BWAHAHAHAAAAAAAAAA! "rst0wxyz" See, I was right all along you're just a
jerkoff who
likes the taste of his own ***.
"rst0wxyz" <rst0wxyz@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:6bfcbe9a-a513-42db-bd2f-28788f6fc39f@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Mar 1, 3:25 pm, the ****ing Boudha <voivodv...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> On Mar 1, 6:21 pm, "ltl...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
" <ltl...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > Crazy American's crazy plan.
> > No wonder Americans believe all kinds of conspiracy theories,
> > including 9/11
> > was an American or Israeli job.
> > This kind of activity also made America the #1 rogue nation of the
> > world.
>
>
>http://www.wired.com/print/politics/security/magazine/16-03/ff_nuclea...
> > ------------------------
> > WIRED MAGAZINE: 16.03
> > Politics : Security
> > The Nukes of October: Richard Nixon's Secret Plan to Bring Peace to
> > Vietnam
> > By Jeremi Suri 02.25.08 | 6:00 PM
>
> > Top Secret
>
> > The following do***ents offer additional proof of the plan hatched by
> > Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger to end the conflict in Vietnam by
> > pretending to launch a nuclear strike on the USSR.
>
> > · Memorandum for the President
> > · Memorandum for Colonel Haig
> > · Notes on Increased Readiness Posture of October 1969
>
> > On the morning of October 27, 1969, a squadron of 18 B-52s -- massive
> > bombers with eight turbo engines and 185-foot wingspans -- began
racing
> > from the western US toward the eastern border of the Soviet Union. The
> > pilots flew for 18 hours without rest, hurtling toward their targets
> > at more than 500 miles per hour. Each plane was loaded with nuclear
> > weapons hundreds of times more powerful than the ones that had
> > obliterated Hiro****ma and Nagasaki.
>
> > The B-52s, known as Stratofortresses, slowed only once, along the
> > coast of Canada near the polar ice cap. Here, KC-135 planes --
> > essentially 707s filled with jet fuel -- carefully approached the
> > bombers. They inched into place for a delicate in-flight connection,
> > transferring thousands of gallons from aircraft to aircraft through a
> > long, thin tube. One unfortunate ****ft in the wind, or twitch of the
> > controls, and a plane filled with up to 150 tons of fuel could crash
> > into a plane filled with nuclear ordnance.
>
> > The aircraft were pointed toward Moscow, but the real goal was to
> > change the war in Vietnam. During his campaign for the presidency the
> > year before, Richard Nixon had vowed to end that conflict. But more
> > than 4,500 Americans had died there in the first six months of 1969,
> > including 84 soldiers at the debacle of Hamburger Hill. Meanwhile, the
> > peace negotiations in Paris, which many people hoped would end the
> > conflict, had broken down. The Vietnamese had declared that they would
> > just sit there, conceding nothing, "until the chairs rot." Frustrated,
> > Nixon decided to try something new: threaten the Soviet Union with a
> > massive nuclear strike and make its leaders think he was crazy enough
> > to go through with it. His hope was that the Soviets would be so
> > frightened of events spinning out of control that they would strong-
> > arm Hanoi, telling the North Vietnamese to start making concessions at
> > the negotiating table or risk losing Soviet military sup****t.
>
> > Codenamed Giant Lance, Nixon's plan was the culmination of a strategy
> > of premeditated madness he had developed with national security
> > adviser Henry Kissinger. The details of this episode remained secret
> > for 35 years and have never been fully told. Now, thanks to do***ents
> > released through the Freedom of Information Act, it's clear that Giant
> > Lance was the leading example of what historians came to call the
> > "madman theory": Nixon's notion that faked, finger-on-the-button rage
> > could bring the Soviets to heel.
>
> > Nixon and Kissinger put the plan in motion on October 10, sending the
> > US military's Strategic Air Command an urgent order to prepare for a
> > possible confrontation: They wanted the most powerful thermonuclear
> > weapons in the US arsenal readied for immediate use against the Soviet
> > Union. The mission was so secretive that even senior military officers
> > following the orders -- including the SAC commander himself -- were
not
> > informed of its true purpose.
>
> > After their launch, the B-52s pressed against Soviet airspace for
> > three days. They skirted enemy territory, challenging defenses and
> > taunting Soviet aircraft. The pilots remained on alert, prepared to
> > drop their bombs if ordered. The Soviets likely knew about the threat
> > as it was unfolding: Their radar picked up the planes early in their
> > flight paths, and their spies monitored American bases. They knew the
> > bombers were armed with nuclear weapons, because they could determine
> > their weight from takeoff patterns and fuel use. In past years, the US
> > had kept nuclear-armed planes in the air as a possible deterrent (if
> > the Soviets blew up all of our air bases in a surprise attack, we'd
> > still be able to respond). But in 1968, the Pentagon publicly banned
> > that practice -- so the Soviets wouldn't have thought the 18 planes
> > were part of a patrol. Secretary of defense Melvin Laird, who opposed
> > the operation, worried that the Soviets would either interpret Giant
> > Lance as an attack, causing catastrophe, or as a bluff, making
> > Wa****ngton look weak.
>
> > The US had come perilously close to nuclear war before: During the
> > Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, the nation's nuclear forces were poised
> > for imminent use in response to Soviet actions. And on several
> > occasions, aircraft carrying nuclear weapons had crashed; other times,
> > radar operators had misinterpreted flocks of migrating birds as a
> > Soviet first strike. October 1969, however, was different. This was
> > the only moment we know of when a president decided that it made
> > strategic sense to pretend to launch World War III.
>
> > Nixon's madman pose and Giant Lance were based on game theory, a
> > branch of mathematics that uses simple calculations and rigorous logic
> > to help understand how people make choices -- like whether to surge
> > ahead in traffic or whether to respond to a military provocation with
> > a strike of one's own. The most famous example in the field is the
> > Prisoner's Dilemma: If two criminal suspects are held in separate
> > cells, should they keep mum or rat each other out? (Answer: They
> > should keep quiet, but as self-interested actors, what they will do is
> > betray each other and both go to jail.) In the Cold War, the "games"
> > were much more complicated simulations of war and bargaining: Would
> > the Soviets be more likely to attack Western Europe if we kept
> > missiles there or if we didn't?
>
> > Kissinger had studied game theory as a young academic and strategic
> > theorist at Harvard. In the early '60s, he was part of a group of
> > World War II veterans who became the oracles or "whiz kids" of the
> > nuclear age. Working at newly formed institutes and think tanks, like
> > the RAND Cor****ation, they preached that the proper way to deal with
> > the existence of nuclear weapons wasn't to act as if the situation was
> > so grave that one couldn't even discuss using them; it was to figure
> > out how to use them most effectively. This was the attitude mocked by
> > Stanley Kubrik in Dr. Strangelove, in which RAND appears thinly
> > disguised as the Bland Cor****ation.
>
> > ...
>
> > ---------------------------
>
> peace in Vietnam in the last century ,
> why . you think the Chinese were stupid ?
>
> the Chinese wanted the Whites out of the East and South East
> Asia .
>
> in this New Century ,
> the Chinese want SE ASIA to become Chinese territory
> with all the Chinese
> in Malaysia ,
> in Thailand ,
> in Cambodia ,
> in Indonesia ,
> in the Philippines,
> in Lao-land,
> in Myanmar
That because the people in all those countries are Chinese, komin.
The natives have abandoned heir homeland and set sail to the new world
in the America's.


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