Secret Societies, Narcoterrorism, International Fascism and the World Anti-Communist League Part I
The blogosphere is awash with tales of highly secretive, globalistic groups and organizations working towards some type of sinister agenda. As I'm guessing many of the regular readers of this blog have surfed more than their fair share of said conspiracy sites it is probably not worth going into an extensive examination of the usual suspects – the Round Table groups (especially the infamous American branch, the Council on Foreign Relations), the Trilateral Commission, the Bilderberg Group, etc. The conspiratorial right has long accused these groups of having some type of nefarious agenda and there is no doubt a basis in reality for these accusations. That being said, the objectives of such groups probably bear little resemblance to the predictable one-world-communistic-government-under-the-UN fever dreams the conspiratorial right has long envisioned.
What's more, this particular faction of elites is not the only game in town. As was considered at great length during my examination of the American Security Council (which can be found here, here, here and here), the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) saw its influence steadily wane in relation to the former group throughout the second half of the 20th century. The ASC was hardly an isolated faction within the United States, either. Indeed, it's hierarchy shared extensive overlap with the notorious international lobby group known as the World Anti-Communist League (WACL) .
the League now calls itself the World League for Freedom and Democracy, which surely indicates someone inside the League has quite a dry sense of humor
In many ways the WACL became the chief organization for international fascism in the post-World War II era. Over the course of this series we shall examine the extensive ties between the WACL and various fascist and far right groups the world over as well as the profound, if little acknowledged, impact it would have on the political course of humanity by the 1980s. The WACL was far more than a lobby group, you see, and the means by which it sought to achieve its political ends would be instrumental in the formation of modern day drug trafficking and terrorism, both of which still being a disease at the very fiber of civilization to this day.
With this in mind, let us begin our examination of the WACL by focusing in on its origins. There were chiefly two groups responsible for the formation of the international group in 1966, both of which having laid the groundwork years before the official unveiling of the WACL. These two groups were the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations (ABN) and the Asian People's Anti-Communist League (APACL). As it is the older of the two groups and has a less complex legacy, I shall begin with the ABN. The roots of the ABN in turn lie with the Quislings, the Central and Eastern European groups who collaborated with the Nazis both before and during (and after?) World War II.
"... In each of those Eastern European countries, the German SS set up or funded political action organizations that help form SS militias during the war.
"In Hungary, for example, the Arrow Cross was the Hungarian SS affiliate; in Romania, the Iron Guard. The Bulgarian Legion, the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), the Latvian Legion, and the Byelorussian (White Russian) Belarus Brigade were all SS-linked. In each of their respective countries, they were expected to serve the interests of the German Nazi Party before and during the war.
"Many of these groups formed SS divisions: the Ukrainian Nationalist formed the 14th Galician Division, Waffen SS; the Latvians formed the 15th and 19th Divisions, Waffen SS; etc. These units and related German-controlled police units had several functions. The Ukrainian division unsuccessfully tried to impede the advance of the Soviet army against the Nazi army. Others hunted down those fellow countrymen who opposed the German occupation of Eastern Europe during World War II.
"More sadistically, many units rounded up hundreds of thousands of Jews, Poles, and others, and conducted mass murders on the spot, sometimes decimating whole villages. They perfected 'mobile killing teams' as efficient means of mass executions. Little is known about these units compared to the concentration camps, gas chambers, and ovens, but they were an integrated component of the 'Final Solution.' Approximately one-third of the victims of the Holocaust, perhaps as many as two million, died at the hands of these units."
(Old Nazis, the New Right, and the Republican Party, Russ Bellant, pgs. 4-5)
the Ustase-backed Croatian parliament and officials from the Catholic Church
Continues at: http://visupview.blogspot.com/2013/09/s ... orism.html