ALTERNATIVE NEWS

Blacklisted News
Cryptogon
Raw Story
Rense


TALK RADIO

Axiom Radio
Mike Chambers Live
Oracle Broadcasting
The Global Reality
Vantage Point Radio
Become Vocal Local


BLOGS

Freeman
The Celtic Rebel
Techno Fascism Blog
Washingtons's Blog


Business/Economics

321 Gold
JSMineset
Kitco
Seeking Alpha
Market Watch
Bloomberg
Wall Street Journal
RTT News
CNN Money
Forbes
Business Week
Shadow Stats
Economist
Financial Times
Fortune Magazine
Kitco
Gold Eagle
Zero Hedge
The Daily Reckoning


Science/Technology

Wired
Blast Magazine
PHYSorg
Science Daily
Popular Science
Engadget
New Scientist
Technovelgy
Singularity Hub
H+ Magazine
Science Magazine
Seed Magazine
CBR Online
Science News
SlashDot
Scientific American
Spectrum IEEE
Technology Review
io9
ZD Net
Technology News
The Register
Tech News World
VNU Net

LEE'S PODCAST/ARCHIVE

SUBSCRIBE TO RSS

FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER

LEE'S MYSPACE PAGE










ROGERS REPORT
 Prev    Next

North Korea Nuclear Crisis Was Engineered By Design
Published on 06-14-2009   Email To Friend    Print Version

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Source: www.roguegovernment.com
By - Lee Rogers

The current crisis with North Korea was created entirely by design. Back in the 1990s, then President Bill Clinton signed a nuclear agreement with North Korea where nuclear technology was provided to them in exchange for the promise that they would freeze their own nuclear program. North Korea received modern light-water nuclear reactors from the U.S. , which has accelerated their ability to create nuclear weapons. Should it be any surprise that the North Koreans have a nuclear weapon after nuclear technology was given to them in the mid-1990s? Much like how the U.S. provided chemical weapons to Saddam Hussein during the 1980s to create an eventual enemy, they have also done the same with North Korea.

The following is taken from a 1994 London Independent article describing the nuclear deal struck with the North Koreans during the Clinton administration.

PRESIDENT Bill Clinton hailed the nuclear agreement signed in Geneva with North Korea yesterday as 'a good deal for the United States'. Sceptics, however, saw the deal as having been done on North Korean terms.

Apart from being good for the US, said Mr Clinton, 'South Korea and our other allies will be better protected. The entire world will be safer as we slow the spread of weapons.' Robert Gallucci, the chief US negotiator with North Korea, handed over a letter from Mr Clinton at yesterday's signing ceremony which committed him personally to American implementation of the agreement.

Under the terms of the deal, North Korea will freeze its nuclear programme, thought to be aimed at developing nuclear weapons, and dismantle its existing reactors, which produce high quantities of weapons-grade plutonium.

In return Pyongyang will receive modern light-water reactors, whose dollars 4bn ( pounds 2.7bn) cost will be borne mainly by South Korea and Japan.

These reactors will be reliant on imported fuel, and will produce far less plutonium. Until they come into service in about 2003, the international community will pay for North Korea's oil imports, with the US contributing dollars 5m for next year's bill.

Donald Rumsfeld who visited Saddam Hussein in 1983 as part of the Reagan administration’s special envoy to the Middle East played a key role in helping provide chemical weapons to Iraq. These weapons provided to Iraq by the U.S. would be used against the Iranians during the Iran-Iraq war as well as against their own domestic population.  The use of chemical weapons by Hussein was one of the reasons the Bush 41 and Bush 43 administrations used as an excuse to engage in military operations against Iraq.  This is despite the fact that the U.S. provided the chemical weapons to Iraq to begin with.

Rumsfeld was also linked to the North Korean nuclear agreement. Rumsfeld sat on the board of ASEA Brown Boveri or ABB the Swiss Engineering firm that was contracted by the U.S. to provide the two nuclear reactors to the North Koreans from 1990 – 2001. The deal would go through in 2000 while Rumsfeld was still sitting on the company’s board.   

It is easy to see how this situation in North Korea is an engineered crisis much like Iraq was. If the Clinton administration hadn’t facilitated a deal to provide them with modern nuclear technology in the mid-1990s, it is likely that the North Koreans would still be trying to figure out how to build nuclear weapons. The fact that Bill Clinton’s wife and now U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is condemning North Korea due to their nuclear weapons tests and continued pursuit of nuclear weapons is an absolute joke considering her husband helped them along in the process by giving them access to modern nuclear technology. This is just another scenario showing how the U.S. creates artificial crises as part of the problem – reaction – solution paradigm that is used over and over again to push us closer to world government.


oracle broadcasting