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Kissinger Calls for a New World Order
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Kurt Nimmo - January 6, 2009

Every time I see the aged Henry Kissinger, I am reminded of the worst sort of pornography. In fact, I am reminded of a snuff film.

Henry Kissinger is likely one of the most notorious killers on the planet, a monster that makes Charles Manson look like a silly school boy. Manson did not actually kill anybody. He had his brainwashed zombies engage in the dirty work. Kissinger didn’t kill anybody either. He had the Pentagon, the CIA, and various cutthroat clients do his dirty work, that is to say the dirty work of the global elite. Charlie had a few deranged girls on LSD do his bidding. Henry enlisted whole armies to commit the crimes he engineered for his bosses.

“Henry Kissinger’s role in the Cambodian genocide, Chile, and East Timor, makes him a first class war criminal, arguably at least in the class of Hitler’s Foreign Minister Joachim Von Ribbentrop, hanged in 1946,” notes Edward S. Herman. “But Kissinger has the impunity flowing naturally to the leaders and agents of the victorious and dominant power. He gets a Nobel Peace prize, is an honored member of national commissions, and is a favored media guru and guest at public gatherings.” Kissinger sabotaged the 1968 Vietnam peace talks, thus allowing the Vietnam War to drag on for another four years, ultimately at a cost of three or four million dead Vietnamese and 58,000 Americans. Kissinger personally persuaded Nixon to extend the war to Cambodia and Laos which led to another million civilian deaths. According to Nixon’s chief of staff H.R. Haldeman, Kissinger sadistically relished in the details of mass murder campaigns with code names such as “Operation Breakfast,” raids that slaughtered 350,000 civilians. Kissinger made the murder of Chilean socialist Salvador Allende his pet project. He was chairman of the Forty Committee, a CIA working group whose task was to cause chaos inside the country which would lead to a military coup. “The issues are much too important for the Chilean voters to be left to decide for themselves,” quipped Henry. “l don’t see why we need to stand by and watch a country go communist because of the irresponsibility of its own people.” Nixon and Kissinger made sure the Chilean fascist organization Patria y Libertad received training in guerrilla warfare and bombing. “When the coup finally came, in September 1973, it was led by the most extreme fascist members of the military, and it was unrelenting in its ferocity. Allende was assassinated,” writes Mark Zepezauer. “Several cabinet ministers were also assassinated, the universities were put under military control, opposition parties were banned and thousands of Chileans were tortured and killed, many fingered as ‘radicals’ by lists provided by the CIA.” Kissinger went out of his way to protect the brutal Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. “At a time when Pinochet was the target of international censure for state-sponsored torture, disappearances, and murders, Kissinger assured him that he was a victim of communist propaganda and urged him not to pay too much attention to American critics,” writes Lucy Komisar.