
May 1996 EWR
"If I'm right that this secret alliance has been formed, we
need a name for it. In World War II, the USG's enemies were the
Axis, so I'll call this group the New Axis.
"Mind you, I'm not saying I'm sure the New Axis has been formed,
only that it seems logical - if I were them, this is what I'd
be doing."
—Richard Maybury, May 1996 EWR
The New Axis
By Richard J. Maybury
© 1999 by Henry Madison
Research, Inc.
Reprinted from May 1996 EARLY WARNING REPORT.
From time to time I
give you secrets Washington does not want you to know. Here's
another big one.
From 1945 to 1990, the USG (US government) had a "2-war"
military strategy, sometimes called a win-win strategy. This
meant the USG held the manpower and weapons to fight and win
two regional wars at a time. If war broke out in one region,
a distant enemy could not use this as an opportunity to start
his own war unopposed.
Now, after the cutbacks, the Pentagon's strategy is "1-1/2
war" or win-hold-win. The idea is to defeat one enemy while
holding the other in check until enough forces can be released
to defeat them.
This win-hold-win strategy has a flaw no one wants to face:
the USG has bought itself more than two enemies. Highly diligent
in sticking its nose into other people's business, the USG has
backed the regimes of Bosnia, Croatia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
Israel, South Korea and Taiwan. It has thereby become the enemy
of their enemies - Iraq, Iran, Serbia, Syria, North Korea, Libya,
China, Sudan.
| None by themselves would be a match for
US forces, but all of them together would be formidable, and
if you and I know this, they do, too. |
| The USG's backing of the Kremlin probably means we can
add Chechnya to this list, for a total of nine enemies [now eleven;
see additional excerpts at end of article] scattered across Chaostan.
None by themselves would be a match for US forces, but all of
them together would be formidable, and if you and I know this,
they do, too.
Unless the nine [now eleven] are a lot more obtuse than I
think they are, they must be secretly planning something. Some
of them hate each other, but they hate the USG more.
If I'm right that this secret alliance has been formed, we
need a name for it. In World War II, the USG's enemies were the
Axis, so I'll call this group the New Axis.
Mind you, I'm not saying I'm sure the New Axis has been formed,
only that it seems logical - if I were them, this is what I'd
be doing.
| Few realize their main duty since World
War II has been to aid the spread of socialism. |
| Another secret. One of the first things I learned in
the Air Force is that the troops are rarely told the truth about
their missions. Few realize their main duty since World War II
has been to aid the spread of socialism.
Since 1945, the focus of US foreign policy has been to provide
military protection for the USG's allies, and this has enabled
these allies to spend less on their own defense and more on welfare
handouts. We complain about America's welfare boondoggle, but
it is a model of frugality compared to those of most other nations
that are protected by the USG. Especially the rich Persian Gulf
oil states.
The primary instrument of this socialist policy has been the
aircraft carrier. No other nation has anything like a US super-carrier.
The most terrifying weapon ever invented, a carrier is a versatile,
self-contained mobile air base that can rain devastation almost
anywhere on earth. For decades, White House aides have said that
each time the USG runs into a foreign policy problem, the first
words out of the president's mouth are, "tell me where the
carriers are."
Fifty years ago, this socialist strategy was easy. The USG
had 105 carriers. It began scrapping them until today it is down
to 12, and several of these are always unavailable due to maintenance,
training and crew rest.
| Present US military strength is far more
than adequate to defend our homeland, but I doubt it is 30% of
what's needed to prop up all the tyrants US diplomats have pledged
to protect. |
| Each carrier is awesome, but it can only be in one place
at a time, and the USG's allies have not strengthened their forces
to take up the slack. In fact, many of these socialist regimes
have been cutting back their forces, too. The 1990 coalition
George Bush assembled in the Mideast is impossible now.
Present US military strength is far more than adequate to
defend our homeland, but I doubt it is 30% of what's needed to
prop up all the tyrants US diplomats have pledged to protect.
The March [1996] Taiwan crisis looked to me like a test, a
New Axis experiment to see how easily Clinton could be suckered
into moving the carrier Nimitz away from the Persian Gulf oil
fields. If this is what it was, it worked. The Chinese fired
their missiles, and like a guard dog abandoning his post to chase
a rabbit, the Nimitz headed for Taiwan. At the same time, Iranian-backed
rebels were threatening trouble in Bahrain, so the carrier George
Washington, which was in the Mediterranean protecting US troops
in Bosnia, had to leave its post to make a mad dash to the Persian
Gulf.
Apparently the USG does not know its enemies have acquired
an amazing device that enables them to coordinate their actions,
and this device is faster than a carrier. It's called a telephone.
If I am right that the New Axis exists and that it was testing
the USG, we can expect more rabbits until these regimes are confident
they can scatter US forces at will.
From the October 1996 issue of EARLY WARNING
REPORT. .
The USG's confrontation with Iraq drew another US aircraft
carrier away from the Balkans, which certainly agrees with the
"rabbit" theory explained in the 5/96 EWR . . . Notice
that at the same time Saddam had two aircraft carriers tied up
in the Persian Gulf, the North Koreans launched a submarine-borne
commando attack on South Korea. I am not saying I am 100% convinced
my New Axis theory is right, but it all fits so far.
. . . Incidentally, while Clinton was bombing Iraq over Saddam's
attack on the Kurds, NATO member Turkey was slaughtering Kurds,
too.[ 1 ] No one said a word against it. In the
next "terrorist" attack on the US, we can add Kurds
to the ever growing list of suspects.
[ 1 ] New York
Daily News, Sept. 6, 1996
From the January 1997 issue of EARLY WARNING
REPORT. .
| Serbia has been smuggling arms to Libya. |
| Chris Hedges of the NEW YORK TIMES says western diplomats
have told him Serbia has been smuggling arms to Libya. (Serbs
are Eastern Orthodox Christian and Libyans are Moslem, but they
have a common enemy, the USG, which is why I include them in
the New Axis.) This is not proof the New Axis exists, but it
is more evidence.
From the February 1997 issue of EARLY WARNING
REPORT. .
Let me emphasize again that present US military forces are
entirely adequate to protect America, if they were in America,
and they are probably enough to fight two small foreign wars.
But what if I am right about the New Axis? Suppose that, all
on the same day:
- Libya annexes the Gulf of Sidra,
- Sudan mines the Red Sea,
- Serbs hit Kosovo and attack US troops in Bosnia,
- Iran launches revolts in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia,
- Iraq takes Kuwait,
- North Korea invades South Korea,
- China fires missiles at Taiwan and takes the oil-rich Spratly
Islands, and
- Syrian, Algerian and Chechen guerrillas smuggle nuclear,
chemical or biological weapons into Moscow, Washington and Paris.
Are these regimes smart enough to coordinate their moves this
way?
What do you think?
Could US forces handle it?
No chance, they are spread way too thin. Outgoing defense
secretary William Perry admitted to ARMY TIMES, "Our force
structure is stretched pretty close to the limit in carrying
out the missions and tasks that we have."[ 2 ] If
you and I know about this, so do the regimes of the New Axis.
Why would the New Axis do it?
Revenge.
If I am right that the New Axis exists, then, whether they
know it or not, US officials are faced with two choices: (1)
at some point be forced to launch an emergency crash program
to make mountains of weapons, or (2) stop sticking their noses
into other peoples' business.
Which do you think they'll choose?
[ 2 ] ARMY TIMES
6 Jan 97, P. 12
From the July 1997 issue of EARLY WARNING
REPORT. .
Evidence of the New Axis is piling up. Syria has, for the
first time in 15 years, opened its borders with traditional foe
Iraq. DEFENSE NEWS Defense News reports that Iraq's official
newspaper, BABEL, has called for normalization of relations among
old enemies Iran, Iraq and Syria.
Worse, the Taliban in Afghanistan is clearly anti-West, and
probably a candidate for membership in the New Axis.
| They will scatter US forces the way the
old Axis scattered the British in 1941. |
|
Also, in 1990, the Pakistani regime paid $658 million for
28 F-16 jet fighters. Clinton [refused] to deliver the planes,
or refund the money, because Pakistan is Moslem and has become
nuclear capable. Pakistanis [were] enraged. On May 20 [1997],
an official at Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs made the
shocking revelation that China is now "a key ally"
of Pakistan.
Pakistan is an ally of the Taliban, too.
So, the New Axis may have 11 members, six of which stretch
in an unbroken line from the Mediterranean to the Pacific. Two
are nuclear capable (China and Pakistan) and 5 are probably working
on it, or have bought nukes on the black market (Iran, Iraq,
Libya, Syria, North Korea).
If they make the moves I suggested in the 5/96 EWR, they will scatter
US forces the way the old Axis scattered the British in 1941,
and this will give them the oil-rich Persian Gulf. Stay tuned.
. . . Look at the map and get out a globe. Am I right that
the New Axis has been formed? I don't know, but assuming I am,
here is something to keep you awake nights. The old Axis of the
1940s was mainly Germany, Italy and Japan. Despite the Allies'
unimaginable amount of weapons and troops, the task of invading
and conquering the Axis was horrific, as anyone who was at Iwo
Jima, Anzio or Omaha Beach can tell you.
| They will own most of the world's oil,
not to mention a lot of the other natural resources. |
| Compare the sizes and populations of the three old Axis
nations with those of the New Axis. Germany, Italy and Japan
together would fit inside Iran. China alone has four times the
population of the old Axis. The US could not use nukes. The New
Axis has them, too. If I am right that the New Axis exists, then
they will own most of the world's oil, not to mention a lot of
the other natural resources. It's only a matter of time, and
maybe not much. By siding with Europe against the New Axis, Washington
is living in a fool's paradise.
From the September 1997 issue of EARLY
WARNING REPORT. .
Conventional wisdom says wars break out when rulers find themselves
beset by domestic troubles and they need a foreign crisis to
divert their people's attention. This assumption leads to the
further assumption that prosperous nations are not inclined to
war.
| Clinton now has Army troops deployed on
1,229 missions in 100 countries, plus the deployments of the
Navy, Air Force and Marines. |
| The people may not want war, but their rulers are another
matter. After studying dozens of wars, historian Geoffrey Blainey
wrote THE CAUSES OF WAR in 1973. Blainey found that nations are
most likely to go to war when the economy is strong and rulers
feel powerful and capable of garnering even more prestige by
winning a war. Politics is, after all, about power -- the thrill
of kicking the bejeezers out of someone -- and to a power seeker,
a strong economy combined with a strong military is an irresistible
temptation.
In the Roaring '90s, the US economy has been booming, and
with the fall of the Soviet Empire, the USG has become the world's
only superpower. Clinton now has Army troops deployed on 1,229
missions in 100 countries, plus the deployments of the Navy,
Air Force and Marines (ARMY TIMES, 11 Aug 97). The Roman Empire
has been revived.
| The USG spends more on its military forces
than all its allies combined. |
| This while the USG's NATO allies have been reducing their
military strength. The USG spends more on its military forces
than all its allies combined (ARMY TIMES, 11 Aug 97).
The USG also has far more military strength than any of its
enemies, but only if we assume these enemies have not formed
an alliance, which I suspect they have.
. . . The future? My guess is Clinton is thinking about a
war with one of these powers, probably Iran, and the limited
imagination of the Clinton gang cannot grasp the possibility
that the other ten nations of the New Axis would see this as
an opportunity to make the war into a giant Vietnam.
Listen for news about Iran being tied to the Khobar Towers
bombing in Saudi Arabia last year. This connection could be used
as the excuse for an attack on Iran. If it is, oil could go to
$100 per barrel overnight.
From the October 1997 issue of EARLY WARNING
REPORT. .
. . . the new Iranian cruise missiles mean the USG is fast
losing the ability to defend Saudi Arabia against Iran and Iraq.
Does Prince Abdullah see these missiles as the handwriting on
the wall? Is he doing the only thing Saudi rulers can do, switching
sides?
| The new Iranian cruise missiles mean the
USG is fast losing the ability to defend Saudi Arabia against
Iran and Iraq. |
| If so, the New Axis will get the Persian Gulf on a silver
platter.
More evidence: WORLD PRESS REVIEW reports that Saudi Arabia's
Consultative Council has been revised to include more Shiite
Moslems and Sunni fundamentalists -- the kinds of people likely
to oppose ties with the US, and favor ties with Syria, Iraq and
Iran.
Saudi Arabia is the leader of the Gulf's Arab oil dictatorships.
If all these people go over to the New Axis, this will give the
New Axis 70% or more of the world's oil deposits.
From the February 1998 issue of EARLY WARNING
REPORT. .
Like Christianity, Islam has various factions, the main ones
being the Sunni and Shiite. Saudi Arabia is the center of the
Sunni, Iran the Shiite. THE ECONOMIST Jan 10,1998, p.37 reports
that ever since the December [1997] Islamic conference I told
you about in the 1/98 EWR , Saudi Arabia and Iran are "now being cozily
called 'the two wings of Islam.'" I doubt the Saudi rulers
have gone over to the New Axis yet, but they must be on the verge.
From the March-April 1998 issue of EARLY
WARNING REPORT. .
For months I have been telling you about my suspicion that
Clinton's Persian Gulf "allies" secretly plan to switch
sides and join the New Axis. Now the Feb. 23 NAVY TIMES reports
that Kuwait is planning to hold joint military exercises with,
guess who -- Iran. This is a very big development and the mainstream
press is ignoring it.
From the May 1998 issue of EARLY WARNING
REPORT. .
I have long warned you that the New Axis might start wars
in Kosovo and other areas as diversions to pull US forces away
from the Persian Gulf. Kosovo's Moslem guerrillas have been receiving
weapons smuggled from Moslem Albania, and rumor says some guerrillas
were trained in Iran. If Kosovo becomes the next big war, watch
the Persian Gulf, and consider buying more oil.
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