As expected, Fidel’s suggestions were received with laughter and contempt. But less than two years later, President Kennedy created his Alliance for Progress, pledging $10 billion for the first ten years. Later, President Johnson promised another $10 billion to continue the program. And less than ten years later, in the spring of 1967, a hemispheric conference was held in Uruguay where the decision was made for the creation of a Latin American common market. Incredibly, both of the apparently far-fetched suggestions Castro made eventually became a reality.
On December 31, 1960, Castro’s newspaper Revolución came out with a banner headline in big, bold letters: “Yankee Invasion!” Inside, there was an alarmist article about an imminent American invasion of Cuba. That same night Castro went on TV to expand on Revolución’s article, which most likely had been written by Castro himself. According to Castro, an invasion by Cuban exiles backed by U.S. marines would occur before President Eisenhower left the presidency on January 20. But what he said afterwards defies all rational explanation
According to Castro, CIA Director Allen Dulles already had everything ready for an invasion. “The excuse would be the assertion that Cuba was allowing rocket pads to be constructed on its territory.” On the basis of this reasoning, Castro called for a general mobilization of Cuba’s armed forces. Castro’s words were repeated almost verbatim in a note addressed to the UN Security Council by Cuban Foreign Minister Raúl Roa and delivered on December 31, 1960.
One must keep in mind that Castro delivered this speech way before any indication that an actual American invasion had been planned and more than sixteen months before the idea of deploying missiles in Cuba allegedly popped into Khrushchev’s mind.
But there are more instances of Castro successfully predicting the future. For example, in 1966, Castro hosted in Havana the Tricontinental Conference, a Cuba-based international organization for promoting global communist revolution by violent means. In 1970, David Rockefeller and other Wall Street bankers create the Trilateral Commission, whose secret goal is promoting a global communo-fascist revolution by gradual means.
On October 12th, 1979, Fidel Castro gave a speech at the UN 34th General Assembly, in which he called for a “New World Order.” On September 11th, 1990, President George H.W. Bush delivered a speech to the Congress, entitled “Toward a New World Order.”
In 1974, Henry Kissinger wrote super secret National Security Study Memorandum 200. It delineated a genocidal policy of depopulating for much of the African continent, to allow U.S. transnational corporations, not Africans, exploit the continent’s natural resources. Just a year after, in 1975, more than 40,000 of Castro’s troops invaded Angola. Other African countries that fell under the control of Castro’s troops were Ethiopia, Congo, and Guinea-Bissau. A few months after the Castroite troops gained control of Angola, the country became one of the main commercial partners of the U.S. in Africa. 95 percent of Angola’s oil was exported to the West. Half of the production of the Gulf Oil in Angola ended up in American refineries. The consortium De Beers controlled the country’s diamond mines.
In 1985, several Latin American countries defaulted on their payments of the interests of their debts to Wall Street banks. As a result, a devastating economic crisis erupted in most of Latin America. In an article published in March 27, 1985, in the authoritative Mexican newspaper Excelsior, Castro suggested a bailout of the banks. Faced with a devastating economic crisis in the U.S., president Barack Obama signed the “Restoring American Financial Stability Act of 2010, which provided for a back door bailout of $50 billion for Wall Street banks.
More recently, no July 5, 2010, Cuba’s state-run media published Castro’s prediction that nuclear war will soon break out as the result of an U.S. conflict with Iran. A few days later, a happy, smiling Castro explained in greater detail his prediction on a taped interview aired on July 12 on Cuban television.
According to Castro, nuclear war could break out if the U.S. tries to militarily enforce sanctions against Iran for its nuclear program. “When they launch war, they’re going to launch it there. It cannot help but be nuclear,” he said. “I believe the danger of war is growing a lot. They are playing with fire.”
On August 6, 2010, Fidel Castro brought the subject again when, in an address to the Cuban parliament that marked his first official government appearance since emergency surgery four years ago, he appealed to President Obama to stave off global nuclear war.
Given the fact that most of Castro’s predictions have become true, there are enough reasons to be alarmed. Is the Cuban tyrant a Caribbean Nostradamus; a soothsayer that has the ability to see the future?
Actually not. What Castro has, though, is a direct channel of communication with powerful people who have the ability to alter and change the future according to their will. I am talking about the Wall Street bankers, oil magnates and CEOs of transnational corporations entrenched at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), particularly the Rockefellers. Proof of it is that all these events that Castro has prognosticated were made possible thanks to the efforts of CFR members infiltrated in the U.S. government.
But Castro’s dreams of nuclear Armageddon are not new.
In October 3, 1962, a few days before the onset of the Cuban missile crisis, Fidel Castro sent one of his trusted men to New York on a secret mission. He was to activate a terrorist team to accomplish Castro’s orders to blow up a big portion of Manhattan, including the Statue of Liberty, Macy’s department store, several subway stations, the 42nd street bus terminal and Grand Central station, as well as several refineries along the New Jersey shore, including the Humble Oil and Refining Company in Linden. To this effect they had stored a huge cache of explosives in the store of one of the team’s members.
But the saboteurs’ plan was too ambitious and included too many people, and soon Hoover’s FBI, not under CFR control, got word of it and detained the main terrorists. Had their plan worked out the way it had been conceived, it would undoubtedly have ignited American public opinion and prompted retaliation against Cuba. Had it occurred during the tense days of the crisis it may have been taken for a Russian preemptive attack on the United States. That may have triggered a spasm-like retaliatory strike on the Soviet Union, with unpredictable consequences --most likely causing the deaths of several million people around the world.
Fortunately, the plan failed. But Fidel Castro is a very resourceful man --no wonder the CFR conspirators have been effectively using him for so many years. After his failed attempt to create a provocation that may have brought a nuclear confrontation between the superpowers, Castro pulled another deadly ace from his sleeve. It is a well-known fact that at the apex of the crisis, on October 27, 1962, an American U-2 reconnaissance plane was shot down on the eastern part of Cuba by a Soviet surface-to-air missile. Several explanations, some of them conflicting among each other, have been given to explain that bizarre event, but most people agree that the missile was fired in violation of orders from Khrushchev and the Soviet high command.
Following Castro’s orders, and disregarding Soviet advice, in the morning of Saturday, October 27, antiaircraft batteries manned by the Cuban army began firing at American low-flying reconnaissance planes, damaging at least one. As Castro himself told Tad Szulc, “I am absolutely certain that if the low-level flights had been resumed we would have shot down one, two, or three of these planes. . . With so many batteries firing, we would have shot down some planes. I don’t know whether this would have started nuclear war.”
Some years later, declassified documents show that, on October 26, Castro already had demanded an assurance from Khrushchev that, if the U.S. invaded Cuba, the Soviet Union would launch a nuclear attack against the United States. In a clear reference to the use of nuclear weapons against the United States, Castro urged Khrushchev to consider the “elimination of such a danger,” and added, “there is, I believe, no other choice.”
It is evident that, whatever he really had in mind, Castro was trying to precipitate a nuclear confrontation between the Soviet Union and the United States. We know that, perhaps triggered by Castro’s insane letter, Khrushchev got cold feet and ordered the dismantling of what looked like strategic missile bases in Cuba and sent everything back to the Soviet Union. But this is not the end of the story.
In late 2009, the New York Times published an incredible story, which shows that, twenty years after his failed attempts during the missile crisis, Castro was still doing his best to destroy the world. A newly released document, shows that in the early 1980s Castro tried again to convince the Soviets to launch a nuclear strike against the United States. According to Andrian A. Danilevich, a Soviet general staff officer from 1964 to the 1990s who wrote the Soviet Union’s reference guide on strategic nuclear planning, in the early 1980s Castro “pressed hard for a tougher Soviet line against the U.S. up to and including possible nuclear attacks.” According to another source, in 1981 Castro told the Soviet leaders to “seriously consider re-establishing the nuclear missile bases in Cuba dismantled after the missile crisis.”
Some questions come to mind: Has Castro been acting on his own, or following orders from his CFR eugenicist masters? Where were the Rockefellers on the two occasions Castro tried to provoke a nuclear Armageddon? Were they hiding in their nuclear shelter under the Pocantico Hills?
Having nuclear-trigger-happy Fidel Castro as a friend perhaps explains Nelson Rockefeller’s obsession with nuclear shelters. On the other hand, having the Rockefellers as friends may explain Castro's obsession with nuclear war. After a visit to India in 1973, Jawaharlal Nehru told some friends, “Governor Rockefeller is a very strange man. All he wants to talk about is bomb shelters.”
India’s Prime Minister was not off the mark. After Nelson became the Governor of New York, he ordered the building, and paid with his own money, of a nuclear shelter for the Executive Mansion, another for his apartment building on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, as well as the one Rockefeller’s compound in upstate New York at the Pocantico Hills. This is a huge underground bunker to be used as an emergency nuclear shelter to survive a nuclear Armageddon. The bunker is also the emergency headquarters for Shell, Manufacturers Hanover, Standard Oil of New Jersey, and other Wall Street firms and multinational corporations.
He also ordered the building of a gigantic nuclear shelter in Albany, for an “alternative seat of government,” in case of nuclear attack. All these shelters were kept ready at all times, with canned food and water replaced periodically to ensure freshness.
The Albany shelter was actually a bunker designed to withstand a direct nuclear blast and its radioactive residue, and was connected to the NORAD alert system through a sophisticated communications setup second only to the ones used by the Pentagon. May it be that Nelson planned to accomplish his dream of becoming the U.S. president with a little help from his friend Fidel?
Two of the most cherished dreams of the Rockefellers are depopulation and deindustrialization. That is precisely what the New World Order is all about. According to the Rockefellers and their minions, the world is overpopulated, and they need to get rid of the excess baggage --that is, us-- ,which they think is no less than 85 percent of the current levels of population.
Despite their efforts for many years of trying to kill the rest of us by different means, including conventional wars, artificially created viruses, lethal drugs and the poisoning of the environment, humans have proved to be extremely resilient. Therefore, Castro, his Rockefeller friends, and their criminal associates at the CFR may have concluded that only a nuclear Armageddon can do the job, and it seems that they are working hard to spoil our day.
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Servando Gonzalez is a Cuban-born American writer, semiologist and intelligence analyst. He has written books, essays and articles on Latin American history, intelligence, espionage, and semiotics.
Servando is the author of Historia herética de la revolución fidelista, The Secret Fidel Castro, The Nuclear Deception and La madre de todas las conspiraciones, all available at Amazon.com.
He also hosted the documentaries Treason in America: The Council on Foreign Relations and Partners in Treason: The CFR-CIA-Castro Connection, produced by Xzault Media Group of San Leandro, California.
His latest book, Psychological Warfare and the New World Order: The Secret War gainst the American People just appeared and is available at Amazon.com.
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