The power of israel in the united states pdf




















The rub is that a group of international bankers, were handed the right to create money out of thin air, money which they keep and loan to our government at interest. This loan and interest, must be paid back from taxes paid by working Americans.

This fraudulent arrangement allows the criminal bankers to siphon off the wealth and productivity of our nation, while doing nothing in return. This massive wealth is then used to corrupt our government and the other institutions of society.

To say the least, this is astounding, but it is also undeniably true! This is readily discernable from events that have shaped our world today. In , Congress passed the Federal Reserve Act. Prior to its passage our government behaved, for the most part, as required by our Constitution. However, all this changed because of the Federal Reserve Act. From the day of its passage, our Constitution became a worthless scrap of paper ignored, for the most part, by those who govern us.

Our Constitution specifies that Congress shall have the power to coin money and regulate its value. The Constitution does not give Congress authority to transfer this power to anyone else, especially a privately owned international banking cartel. Yet, in gross and flagrant violation of their oath of office, Congress did this. Furthermore, if our government does anything not provided for in our Constitution, without amending it, then such action is unconstitutional.

Air Force, the newly created U. All of these federal offices and agencies are unconstitutional, and our elected representatives know this. Before taking office, they swear an oath to uphold and preserve our Constitution. This oath is sworn before the people of this nation and also before God. Despite this, when taking their oath, elected officials have no intention of honoring it.

While these in part were driven by political and economic realities indigenous to the region, the most profound changes have come about through the actions of outside actors, first by the Europeans and later by the United States and the Soviet Union. The Arab Spring, the ensuing collapse of the Arab political order, and the ongoing civil wars, are the drivers of an emerging new Middle East political order.

To get a sense of what is driving this metamorphous, and what trajectory this is likely to put the region on in the future, it is critical that we examine how the Middle East has evolved up to this point.

The argument advanced here is that the most important historical factor to look at is how the end of the Cold War, and the ensuing era of American primacy, triggered a rebalancing of power in the region, giving birth to some of the problems we are contending with in the Middle East today. It will also be argued that the most important current factor shaping the new Middle East are the ongoing civil wars, within which regional and international powers are contending.

If we are going to think about policy scenarios and strategies for moving the region from chaos to at least a modicum of stability, we need to understand both the historical dynamics that got us to where we are today, as well as the current factors that are helping shape the future.

While the Cold War has been over for almost three decades, the legacy of this rivalrous period is still having an impact on the Middle East.

The reason this period of superpower competition was so profound, and is now critical for understanding the region, is that its advent corresponded with the liberation of most Arab countries from the yoke of European colonialism. From the bookends of Syria and Lebanon gaining their sovereignty in to Algeria throwing off French rule in , almost all former European colonial holdings became independent Arab states. Each of these fledgling Arab countries had specific security, political and economic needs as they struggled to make the transition from colony to independent state.

The omnipresent security threat for most Arab states was a fear of European colonial revanchism. There was also the perception that the creation of the state of Israel represented a form of neo-colonialism. Many of the states, particularly those without significant oil assets like Syria, faced economic challenges that they looked to outside powers to help alleviate.

Both the United States and the Soviet Union saw this emerging Arab landscape as fertile ground upon which to compete with the global ambitions of the other.

Each of the superpowers competed for Arab allies in an effort gain the upper regional hand, thereby containing what they saw as the nefarious ambitions of their adversary. It was the convergence of the needs of the newly independent Arab countries for outside support, and the available supply of that support from the United States and Soviet Union, that created the modern Middle East.

Arab states, at their most vulnerable moment of transitioning from colonial vassals to independent states, sought and received support from the superpowers. Conservative monarchies, like Jordan and Saudi Arabia, fell squarely into the camp of the United States, risking their domestic legitimacy to ensure regime security.

Syria, Libya, Iraq and Egypt up until , states whose legitimacy depended on the flouting of European and American norms, aligned themselves with the Soviet Union. Turkey, Iran and Israel all tacked towards the west, putting them squarely in the U.

Evidence of this was an Arab Cold War that mirrored the global superpower conflict. What is most important about the Cold War period is that it engendered a Middle East political order that persisted from the s until the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early s. Political transitions from one era to another are always messy. The political order that was established during the Cold War started to fray even before the formal collapse of the Soviet Union in In , U.

While these events put pressure on the Cold War regional order that had defined the Middle East since the end of World War II, it was the formal collapse of the Soviet Union in that delivered the biggest geopolitical shock to the Middle East.

There were several effects of this momentous event that rocked the region. First, all countries aligned with either superpower took a strategic haircut. For the United States and the Soviet Union, alliances in the region were seen largely as instruments for battling and containing each other. When the Soviet Union collapsed, this strategic imperative ended for the United States.

While the Middle East remained important to Washington given its reliance on oil and gas from the Persian Gulf and ties with Israel, the Cold War glue that held the United States riveted to the region gave way. Second, former Soviet allies were left holding the bag.

Share on facebook. Share on twitter. Share on linkedin. A new moon "devouring" them would seem to mean that Israel, Ephraim and Judah will all fall within one month. This prophecy was not fulfilled in ancient times. As already mentioned, ancient Judah fell to Babylon more than a century after Israel fell to Assyria.

Yet in the end it appears they will fall together—within one month of each other. This prophecy remains to be fulfilled. Remember that Israel gave his name to Ephraim and Manasseh, the ancestors in turn of the British and American peoples. As Ephraim is mentioned separately in this prophecy, the reference to "Israel" must apply to the United States, which is now the more dominant of the two nations.

For two centuries prior to World War II, the roles were reversed with the multitude of nations—the British Empire—a greater power than the single nation, the United States. But today America is the greater. According to this prophecy, it appears that all three will fall within the span of a month. Hosea Hosea For I desired mercy, and not sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings. Because of their sins, He will let them suffer defeat and collapse. This prophecy could not have been fulfilled until after the rise of Britain and the United States as world powers in the 19th century and the formation of the Jewish state of Israel in the 20th.



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