Monday, May 28, 2007

THE MAKING OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR 1939-1945

A global assemblage of historians, authors, enemies, and admirers alike are all too quick to point
out that here was Mussolini’s great mistake — the war! Most of these commentators and their
conclusion give none, if any, consideration to the many differing factors which created the now
infamous war of 1939 to 1945, which caused the demise of the Fascist Government in Italy, and
eventually Benito Mussolini’s death on July 28, 1945. He was not the author of these events. He
was forced to protect the interests of Italy first, and secondly the fate of his Fascist Government
which had taken Italy by the bootstraps in 1922 and made it a great Nation once again. He was
sufficiently aware of the secret and scandalous rationale and of the hidden agendas which were
then being played out across Europe and the world. For Benito Mussolini there was no way out!
He was forced to choose and to act. He was given no choice in these vicious, cruel and devious
International Affairs. He knew that if Adolph Hitler’s government was defeated in Germany by
the Allies, that in a matter of days Italy would be militarily invaded and be forced to replace its
Fascist Government.
Much of the fault for the war lays mainly with the citizens of the world who believed all that they
were told and were given to read without question or further inquiry and who willingly send their
sons and daughters away to war albeit some were compelled to do so by the Conscription
Legislation Requirement of their own government. Long periods of economic depression and
long lines of unemployed men were also useful for the creation of instant armies. These same
citizens themselves soon became the prime targets of war in their own cities and houses with the
advent of new and highly lethal equipment of air warfare which changed the concept of a
battlefield of warfare forever.
Germany and The Soviet Union signed a mutual Non-Aggression Pact on August 23, 1939, one
week before England and France declared war on Germany, September 3, 1939.

On September
17 Soviet Russia invaded Eastern Poland with the full knowledge of England and France.

The
German- Russian Non-Aggression Pact was terminated on June 22, 1941. On February 28, 1942
England and the United States signed a Anglo-American Mutual Aid Agreement, which included
a program to supply the Soviet Russia with an unprecedented amount of war centered finances
and vast supplies of military equipment produced primarily in the U.S.A. In reality what the Allies
did with this agreement was rent a country to absorb the full brunt of the powerful and disciplined
German Army’s attacks. The Russian Front proved to be The War Front which saved the Allies in
Europe until the U.S.A. entered fully into the war after December 7, 1941 and subsequently
invaded Europe.
Soviet Russia, with 18 million war dead, was duped into entering a war of ideological and
economic survival by the Western Allied leaders and as a result of their decision suffered these
great losses of men and much of its national infrastructure. Today Russia finds it self a nation
beholden to the Western Nations for its economic survival and plays a secondary role in the
International affairs of the new world order of nations. Poland with over five million war dead
ranks second in the list of martyred lives. This is the very nation that England and France swore
to protect even if war was needed to assure their freedom and independence.


Mussolini had no dealings in these national and international European War maneuvers, except
for his own decisions to protect Spain from an clear and present danger of becoming a Communist
State and the removal of Spain’s then Reigning King. and in Ethiopia where he inherited a long
held Italian legacy and anger of the memory of 14,000 Italian soldiers being massacred at the
blood-drenched battlefield of Aduwa in 1896. These soldiers were literally cut to pieces by
Emperor Melenik II’s tribal armies of Ethiopia.
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He declined all invitations of international travel to attend conferences and meetings, saying “My
business is here in Italy” At the behest of Neville Chamberlain, then Britain’s Prime Minister, he
chaired and animated the historical Peace Agreements signed at Munich Germany, on September
29, 1938.

Winston Churchill, far from being the wise, brave, British Statesman/Saint as he is now painted,
was never the less a knowledgeable factotum in the affairs of modern Europe. He understood that
Britain alone was no military match for the renewed German Military might which Britain now
faced, as a result of their declaration of war against Germany on September 3, 1939. By this
declaration Britain and France put both of their countries at risk and grave danger. The German
Army swept through Belgium and France in only two months of early 1940 and completely
destroyed the British and French armies gathered there to defend the Western Front of the war.
The Great wall of France, the Marginot Line took twenty-one years to build and was designed as
a protective wall of defense from any advancing armies from the East. It stretched from
Switzerland in the North to the Mediterranean in the South. It was a series of underground, ultramodern
tunnels of defense which failed in the face of the onslaught of the German Army on which
France had the audacity to declare war. The German army was now only 25 miles away from the
British Coastline and 90 miles from London. One unexplained and unexplored aspect of the war
remains an open question: If England was truly the ultra archenemy in the eyes of the Germans,
the German Military might could have invaded England and found total victory there within
weeks or months. Instead England was seen to the German Command as a tottering old lady
whose time had now past after a dubious career of instigating and meddling in the affairs of other
nations. The Germans did not attack with its full military might. If they had it would have meant
that the United States would have had to invade England from three thousand miles away in order
to overthrow the German occupation of Great Britain. England now was in an immediate need
of a military savior. They acquired two in 1941 — The United States and the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics.
On September 29, 1941, Russia, England and The U.S.A. signed a mutual aid
agreement in Moscow when Joseph Stalin, Averell Harriman of the U.S.A. and Canadian born,
Baron William Maxwell Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook, of England concluded a Lend Lease
Agreement which guaranteed that Russia could afford to open a Second Front against Germany
in Eastern Europe. At the time Russia’s Soviet Comintern was Western Capitalism’s sworn
enemy, committed to an ideology which had a goal to conquer and dissolve the economic and
social fabric of the Western Capitalist nations of the world — they had been committed to this
economic revolutionary goal since 1917 at the time of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia.

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