Thursday, December 7, 2023

US created Pearl Harbor as PRETEXT for war

Doc Central, March 4, 2022; Pfc. Sandoval, Ashley Wells, Seth Auberon, Wisdom Quarterly
Jump ahead. Discussion of the plan to allow Pearl Harbor to be attack begins at Minute 45:25

Pearl Harbor was planned by Pres. Franklin Roosevelt | secrets revealed
(Documentary Central) History says the Pearl Harbor bombing by Japan was the ultimate "sneak attack," but that's a propagandistic lie. Historians are convinced that U.S. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt KNEW it was coming long in advance. Did FDR sacrifice many his own troops to justify (get a pretext for) joining the larger war against Nazi Germany, who was making advances that might see Hitler rule the world? More documentaries 👉 SubToDocumentaries #Documentary #Facts #Channel

Day of Deceit: Truth About Pearl Harbor

What's the big deal? That's how we do all wars
Author Robert B. Stinnett (narrated by Rafael Ferrer) has a 4.6 out of 5 stars with 490 ratings. The great question about Pearl Harbor -- What did we know and when did we know it? -- has been argued for years.

However, no investigator has previously been able to PROVE that foreknowledge of Japan's attack existed at the highest levels. The U.S. knew it because the U.S. provoked it on purpose. Until now. After decades of Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, researcher Robert B. Stinnett has gathered the long-hidden evidence that shatters every lie about Pearl Harbor.

Not only was the attack expected, it was deliberately provoked by FDR's government through an eight-step program devised by the Navy.

Previous investigators have claimed that the U.S. government did not crack Japan's military codes before Dec. 7, 1941. But Stinnett offers cable after cable of decryptions. We did crack it.

Stinnett proves that a Japanese spy on the island transmitted information -- including a map of bombing targets -- beginning on August 21, and that we knew all about it. The evidence is overwhelming.

At the highest levels -- on FDR's desk -- America had ample warning of the pending attack. The attack happened in slow motion. The U.S. moved the ships from their old home in San Diego to their new home in Hawaii -- 1,500 miles closer to Japan to tempt them. We moved the important ships, leaving just junk and young men to be bombed.

At those same levels, it was understood that the isolationist American public (not wanting to be involved in foreign war but isolating ourselves to U.S. problems) would not support or fund a declaration of war. Unless we were attacked first. (We could not wait for that, so we brought it on and cried, "What a surprise!")

The result was a plan to methodically incite Japan, to keep the loyal officers responsible for Pearl Harbor in the dark, and to drag America into the largest war of its many, many wars.

©1999 Robert B. Stinnett, all rights reserved (P)1999 Simon & Schuster Inc., All Rights Reserved, AUDIOWORKS is an imprint of Simon & Schuster, Inc.


War for profit (Smedley Butler)
The U.S. had broken the code and knew ALL about Japan's plans to bomb Hawaii. There was no surprise and no need to retaliate by joining WWII. The U.S. wanted to join and needed a pretext. It let U.S. soldiers be killed to make sure it got its pretext.

This is U.S. propaganda at its finest, at its most usual. War is a racket, and this is business as usual. The U.S. moved its important ships out to sea for safety, leaving behind old wrecks in need of demolition. Many sailors were also left out as bait.

Every war gets a pretext now.
It took Japan weeks to arrive, and as kamikaze fighters flew, they knew it was a trap. But it was too late. They were taken in by the U.S. ruse. They bombed, they dove, they got shot down. It was all a trick, all for nothing, no surprise to U.S. forces.

Japan was doomed, and the U.S. already had a super bomb in the works that it would drop to demonstrate to the world who the new Empire was and who would be calling the shots on the planet from then on. It wasn't going to be Hitler's Germany and the Nazis.


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