by Thinker
Latest Blackstone Intel from inside Iraq/Syria. Plus… stunning details about the Rothschild connections to the White House.
The Allies of World War II, called the United Nations from the 1 January 1942 declaration, were the countries that together opposed the Axis powers during the Second World War (1939–1945).
The Allies promoted the alliance as a means to control German, Japanese and Italian aggression.
At the start of the war on 1 September 1939, the Allies consisted of France, Poland and the United Kingdom, as well as their dependent states, such as British India. Within days they were joined by the independent Dominions of the British Commonwealth: Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa. After the start of the German invasion of North Europe until the Balkan Campaign, the Netherlands, Belgium, Greece, and Yugoslavia joined the Allies. After first having cooperated with Germany in invading Poland whilst remaining neutral in the Allied-Axis conflict, the Soviet Union perforce joined the Allies in June 1941 after being invaded by Germany. The United States provided war materiel and money all along, and officially joined in December 1941 after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. China had already been in a prolonged war with Japan since the Marco Polo Bridge Incident of 1937, but officially joined the Allies in 1941.
The alliance was formalised by the Declaration by United Nations, from 1 January 1942. However, the name United Nations was rarely used to describe the Allies during the war. The leaders of the “Big Three”—the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States—controlled Allied strategy; relations between the United Kingdom and the United States were especially close. The Big Three together with China were referred as a “trusteeship of the powerful”, then were recognized as the Allied “Big Four” in the Declaration by United Nations and later as the “Four Policemen” of the United Nations. After the war ended, the Allied nations became the basis of the modern United Nations.
During December 1941, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt devised the name “United Nations” for the Allies and proposed it to British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. He referred to the Big Three and China as a “trusteeship of the powerful”, and then later the “Four Policemen”. The Declaration by United Nations on 1 January 1942 was the basis of the modern United Nations (UN).
At the Potsdam Conference of July–August 1945, Roosevelt’s successor, Harry S. Truman, proposed that the foreign ministers of China, France, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States “should draft the peace treaties and boundary settlements of Europe”, which led to the creation of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the “Big Five”, and soon thereafter the establishment of those states as the permanent members of the UNSC.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allies_of_World_War_II
LIKE GENERAL BUTLER AND PATTON SAID, WAR IS A RACKET!
The Grand Alliance, also known as The Big Three, was a military alliance consisting of the three major Allied powers of World War II: the Soviet Union, the United States, and the United Kingdom. It is often called the “Strange Alliance” because it united the world’s greatest capitalist state, the greatest communist state and the greatest colonial power.
The Grand Alliance was one of convenience in the fight against the Axis powers. The British had reason to ask for one as Germany, Italy, and Imperial Japan threatened not only the colonies of the British Empire in North Africa and Asia, but also the Home Islands. The United States felt that the Japanese and German expansion should be contained, but ruled out force until the attack by the Imperial Japanese Navy on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. The Soviet Union, after the breaking of the Nazi–Soviet Pact by the instigation of Operation Barbarossa in 1941, greatly despised the unchallenged Japanese expansion in the East, particularly considering their defeat in several previous wars with Japan. They also recognized, as the US and Britain had suggested, the advantages of a two-front war. In 1942 the three powers discussed becoming, with China, the Four Policemen of world peace.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Alli…ld_War_II)
It wasn’t the the leaders who made the major decisions, but the cabinets/advisors they surrounded themselves with. Do you know who they were? How much of an influence did they have in what happened in every war? Waking up in a world where the history written is telling many truths and lies about how the world really turns.