|
Wild, desperate actions by NATO, through its proxy, the
now-visibly-disintegrating Ukrainian military, nearly put the world on
a certain path to World War Three this week, or next. Russia’s Federal
Security Service (FSB) issued this statement yesterday:
”The Federal Security Service has uncovered and thwarted an
operation by the Ukrainian Defense Ministry’s Main Intelligence
Directorate and its UK supervisors to hijack a Russian MiG-31
supersonic fighter jet, which is equipped with a Kinzhal hypersonic
missile, and fly it abroad…. The special services then planned to send
the jet with the Kinzhal missile to the area where NATO's largest
airbase in southeastern Europe is located, in the Romanian city of
Constanta, where it could be shot down by air defenses.”
Meanwhile, even the Lilliputian European leadership is warning the
United States that what it is doing in its unprovoked attack on
Venezuela violates international law: on Tuesday, French Foreign
Minister Jean-Noel Barrot told reporters in Ontario at the start of
the G7 (no in the meeting itself apparently) that U.S. strikes in the
Caribbean “violate international law.” Asked about this, the State
Department’s “Little Marco” Rubio replied: “I don’t think the European
Union gets to decide what international law is.”
In the midst of the apparent chaos careening through the minds, and
the conference rooms, board rooms, war rooms, and banquet halls
occupied by the lackeys of a dying trans-Atlantic “world order,” the
International Schiller Institute convened a conference in Paris,
together with the Solidarity and Progress organization of France,
which took place this past weekend. Most notable was the presence of a
vibrant, intellectually alive audience of youth from around the world,
gathered to discuss how to change the present tragic direction of
their nations—before it is too late.
The question of method in statecraft was the central topic of a
two-day-plus conference with the work of Cardinal Nicholas of Cusa and
Executive Intelligence Review founder Lyndon LaRouche highlighted in a
series of presentations, with keynotes by Schiller Institute founder
Helga Zepp-LaRouche, and Jacques Cheminade, founder and lead of
Solidarity and Progress, the co-thinker organization of the LaRouche
organization in France. Tonight’s report will present both the tragedy
of the present policies, and the hope that a new security and
development architecture, embodied in the work of the newly-forming
world youth movement organized around the ideas of Nicholas of Cusa
and Lyndon LaRouche can represent. SPEAKER: Bill Jones, others
|