Origins of the EU – USA Covert Operations to Assimilate Europe Into A Federal State
For anyone who still has doubts, the European Union was not
really motivated by the twin desires of ending warfare on the continent
of Europe and promoting economic growth by making it easier for European
countries to trade with each other. This was the story you were
spoon-fed. It was actually the creation of America. Read on.
Post second world war, America saw the opportunity to transform a war
torn continent. It wanted Europe to be complimentary to American
policy, viewing American federalism an an ideal political model. It
wanted to assimilate Europe and implemented various covert operations to
undermine staunch resistance to federalist ideas, especially by the
British Labour government. The opportunity was a puppet run super-state
filled with attendant yes men for trade and the manipulation of
strategic global markets and, just as importantly a defensive buffer
zone against it’s new foe – the Reds from Russia and China.
Diplomatic historians have unearthed evidence of US backed covert operations
designed to undermine communist influences in Europe. US officials
worked on a plan in 1950 to lead to a United States of Europe. It is
here we see the emergence of the Bilderberg Group and The Action Committee for a United States of Europe.
Winston Churchill was one of the five presidents of the Council of
Europe, a disparate organisation urging rapid European unification.
Interestingly, these particular
documents were not found in the archives in America or Britain, but in
Brussels, the de facto capital of the European Union.
In addition, Washington feared
emerging markets and anything remotely resembling an eastern alliance
such as Russia and China, which has since morphed into the BRICS
economic group of nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South
Africa) and the creation of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. At
the end of last year the IMF even added the yuan to its basket of reserve currencies,
an international stamp of approval of the strides China has made
integrating into a global economic system dominated for decades by the
U.S., Europe and Japan.