by Dr. Joseph Mercola
October 19, 2023
from
Mercola Website
Story at-a-glance
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The globalist cabal behind The Great Reset plan desperately wants
war - the bigger the better - as this will facilitate the transition
into their "New World Order"
-
War destroys supply chains, the energy sector, food supply and the
workforce, which creates dependency on government, which in turn
will be taken over by private interests and central banks through
the collapse of the global economy
-
Putting an end to the Ukraine war could go a long way toward
thwarting that plan, but instead, American leaders are adding fuel
to yet another war
-
October 7, 2023, Hamas launched a surprise attack on Israeli
civilians. American war hawks are calling for retaliatory strikes
not only against Palestinian civilians in Gaza but also Iran,
suspected of funding Hamas forces
-
October 8, 2023, a top Hezbollah official, Hashem Safi al-Din,
warned that Lebanon will join the Palestinian resistance unless the
U.S. and Israel cease to "violate" Muslim holy sites. Evidence
suggests Hezbollah has been using Mexican cartels to smuggle
terrorists into the U.S. for well over a decade, raising the
possibility of terrorist attacks on U.S. soil, should we enter the
war in the Middle East
How War Fuels the March
toward a New World Order
Unmasking the globalist cabal's desire
for conflict and chaos to
usher in their vision
of the Great Reset's hidden agenda,
a 'New World
Order,'
this expose reveals how war serves
as a catalyst for
reshaping
the world in their image.
As detailed in "Phase 2 of The Great Reset: War," published a
year-and-a-half ago, in March 2022, the globalist cabal behind
The
Great Reset plan desperately wants war - the bigger the better
- as
this will facilitate the transition into their "New
World Order."
The more areas leveled, the easier it will be to rebuild smart
cities in their stead.
The more people killed, the more malleable
survivors will be, and likely to accept slavery in return for some
semblance of peace and security.
War destroys supply chains, the energy sector, food supply and the
workforce, which creates dependency on government, which in turn
will be taken over by private interests and central banks through
the collapse of the global economy.
Putting an end to
the Ukraine
war could go a long way toward thwarting that plan.
At bare minimum, it would drastically delay the final implementation
of The Great Reset, giving us time to work out other solutions. But
instead, American leaders are adding fuel to yet another war.
As predicted, ever since Russia's incursion into Ukraine, the U.S.
has done nothing but push for the escalation of conflict, and now,
with the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel, American war
hawks are squawking again, calling for retaliatory strikes not only
against Palestinian civilians in Gaza but also Iran, suspected of
funding Hamas forces. 1
Understanding the Context of Current Wars
Peace requires being able to see both sides of a conflict, and that
is something mainstream media do not facilitate.
For example, we've
been repeatedly told that Russia's attack on Ukraine was
"unprovoked," yet Russia's patience has been strained to the limit
for well over a decade.
From Russia's perspective,
it's fighting an existential threat.
Meanwhile, evidence suggests the basis for the United States'
defense of Ukraine is related to it being a valuable money
laundering hub and, potentially, a secret biological weapons
manufacturing ally.
Now,
Israel is said to be fighting an existential threat as well,
and American leadership is doing nothing to further peace in this
situation either...
Blame is laid on one side or the other, rather
than viewing events within a historical context and trying to come
to a resolution.
A Long History of Conflict
The video far below is a
History Hit Network documentary, that reviews
the long-standing conflict between Israel and Palestine, which began
with the declaration of Israel as an independent nation state in
1948.
As explained in the video,
thousands of Jews emigrated to Palestine
in the 1920s and '30s, resulting in violent clashes with the local
Arab population.
At the time, the British empire occupied Palestine,
and its attempts to limit Jewish immigration enraged the Jews. At
the same time, the British stated support for a Jewish homeland
enraged the Arabs.
Then World War II broke out, and an estimated 6 million Jews were
murdered in Nazi concentration camps.
After the war, Jews again
began to flood into Palestine, which they viewed as their homeland
and, by 1947, the British realized the situation had become
unsustainable.
The solution, devised by the newly formed
United Nations, was to
split the contested land of Palestine into two sections.
Jews
celebrated and Arabs rebelled...
May 14, 1948, the day British troops
withdrew from Palestine and the state of Israel was declared,
violence broke out between the two communities.
The Muslim countries of Lebanon, Syria, Iraq,
Jordan and Egypt
attacked the newly formed state and secured Arab territory within
it.
In the remaining Israeli territory, thousands of Palestinians
were driven out by Israeli forces...
This forms the basis of a conflict that is still brewing today.
Palestinians forcefully removed from their homes never forgot it.
The situation further escalated in 1967, when Israel seized
additional territory from Jordan and Syria.
According to the
documentary:
"That was a war in which the Arab Nations clearly were about to
attack Israel. Israel had, as it were, both a legal and moral right
to strike first, and they did strike first."
As a result of Israel's preemptive strike, the Gaza Strip, initially
part of Egypt, came under the control of Israel.
In 1973, Israel's
hostile neighbors struck back with a surprise attack during the
religious holiday of
Yom Kippur.
After years of ongoing aggressions,
Egypt and Israel finally met to negotiate peace in 1978...
The
Camp David Accords of 1978 returned the Sinai peninsula to
Egypt, while Israel kept East Jerusalem, the West Bank, the Golan
Heights in Syria, and the Gaza strip.
Israel also acquired more than
1 million Palestinian Arabs who lived in the Israeli-occupied
territories.
The Rise of Hamas
The Accords did nothing to soothe old differences, however, and for
decades afterward, Israeli forces and the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) carried on hostilities.
Peace talks were renewed
in the early 1990s in Oslo, Norway, resulting in a two-state
solution.
The Oslo Accords guaranteed Israel's right to exist as an
independent state, and that Arab neighbors would cease calling for
the annihilation of Israel and instead guarantee its security.
In return, Palestinians would also be guaranteed an independent
state.
As a result, Palestinians were able to elect their own
government within the territories of the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip.
Jerusalem, meanwhile, was to be a "free city"...
Things did not work out as planned, however.
In 2000, violent
clashes between the two communities resumed, and in 2006,
Palestinians elected members of the hard-line Islamist group Hamas
into office.
The reigning party, Fatah, ended up with just 45 seats
of the 132-seat government, while Hamas got 74 seats.
The problem...?
Hamas' founding charter included a commitment to the
total destruction of the Israeli state - a direct violation of the
Oslo Accords...
Tahani Mustafa, a political scientist, describes Hamas
as,
"the armed wing of the Palestinian strand of the
Muslim
Brotherhood, as they were created specifically for that reason in
1987." 2
According to Mustafa, the election of Hamas was a "protest vote"
against Fatah's corruption and government failures, and against the
ongoing Israeli occupation of what they saw as Palestinian land.
Violence intensified over the next four years, resulting in the
deaths of thousands on both sides.
As noted in
the documentary,
"This is a conflict driven by old disputes and unresolved
grievances, where each side blames the other."
Both view themselves
as the rightful owners of Palestine and neither is willing to go
along with the compromise of dividing up the land.
Palestine's Government Divided
Adding another layer of complexity,
Hamas and
Fatah also fought
internally for control over the security forces.
Hamas sought to
create a united government, but Fatah refused and negotiations
ultimately broke down.
U.S. intelligence armed Fatah to carry out a military coup against
Hamas, but Hamas intelligence intercepted the plan and preemptively
seized control of the Gaza Strip.
So, in June 2007, the Palestinian
government was split in two, with Fatah controlling the Palestinian
area of the West Bank and Hamas controlling Gaza, which is one of
the most densely populated areas on the planet.
Israel responded with an economic blockade of Gaza, preventing
residents from receiving food, medicine, building materials and
more, in an effort to pressure them to kick Hamas out.
In response
to the blockade, Hamas militants bombed Israel, and Israel responded
in kind.
After two years of back and forth air strikes, Egypt, in 2008,
brokered a ceasefire, and the two sides agreed that the longer the
ceasefire held, the more open the Gaza borders would become.
Alas,
the peace didn't last long...
Six months later, in December 2008,
Israel launched
Operation Cast Lead, bombing 100 Gaza targets in the
first four minutes of the attack...
For the next three weeks, Israeli forces penetrated Gaza, attacking
what they claimed were Hamas strongholds. However, due to it being
so densely populated, civilian casualties were inevitable.
By
mid-January 2009,
1,400 Palestinian civilians had been killed by
Israeli forces, including 313 children. Israel finally ended the
operation January 18, 2009, following international condemnation.
The Muslim Brotherhood
As explained in the film, by 2012, the
Muslim Brotherhood had come
into power in Cairo, Egypt, and an alliance between the Muslim
Brotherhood and Hamas was forged, and much-needed goods flowed into
Gaza from Egypt.
In 2013, the Muslim Brotherhood was overthrown in a
coup.
The new government did not support Hamas and blocked the underground
tunnels used to smuggle goods from Egypt to Gaza.
By 2014, Hamas was
facing a financial crisis, as most of the government's income dried
up when the smuggling of goods ceased.
Nearly half the adult
population of Gaza was unemployed, and clean water and electricity
were in short supply...
The
United Nations declared a humanitarian emergency in Gaza, yet
Hamas' popularity remained.
The residents of Gaza blamed Israel and
Fatah in the West Bank for their troubles instead.
Conflict Resumes
In 2012, Hamas leader Ahmed Al-Jabari was killed by an Israeli drone
strike.
Additional targets were bombed in the days that followed,
including Hamas' headquarters and munitions stores. Civilian
infrastructures were also hit.
Hamas responded with indiscriminate
rocket fire into civilian areas of Israel. Israel's rocket defense
system,
Iron Dome, limited Israel's casualties to six.
Peace talks resumed in 2014, but collapsed. In June that year, three
Israeli teenagers were kidnapped and murdered by Palestinians in the
West Bank.
A massive military operation was launched to locate the
culprits, resulting in the arrest of 350 Palestinians, including
leading Hamas officials.
Tensions rapidly escalated. When a Palestinian youth was killed by a
group of Israeli nationalists, Hamas launched rockets in
retaliation.
In response, Israel launched
Operation Protective Edge.
Once again, the Gaza Strip was turned into a war zone.
At the end of
a seven-week operation, more than 20,000 Palestinian homes in Gaza
had been leveled and more than 2,000 residents killed.
US Recognizes Jerusalem as Capital of Israel
In 2016, the newly-elected president of the United States,
Donald
Trump, announced that,
the U.S. would recognize Jerusalem as the
capital of Israel and relocate the U.S. embassy to it.
The
international community condemned the move, expressing concerns that
it would aggravate the conflict with Palestine.
Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza launched weekly mass
protests, as they viewed this as a violation of the agreement to
keep Jerusalem free and neutral.
They called the demonstrations "The
Great March of Return," and demanded the right to return to their
ancestral homes, which had been taken from them by Israel in 1948,
and an end to Israel's 12-year blockade of Gaza.
In March 2019, Trump enraged Palestinians yet again, by announcing,
the U.S. would become the first country to endorse the Israeli
occupation of the Golan Heights...
As noted in the film, the U.S. has endorsed,
"the expansion of Israel
by means of warfare," and as a result, "the two-state solution,
which is the only solution that the world has been able to see to
this conflict since 1967, is now very unlikely to take place."
In January 2020, the Trump administration unveiled the final part of
the Israeli-Palestinian peace plan.
Palestinians would have their
own independent state, but Hamas would have to relinquish power over
Gaza. Israel would also gain more land.
The plan was immediately
rejected by the Palestinians, and Hamas stayed in power.
All of this brings us to today, and the Hamas-led attack on Israeli
civilians in the first week of October.
As you can see, there's a
lot of history, a lot of context, for this most recent round of
aggression.
Both sides have been wronged at one point or another,
and both have done wrong.
Taking sides without at least a
superficial understanding of this historical context can only result
in greater bloodshed.
Yet that's what our 'leaders' are doing, and
it's fueling the flames of war...
Hezbollah Is Using Mexican Cartels to Invade the US
October 8, 2023, a top Hezbollah official, Hashem Safi al-Din, said
that the U.S. and Israel's violations of Islamic holy places and
"crossing of all lines" are what led to the latest attack.
Moreover,
he warned that Lebanon will join the "deluge" on Israel if the
"foolishness" continues. 3
Already, Hezbollah forces have shelled Israeli military sites along
the Lebanon border,
"in solidarity with the Palestinian resistance."
Israel reportedly responded with a drone strike against "Hezbollah
infrastructure" in the area. 4
The fact that Lebanon is warning America to stay out of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict is particularly noteworthy in light of
evidence suggesting Hezbollah is using Mexican cartels to smuggle
terrorists into U.S. by way of our wide-open southern border, and
has been doing so for well over a decade.
Hezbollah is also said to have established a home base near the U.S.
border in Mexico. 5,6,7
As noted by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.,
by leaving the border unsecured,
the Biden administration has effectively outsourced U.S. immigration
to the Mexican cartels.
They decide who's coming in, and there's
every reason to suspect terrorists of various stripes are among
them.
The
Biden administration is also endorsing Israel's escalation
against Iran, 8 which raises the stakes even further, and risks
terror attacks on American soil.
There are no easy answers to
time-hardened conflicts such as those
in the Middle East, but
aggressively calling for retaliatory actions is clearly not in the
best interest of anyone, least of all the American population.
Yet here we are, seemingly powerless to prevent being dragged into
what could progress into a multi-front world war...
In the immediate
term, the best thing you could probably do is to make sure your
family is well-prepared for disruptions to our infrastructure and
supply chains.
Video
Sources and
References
1 Daily
Mail October 11, 2023
2 YouTube
12:56
3, 4 Times
of Israel October 8, 2023
5 Intelligence
Overwatch August 4, 2012
6 Jerusalem
Post July 6, 2010
7 AEI
October 6, 2011
8 The
Intercept March 1, 2023
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