dimanche 5 mai 2013

Su La Testa!: COLPI DI STATO DI KISSINGER E ROCKEFELLER

Su La Testa!: COLPI DI STATO DI KISSINGER E ROCKEFELLER:

 
Kissinger & Napolitano (foto quirinale.it)

by Gianni LANNES


Quanto è piccolo il mondo sotto il nuovo ordine mondiale che ha schiavizzato gran parte del Sudamerica e dell'Europa. Ecco, da chi è retta l'Italia: personaggi che hanno tradito la Patria e calpestato la Costituzione. Dalla lettura dei seguenti documenti segreti (USA),  i colpi di Stato di David Rockefeller e di Henry Kissinger, mandante dell'omicidio dello statista Aldo Moro e prima ancora dell'eliminazione del presidente democratico cileno Salvador Allende.

lo statista ALDO MORO e l'assassino Hanry Kissinger


Il criminale internazionale Kissinger (membro influente del Bilderberg Group) è stato ricevuto dal Presidente della RepubblicaGiorgio Napolitano, collaboratore dell'Aspen Institute, finanziato dallo stesso Rockefeller (ideatore del Bilderberg Group e della Trilateral Commission, associazioni mafiose e criminali di caratura internazionale, alle quali l'attuale presidente del Consiglio dei MinistriEnrico Letta è affiliato).


il presidente del Cile SALVADOR ALLENDE


"Chile", Memorandum of Conversation with Anaconda Copper Executives, 17 August 1971, White House, memoranda and letters attached, Confidential


The CIA's inability to stop Salvador Allende's election to the Chilean presidency the previous October had produced great displeasure in the Nixon White House, which had backed covert operations to prevent the Popular Unity coalition's victory. In keeping with Nixon's order to Director of Central Intelligence Richard Helms to "make the economy scream," the White House supported an embargo on international loans to the Chilean government. Earlier governments had taken steps to nationalize copper mines in Chile, but the Allende coalition took the process further in July 1971, when Congress passed a constitutional amendment allowing the government to nationalize all the mines, placing them under the control of a state-owned company. In light of the high profits that U.S. corporations had made in Chilean copper over the years, Allende argued that those profits were sufficient compensation.  








Concerned about the Chilean situation, in August 1971 Chase Manhattan Bank Chairman David Rockefeller asked Kissinger to meet with his former colleague John Place, who had recently become president of Anaconda Copper. 
A meeting between Kissinger, Place, and another Anaconda executive showed some differences over the exact meaning of a "tough line" toward Chile, but it was evident that the White House wanted to harass the Chilean economy: "if we agree to open up international credits, we may be just speeding up the process of establishing a communist regime."