlimited arms race.
It is in this spirit that
the recent Belgrade Conference--recognizing that this is no longer a Soviet
problem or an American problem, but a human problem--endorsed a program of
"general, complete and strictly an internationally controlled
disarmament." It is in this same spirit that we in the United States have
labored this year, with a new urgency, and with a new, now statutory agency
fully endorsed by the Congress, to find an approach to disarmament which would
be so far-reaching yet realistic, so mutually balanced and beneficial, that it
could be accepted by every nation. And it is in this spirit that we have
presented with the agreement of the Soviet Union--under the label both nations
now accept of "general and complete disarmament"--a new statement of
newly-agreed principles for negotiation.
But we are well aware that
all issues of principle are not settled, and that principles alone are not
enough. It is therefore our intention to challenge the Soviet Union, not to an
arms race, but to a peace race--to advance together step by step, stage by
stage, until general and complete disarmament has been achieved. We invite them
now to go beyond agreement in principle to reach agreement on actual plans.
The program to be presented
to this assembly--for general and complete disarmament under effective
international control-moves to bridge the gap between those who insist on a
gradual approach and those who talk only of the final and total achievement. It
would create machinery to keep the peace as it destroys the machinery Of war.
It would proceed through balanced and safeguarded stages designed to give no
state a military advantage over another. It would place the final
responsibility for verification and control where it belongs, not with the big
powers alone, not with one's adversary or one's self, but in an international
organization within the framework of the United Nations. It would assure that
indispensable condition of disarmament-true inspection--and apply it in stages
proportionate to the stage of disarmament. It would cover delivery systems as
well as weapons. It would ultimately halt their production as well as their
testing, 'their transfer as well as their possession. It would achieve, under
the eyes of an international disarmament organization, a steady reduction in
force, both nuclear and conventional, until it has abolished all armies and all
weapons except those needed for internal order and a new United Nations Peace
Force. And it starts that process now, today, even as the talks begin.
In short, general and
complete disarmament must no longer be a slogan, used to resist the first
steps. It is no longer to be a goal without means of achieving it, without
means of verifying its progress, without means of keeping the peace. It is now
a realistic plan, and a test--a test of those only willing to talk and a test
of those willing to act.
Such a plan would not bring
a world free from conflict and greed--but it would bring a world free from the
terrors of mass destruction It would not usher in the era of the super state--but
it would usher in an era in which no state could annihilate or be annihilated
by another.
In 1945, this Nation
proposed the Baruch Plan to internationalize the atom before other nations even
possessed the bomb or demilitarized their troops. We proposed with our allies
the Disarmament Plan of 1951 while still at war in Korea. And we make our
proposals today, while building up our defenses over Berlin, not because we are
inconsistent or insincere or intimidated, but because we know the rights of free
men will prevail--because while we are compelled against our will to rearm, we
look confidently beyond Berlin to the kind of disarmed world we all prefer.
I therefore propose, on the
basis of this Plan, that disarmament negotiations resume promptly, and continue
without interruption until an entire program for general and complete
disarmament has not only been agreed but has been actually achieved.
The logical place to begin
is a treaty assuring the end of nuclear tests of all kinds, in every
environment, under workable controls. The United States and the United Kingdom
have proposed such a treaty that is both reasonable, effective and ready for
signature. We are still prepared to sign that treaty today.
We also proposed a mutual
ban on atmospheric testing, without inspection or controls, in order to save
the human race from the poison of radioactive fallout. We regret that that
offer has not been accepted.
For 15 years we have sought
to make the atom an instrument of peaceful growth rather than of war. But for
15 years our concessions have been matched by obstruction, our patience by
intransigence. And the pleas of mankind for peace have met with disregard.
Finally, as the explosions
of others beclouded the skies, my country was left with no alternative but to
act in the interests of its own and the free world's security. We cannot
endanger that security by refraining from testing while others improve their
arsenals. Nor can we endanger it by another long, un-inspected ban on testing.
For three years we accepted those risks in our open society while seeking
agreement on inspection. But this year, while we were negotiating in good faith
in Geneva, others were secretly preparing new experiments in destruction.
Our tests are not polluting
the atmosphere. Our deterrent weapons are guarded against accidental explosion
or use. Our doctors and scientists stand ready to help any nation measure and
meet the hazards to health which inevitably result from the tests in the
atmosphere.
But to halt the spread of
these terrible weapons, to halt the contamination of the air, to halt the
spiraling nuclear arms race, we remain ready to seek new avenues of agreement,
our new Disarmament Program thus includes the following proposals:
First, signing the test-ban treaty by all nations.
This can be done now. Test ban negotiations need not and should not await
general disarmament.
Second, stopping the production of fissionable
materials for use in weapons, and preventing their transfer to any nation
now lacking in nuclear weapons.
Third, prohibiting the transfer of control over
nuclear weapons to states that do not own them.
Fourth, keeping nuclear weapons from seeding new
battlegrounds in outer space.
Fifth, gradually destroying existing nuclear
weapons and converting their materials to peaceful uses; and
Finally, halting the unlimited testing and
production of strategic nuclear delivery vehicles, and gradually
destroying them as well.
To destroy arms, however, is
not enough. We must create even as we destroy--creating worldwide law and law
enforcement as we outlaw worldwide war and weapons. In the world we seek, the
United Nations Emergency Forces which have been hastily assembled, uncertainly
supplied, and inadequately financed, will never be enough.
Therefore, the United States
recommends the Presidents that all member nations earmark special peace-keeping
units in their armed forces-to be on call of the United Nations, to be
specially trained and quickly available, and with advance provision for
financial and logistic support.
In addition, the American
delegation will suggest a series of steps to improve the United Nations'
machinery for the peaceful settlement of disputes--for on-the-spot
fact-finding, mediation and adjudication--for extending the rule of
international law. For peace is not solely a matter of military or technical
problems--it is primarily a problem of politics and people. And unless man can
match his strides in weaponry and technology with equal strides in social and
political development, our great strength, like that of the dinosaur, will
become incapable of proper control--and like the dinosaur vanish from the
earth.
As we extend the rule of law
on earth, so must we also extend it to man's new domain--outer space.
All of us salute the brave
cosmonauts of the Soviet Union. The new horizons of outer space must not be
driven by the old bitter concepts of imperialism and sovereign claims. The cold
reaches of the universe must not become the new arena of an even colder war.
To this end, we shall urge
proposals extending the United Nations Charter to the limits of man's
exploration in the universe, reserving outer space for peaceful use,
prohibiting weapons of mass destruction in space or on celestial bodies, and
opening the mysteries and benefits of space to every nation. We shall propose
further cooperative efforts between all nations in weather prediction and
eventually in weather control. We shall propose, finally, a global system of
communications satellites linking the whole world in telegraph and telephone
and radio and television. The day need not be fat away when such a system will
televise the proceedings of this body to every corner of the world for the
benefit of peace.
But the mysteries of outer
space must not divert our eyes or our energies from the harsh realities that
face our fellow men. Political sovereignty is but a mockery without the means
of meeting poverty and literacy and disease. Self-determination is but a slogan
if the future holds no hope.
That is why my Nation, which
has freely shared its capital and its technology to help others help
themselves, now proposes officially designating this decade of the 1960's as
the United Nations Decade of Development. Under the framework of that
Resolution, the United Nations' existing efforts in promoting economic growth
can be expanded and coordinated. Regional surveys and training institutes can
now pool the talents of many. New research, technical assistance and pilot
projects can unlock the wealth of less developed lands and untapped waters. And
development can become a cooperative and not a competitive enterprise-to enable
all nations, however diverse in their systems and beliefs, to become in fact as
well as in law free and equal nations.
My Country favors a world of
free and equal states. We agree with those who say that colonialism is a key
issue in this Assembly But let the full facts of that issue be discussed in
full.
On the one hand is the fact
that, since the close of World War II, a worldwide declaration of independence
has transformed nearly 1 billion people and 9 million square miles into 42 free
and independent states. Less than 2 percent of the world's population now lives
in "dependent" territories.
I do not ignore the
remaining problems of traditional colonialism which still confront this body. Those
problems will be solved, with patience, good will, and determination. Within
the limits of our responsibility in such matters, my Country intends to be a
participant and not merely an observer, in the peaceful, expeditious movement
of nations from the status of colonies to the partnership of equals. That
continuing tide of self-determination, which runs so strong, has our sympathy
and our support.
But colonialism in its
harshest forms is not only the exploitation of new nations by old, of dark
skins by light, or the subjugation of the poor by the rich. My Nation was once
a colony, and we know what colonialism means; the exploitation and subjugation
of the weak by the powerful, of the many by the few, of the governed who have
given no consent to be governed, whatever their continent, their class, or
their color.
And that is why there is no
ignoring the fact that the tide of self-determination has not reached the
Communist empire where a population far larger than that officially termed
"dependent" lives under governments installed by foreign troops
instead of free institutions--under a system which knows only one party and one
belief--which suppresses free debate, and free elections, and free newspapers,
and free books and free trade unions--and which builds a wall to keep truth a
stranger and its own citizens prisoners. Let us debate colonialism in full--and
apply the principle of free choice and the practice of free plebiscites in
every corner of the globe.
Finally, as President of the
United States, I consider it my duty to report to this Assembly on two threats
to the peace which are not on your crowded agenda, but which causes us, and
most of you, the deepest concern.
The first threat on which I
wish to report is widely misunderstood: the smoldering coals of war in
Southeast Asia. South Viet-Nam is already under attack--sometimes by a single
assassin, sometimes by a band of guerrillas, recently by full battalions. The
peaceful borders of Burma, Cambodia, and India have been repeatedly violated.
And the peaceful people of Laos are in danger of losing the independence they
gained not so long ago.
No one can call these
"wars of liberation." For these are free countries living under their
own governments. Nor are these aggressions any less real because men are knifed
in their homes and not shot in the fields of battle.
The very simple question
confronting the world community is whether measures can be devised to protect
the small and the weak from such tactics. For if they are successful in Laos
and South Viet-Nam, the gates will be opened wide.
The United States seeks for
itself no base, no territory, no special position in this area of any kind. We
support a truly neutral and independent Laos, its people free from outside
interference, living at peace with themselves and with their neighbors, assured
that their territory will not be used for attacks on others, and under a
government comparable (as Mr. Khrushchev and I agreed at Vienna) to Cambodia
and Burma.
But now the negotiations
over Laos are reaching a crucial stage. The cease-fire is at best precarious.
The rainy season is coming to an end. Laotian territory is being used to
infiltrate South Viet-Nam. The world community must recognize--and all those
who are involved--that this potent threat to Laotian peace and freedom is
indivisible from all other threats to their own.
Secondly, I wish to report
to you on the crisis over Germany and Berlin. This is not the time or the place
for immoderate tones, but the world community is entitled to know the very
simple issues as we see them. If there is a crisis' it is because an existing
peace is under threat, because an existing island of free people is under
pressure, because solemn agreements are being treated with indifference.
Established international rights are being threatened with unilateral
usurpation. Peaceful circulation has been interrupted by barbed wire and
concrete blocks.
One recalls the order of the
Czar in Pushkin's "Boris Godunov": "Take steps at this very hour
that our frontiers be fenced in by barriers .... That not a single soul pass
o'er the border, that not a hare be able to run or a crow to fly."
It is absurd to allege that
we are threatening a war merely to prevent the Soviet Union and East Germany
from signing a so-called "treaty" of peace. The Western Allies are
not concerned with any paper arrangement the Soviets may wish to make with a
regime of their own creation, on territory occupied by their own troops and
governed by their own agents. No such action can affect either our rights or
our responsibilities.
If there is a dangerous
crisis in Berlin-and there is--it is because of threats against the vital
interests and the deep commitments of the Western Powers, and the freedom of
West Berlin. We cannot yield these interests. We cannot fail these commitments.
We cannot surrender the freedom of these people for whom we are responsible. A
"peace treaty" which carried with it the provisions which destroy the
peace would be a fraud. A "free city" which was not genuinely free
would suffocate freedom and would be an infamy.
For a city or a people to be
truly free, they must have the secure right, without economic, political or
police pressure, to make their own choice and to live their own lives. And as I
have said before, if anyone doubts the extent to which our presence is desired
by the people of West Berlin, we are ready to have that question submitted to a
free vote in all Berlin and, if possible, among all the German people.
The elementary fact about
this crisis is that it is unnecessary. The elementary tools for a peaceful
settlement are to be found in the charter. Under its law, agreements are to be
kept, unless changed by all those who made them. Established rights are to be
respected. The political disposition of peoples should rest upon their own
wishes, freely expressed in plebiscites or free elections. If there are legal
problems, they can be solved by legal means. If there is a threat of force, it
must be rejected. If there is desire for change, it must be a subject for
negotiation and if there is negotiation, it must be rooted in mutual respect
and concern for the rights of others.
The Western Powers have
calmly resolved to defend, by whatever means are forced upon them, their
obligations and their access to the free citizens of West Berlin and the
self-determination of those citizens. This generation learned from bitter
experience that either brandishing or yielding to threats can only lead to war.
But firmness and reason can lead to the kind of peaceful solution in which my
country profoundly believes.
We are committed to no rigid
formula. We see no perfect solution. We recognize that troops and tanks can,
for a time, keep a nation divided against its will, however unwise that policy
may seem to us. But we believe a peaceful agreement is possible which protects
the freedom of West Berlin and allied presence and access, while recognizing
the historic and legitimate interests of others in assuring European security.
The possibilities of
negotiation are now being explored; it is too early to report what the
prospects may be. For our part, we would be glad to report at the appropriate
time that a solution has been found. For there is no need for a crisis over
Berlin, threatening the peace--and if those who created this crisis desire
peace, there will be peace and freedom in Berlin.
The events and decisions of
the next ten months may well decide the fate of man for the next ten thousand
years. There will be no avoiding those events. There will be no appeal from
these decisions. And we in this hall shall be remembered either as part of the
generation that turned this planet into a flaming funeral pyre or the
generation that met its vow "to save succeeding generations from the
scourge of war."
In the endeavor to meet that
vow, I pledge you every effort this Nation possesses. I pledge you that we
shall neither commit nor provoke aggression, that we shall neither flee nor
invoke the threat of force, that we shall never negotiate out of fear, we shall
never fear to negotiate.
Terror is not a new weapon.
Throughout history it has been used by those who could not prevail, either by
persuasion or example. But inevitably they fail, either because men are not
afraid to die for a life worth living, or because the terrorists themselves
came to realize that free men cannot be frightened by threats, and that
aggression would meet its own response. And it is in the light of that history
that every nation today should know, be he friend or foe, that the United
States has both the will and the weapons to join free men in standing up to
their responsibilities.
But I come here today to
look across this world of threats to a world of peace. In that search we cannot
expect any final triumph-for new problems will always arise. We cannot expect
that all nations will adopt like systems--for conformity is the jailer of
freedom, and the enemy of growth. Nor can we expect to reach our goal by
contrivance, by fiat or even by the wishes of all. But however close we
sometimes seem to that dark and final abyss, let no man of peace and freedom
despair. For he does not stand alone. If we all can persevere, if we can in
every land and office look beyond our own shores and ambitions, then surely the
age will dawn in which the strong are just and the weak secure and the peace
preserved.
Ladies and gentlemen of this
Assembly, the decision is ours. Never have the nations of the world had so much
to lose, or so much to gain. Together we shall save our planet, or together we
shall perish in its flames. Save it we can--and save it we must--and then shall
we earn the eternal thanks of mankind and, as peacemakers, the eternal blessing
of God.
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Discurso do Presidente da Rússia, Vladimir Putin, na manhã do dia 24 de Fevereiro de 2022
Discurso do Presidente da Rússia, Vladimir Putin, Tradução em português
Presidente da Rússia, Vladimir Putin: Cidadãos da Rússia, Amigos,
Considero ser necessário falar hoje, de novo, sobre os trágicos acontecimentos em Donbass e sobre os aspectos mais importantes de garantir a segurança da Rússia.
Começarei com o que disse no meu discurso de 21 de Fevereiro de 2022. Falei sobre as nossas maiores responsabilidades e preocupações e sobre as ameaças fundamentais que os irresponsáveis políticos ocidentais criaram à Rússia de forma continuada, com rudeza e sem cerimónias, de ano para ano. Refiro-me à expansão da NATO para Leste, que está a aproximar cada vez mais as suas infraestruturas militares da fronteira russa.
É um facto que, durante os últimos 30 anos, temos tentado pacientemente chegar a um acordo com os principais países NATO, relativamente aos princípios de uma segurança igual e indivisível, na Europa. Em resposta às nossas propostas, enfrentámos invariavelmente, ou engano cínico e mentiras, ou tentativas de pressão e de chantagem, enquanto a aliança do Atlântico Norte continuou a expandir-se, apesar dos nossos protestos e preocupações. A sua máquina militar está em movimento e, como disse, aproxima-se da nossa fronteira.
Porque é que isto está a acontecer? De onde veio esta forma insolente de falar que atinge o máximo do seu excepcionalismo, infalibilidade e permissividade? Qual é a explicação para esta atitude de desprezo e desdém pelos nossos interesses e exigências absolutamente legítimas?
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