Prisoners of war: Victims of imperial Washington

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Written By Alan Stang

prisoners-of-war-victims-of-imperial-washingtonOver the past some weeks, we have looked at the five major wars Imperial Washington conducted in the Twentieth Century. We saw that there was no good reason for the United States to fight in any of them, so, in every case, Imperial Washington arranged our entry with a trick. The horror began with totalitarian monster Abraham Lincoln, who destroyed the Christian republic the Founding Fathers left us and created a ravening beast in his own likeness.

No such survey would be complete without a look at how Imperial Washington treated our own men who became Prisoners Of War. Imperial Washington is now conspiring to drag us into yet another war. There will be another generation of POWs. As your husband, father and son (and, God help us, your wife, mother and daughter) leave for basic training, you need to know what to expect. How does Imperial Washington typically treat our own people?

Toward the end of World War I, the Communists seized power in Russia with American help, and took Russia out of the war. From the beginning, Imperial Washington protected the Soviets and saved them from collapse. Without that intervention, the Soviets would have disappeared long ago. At the same time, Imperial Washington sent some troops to the Soviet Far East, allegedly to “fight Communism.” Some of those troops fell into enemy hands, became POWs, and disappeared in the Communist maw. Imperial Washington abandoned them.

At the end of World War II, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, who commanded our military in the European Theater of Operations (but who had never seen a battle outside the movies), ran Operation Keelhaul. Literally millions of victims who had escaped from Communist dictator Joe Stalin during the war were forcibly returned to him in boxcars like Jews on their way to Auschwitz. Many committed suicide rather than make the trip. Some of them were men who had served in our army in our uniform, which didn’t matter. If Stalin wanted them, Eisenhower sent them and Stalin killed them by the thousands for the crime of escape, and so that they couldn’t spread word in the Soviet Union about what like was like in the West.

Julius Epstein wrote a book exposing the horror, now long out of print, simply entitled Operation Keelhaul. You could also read about it in Peter J. Huxley-Blythe’s The East Came West (Caldwell, Idaho, the Caxton Printers, 1968). Call the American Opinion Library in North Hollywood at 1 (800) 470-8783 and tell Pat Dixon your Intrepid Correspondent sent you.

Indeed, at the Yalta conference early in 1945, where one of the dying President Franklin Roosevelt’s top advisers was Soviet spy Alger Hiss, Imperial Washington ceded central Europe to the advancing Soviets coming west. In obedience to that agreement, advancing Americans headed east were ordered to stop so the Soviets could seize as much ground as possible.

In the course of that advance, the Soviets also seized about 25,000 Americans. Most of them were already Prisoners Of War in German camps. The Soviets simply inherited them. And Imperial Washington typically abandoned them, because Stalin was our dear friend, “Uncle Joe.” Imagine turning 18 on a farm outside Kankakee in early 1945. You have never been anywhere and have never seen anything; but now you are drafted, trained and sent to fight in Europe, where you are captured by the Germans and inherited by the Soviets. You will never again see your native land. Consider that today, in 2002, you could still be alive, still immured in the gulag that is still intact because the Soviet Union never collapsed. America is a dream you are not sure ever happened.

In Korea, the United States showered enemy soldiers, North Korean and Red Chinese, with millions of leaflets, promising freedom and good treatment to those who surrendered. Tens of thousands of them did; they were slaves who had been forced into the Communist armies. Many actually opposed Communism. So now here they come into our lines, joyously waving those leaflets, already almost tasting American-style freedom.

But this would have been a public relations disaster for the Reds. They complained. And Imperial Washington tried to force those men to return to Communist slavery and death. Before Imperial Washington could do that, Syngman Rhee, President of the Republic of Korea, ordered the South Korean guards at the gates of the prisons to throw them open, and 27,000 Communist-hating North Koreans disappeared.

What would you guess Imperial Washington did about that? The Eisenhower Administration ordered American troops to recapture them. Imperial Washington used rifle fire and tear gas for the purpose. Nine of the escaping victims were killed. There were actual gun battles with North Korean escapees who had believed the American leaflets. More of them were killed. To please the Communists, Eisenhower was repeating Operation Keelhaul. Among many other sources, please see your obedient servant’s book, The Actor: The True Story of John Foster Dulles (Boston, Western Islands, 1968).

About 20,000 Chinese prisoners who were equally hostile to Communism remained. Imperial Washington did everything it could to persuade them to return. They refused. They ripped off their identification cards and refused to give their names, to protect their families in China. They rioted and tried to escape. A couple were killed. Always, everywhere, Imperial Washington labors in behalf of Communism.

You are probably figuring that this was about as bad as it could get; but you are wrong. General Mark Clark, who commanded “our” side at the time, said that after Operation Big Switch he had “solid evidence” that the Communists still held 944 Americans, our own men. Imperial Washington knew that those men (many of them black, by the way) were shipped to concentration camps in the Soviet Union, and put to work as slaves. General Clark writes that they were the victims of Nazi-style medical experiments.

Sergeant Glenn J. Oliver told what happened at prison camp 5: “Men in poor condition were placed outdoors with little or no clothing and eaten by flies and worms. I saw at least fifteen men given injections of an unknown type of fluid and they would die within five minutes.” Other Americans were burned alive and beaten to death.

Imperial Washington did nothing. Typically, those men were abandoned. Some are no doubt still alive, perhaps living and slaving beside American POWs abandoned in World War II. Imperial Washington kept financing Communist-occupied Russia, where our men were immured; kept protecting it; kept advancing it.

In Vietnam, Nixon and Kissinger did a secret deal with Hanoi, in which Imperial Washington would pay about $4 billion in exchange for the American POWs. But Congress balked when the secret deal leaked, so Nixon simply announced that all Americans in Southeast Asia had come home. Of course, he lied. Meanwhile, the Pathet Lao, the Communists in Laos, wanted in on the deal. They announced that they held hundreds of Americans. That’s right! This was not a discovery unearthed by U.S. intelligence. The Pathet Lao admitted it themselves. Those men are still there, because Imperial Washington abandoned them.

By now, the mounting evidence that Hanoi still holds hundreds of our men is overwhelming. It consists of eyewitness testimony by South Vietnamese who have escaped; findings accumulated by U.S. intelligence; satellite photos, etc. Imperial Washington has done everything it could to discredit all this. Families of the abandoned men long said that if only one man could escape or be rescued, the putrid can of worms would pop. But Bobby Garwood did escape, with news of other POWs. Imperial Washington went to incredible extremes to discredit him; indeed, Imperial Washington wouldn’t even debrief him for years. Typically, the abandoned men were sent to our friends in the Soviet Union, who used them in the usual Nazi experiments. They are still waiting for us to bring them home. For a fictional version of what happened, based four- square on fact, see your Intrepid Correspondent’s novel, Perestroika Sunset (Patton House, Los Angeles, 1999).

As far as we know, the only POW still left over from Gulf War I is U.S. Navy Commander Scott Speicher, shot down over Iraq on the first night of the war. But by the time we were Bushwhacked into that war, we had already allowed ourselves to be so corrupted by the Communist dialectics of Antonio Gramsci (which we explained in an earlier Etherzone commentary); we were by then so degraded and unmanly, so zombified by government-is-god propaganda; that we allowed Imperial Washington to send women into combat.

A couple of those women were captured by Iraq. Rumors have circulated ever since about what happened to them. I’m not going to repeat them because I don’t have the facts. But it is a fact that those women have been hidden as deeply as April Glaspie, Imperial Washington’s ambassador to Baghdad, who started the war. There has been no best-selling book. Their story has not been told in the usual, inspiring movie starring Rosie O’Donnell or Ellen Degeneris. Imagine the effect of that story on female enlistment in the military, and on the preposterous, feminoid canard that the anatomical differences between men and women don’t really matter.

In an empire, the individual becomes nothing but a disposable pin on a map, swept into the dustbin of history when the plans change. Because Imperial Washington has done the same thing in every Twentieth Century war it tricked us into, there is every reason to believe it will do so again. Keep this in mind when you say goodbye to your sons and your daughters.

Related Articles:

World Government Frenzy(Part I)

World Government Frenzy (Part II)

Worse Than Japan

The UN is Communist

The War in Korea

The War in Vietnam

Published originally at EtherZone.com : republication allowed with this notice and hyperlink intact.”

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