AGENDA FOR THE ANTI KHMER RACE GROUP IN 2011.
Managed conflicts in this way.
1. Phony war IN AFGHANISTAN -PAKISTAN or -drug trade, USING DRONE INSTEAD OF 
B-52, like in Cambodia in 1969 , WITH A PURPOSE OF DESTRUCTION OF THE CIVILIANS 
,WOMEN,CHILDREN LIKE IN CAMBODIA IN 1969-1975 WITH B-52 ORDERED BY SATAN HENRY 
KISSINGER. or a drug trade back to America and ...., using US airplanes. US 
Officials  to bring back opium , to carry  drug trade in a legal way by not 
going through TSA OF NAPOLITANO  back to America.   
2. Destruction of America continues, by the New World Order & Zombie banks (1) 
book by Jim Marrs. 





Next Year's Wars
The 16 brewing conflicts to watch for in 2011.
CAPTIONS BY INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP | DECEMBER 28, 2010 



 
Across the globe today, you'll find almost three dozen raging 
conflicts, from the valleys of Afghanistan to the jungles of the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo to the streets of Kashmir. But what are the next crises 
that might erupt in 2011? Here are a few worrisome spots that make our list. 


 

Côte d'Ivoire 
Côte d'Ivoire is on the brink of what may be a very 
bad 2011. After a five-year delay, Côte d'Ivoire held presidential elections on 
Oct. 31. A peaceful first round of voting was commended by the international 
community, but the runoff between incumbent Laurent Gbagbo and former Prime 
Minister Alassane Ouattara was marred by clashes and allegations of fraud on 
both sides.heavily armed supporters who seem ready to fight 
for the long haul. 
ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/Getty Images 

 

Colombia  
At first glance, Colombia's prospects for 2011 look 
bright. The country's new president, Juan Manuel Santos, has 
surprised many former critics with his bold reform proposals, many of which are 
aimed at addressing the root causes of the country's 46-year civil conflict 
against leftist rebels. He has mended relations with neighbouring Venezuela and 
Ecuador, committed to protect human rights advocates, and 
proposed legislation to help resettle the country's four million displaced.ven 
welcome the chance to start talks with the 
government about disarmament and reintegration. Much rests in this government's 
hands. 
LUIS ROBAYO/AFP/Getty Images 

 

Zimbabwe 
Keep an eye on Zimbabwe in 2011 as the country's 
"unity" government -- joining longtime President Robert Mugabe with opposition 
leader Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai -- will warrant its 
conciliatory name less and less by the day. The flashpoint next year? 
Elections. 
Both men want to hold them -- but they don't agree about what Zimbabweans 
should 
be voting on.te a 
compromise and bring real pressure to bear on Mugabe to play by the rules. 
Michael Nagle/Getty Images 

 

Iraq 
Iraq today is in far better shape than it was in 
2007, when nearly two dozen Iraqis were dying each day in suicide bombings. But 
it's still far from out of the woods. And these days, it's not militants but 
the 
country's politics that post the biggest threat. The new government, formed in 
December after nine months of 
wrangling, is weak and lacks the institutions to rule effectively. Iraq's 
bureaucracies are nascent and fragile, and its security forces remain heavily 
dependent on U.S. training as well as logistics and intelligence support. 
Meanwhile, grievances abound -- from minority groups to repatriated refugees -- 
and it is unlikely that the state will be able to appease these many political 
demands. Sectarian violence resurfaces in fits and spurts, and is far from 
quashed entirely; approximately 300 Iraqis died in violence in November.
ALI AL-SAADI/AFP/Getty Images 

 

Venezuela  
Over the next 12 months, watch for Venezuelan 
President Hugo Chávez to take his brand of 21st-century socialism to the 
extremes. Having lost his majority in Parliament in September, 
Chávez has since been working hard to ensure that the new, opposition 
legislature will be irrelevant by the time it is sworn in in January. The 
Venezuelan president has consolidated control over the military and police, 
seized more private companies, and won temporary "decree powers" from the 
outgoing, pro-government National 
Assembly.
MIGUEL GUTIERREZ/AFP/Getty Images 

 

Sudan 
The fate of Sudan in 2011 will be set early, on 
January 9, when a referendum on southern self-determination is scheduled to 
take 
place, and which will likely result in independence for the south. Two decades 
of 
war came to an end in Sudan in 2005 with the signing of the Comprehensive 
Peace Agreement (CPA). But as the agreement enters its last stages, however, 
that delicate peace will be tested. While securing the referendum has been an 
international priority, the long-term stability of the region relies on the 
ability of north and south Sudan to forge a positive post-CPA relationship. 
ASHRAF SHAZLY/AFP/Getty Images   
  

 

Mexico 
It has been four years since Mexican President 
Felipe Calderón declared war on the country's drug lords. During that time, 
30,000 people have fallen victim to the conflict, many of them along the 
northern border with the United States, largely as a result of in-fighting 
among 
rival gangs vying for control of trafficking corridors. Today, Ciudad Juarez, a 
border city near Texas, competes with Caracas as the most deadly city in the 
world. Over the last 12 months, the violence has spread to Mexico's economic 
and 
cultural hubs that were once considered immune from drug infiltration. To the 
north, Mexico's organized crime routes now reach into nearly every metropolitan 
area of the United States.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images 

 

Guatemala 
Mexico's drug war is also sending shockwaves throughout Latin America. Under 
pressure from the Mexican state, the most infamous cartels are seeking 
friendlier ground and finding it in Guatemala, where the state is weak and the 
institutions are fragile.g. 
JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP/Getty Images 

 
Haiti 
Nature had it in for Haiti in 2010, but it may be 
politics that batters the small island country in the coming year. The poorest 
country in the Western Hemisphere began the year with a devastating January 
earthquake that killed more than 300,000, a deadly cholera outbreak, and a 
tortuously slow reconstruction process, which remains way off the pace and 
beset 
with difficulties. A November 28 presidential 
election, which should have led to the election of a new, legitimate 
government, remains wedged in an impasse over allegations of fraud. 
 

Tajikistan 
Tajikistan, a land of striking beauty, grinding poverty, and rapacious 
leaders, could well become the next stomping ground for guerrillas -- Central 
Asians and other Muslims from the former Soviet Union -- who have been fighting 
alongside the Taliban for years and may now be thinking of returning home to 
settle scores with the region's brutal and corrupt leaders.
STR/AFP/Getty Images 


 

Pakistan 
It's hard to remember a time when Pakistan didn't seem on the brink of 
collapse. This coming year will likely be no exception. The country faces a 
humanitarian crisis in its mid-section where floods displaced 10 million 
people, 
a security threat from terrorist groups operating on Pakistani soil, and 
political instability from a weak administration still trying to wield civilian 
control over the all-powerful military.
RIZWAN TABASSUM/AFP/Getty Images 



 

Somalia 
If Somalia keeps heading south in 2011, the entire country could fall under 
Islamist insurgent control. Up to now, the country's U.N.-backed transitional 
government has withstood attacks from Islamist insurgents only thanks to 
protection from an African Union peacekeeping force; it remains weak and 
divided, 
a national government in name alone. Further, the capital city of Mogadishu is 
under perpetual siege by militants, a reality that has sent millions fleeing 
from their homes in this year alone. When the government does make gains on the 
insurgents, they are counted in mere city blocks, captured one by one.
The best hope for Somalia is for its forces to exploit the divisions among 
the insurgency to recapture territory, particularly in Mogadishu. International 
support, already forthcoming, will help. But so would a lot of luck.   
KATE HOLT/AFP/Getty Images 

 

Lebanon 
Still smarting from a war with Israel in 2006 that 
left a precarious balance of power between Christians and Islamic 
fundamentalists, Lebanon today is arguably more than ever on the brink.. 
ANWAR AMRO/AFP/Getty Images 

 

Nigeria 
Nigeria's 2010 was about as rough as they come: The 
country's president disappeared on medical leave -- and then died -- hundreds 
were 
killed in sectarian violence between Muslims and Christians in the country's 
middle belt, and a rebel amnesty in the oil-producing Niger Delta region 
completely unraveled, leading to a string of bombing attacks and kidnappings.
PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/Getty Images 

 

Guinea 
Guinea enters 2011 on a hopeful path. In December, 
the West African country inaugurated its first-ever elected leader, Alpha 
Condé. 
After decades of strongman rule, followed by a 2009 coup, this new leadership 
seems nothing less than miraculous.
ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/Getty Images 
  

 

Democratic Republic of the Congo 
Years after the official end of the Second Congo War, which raged from 1998 
to 2003 and was responsible for up to 4.5 million deaths, whole swathes of the 
enormous Central African country remain in upheaval. In the eastern Kivu 
provinces, an undisciplined national army battles with rebel groups for 
territorial control. Amid the frenzy of violence and rape that follows in their 
path, the world's largest U.N. peacekeeping force is at a loss to protect even 
those civilians that live close to its bases. 
Gwenn Dubourthoumieu/AFP/Getty Images  .






HERE IS THE PATTERN ?

THE ANTI-KHMER RACE GROUP : 

WHAT DID THE KHMER RACE DO TO THE SATAN GROUP LIKE HENRY KISSINGER AND HIS 
BOSSES ?












Sideshow, Revised Edition: Kissinger, Nixon, and the Destruction of Cambodia 









 



 

 

 

 

THE ANTI-KHMER RACE GROUP OF SATAN HENRY KISSINGER ARE CRIMINALS.

WHO ARE THESE ANTI-KHMER RACE GROUP OR CRIMINALS ?

 

1.THE FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF NEW YORK?

2. THE WALL STREET BANKERS IN NEW YORK?

3. THE INTERNATIONAL BANKERS?

4. THE COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS ?

 


McGeorge Bundy during a 1967 meeting in the Oval Office


DESTRUCTION OF THE Khmer nation :
BY ANTI-KHMER RACE GROUP : KISSINGER -NIXON 1969-2010.Henry Kissinger 
 




SIDESHOW: KISSINGER, NIXON AND THE DESTRUCTION OF CAMBODIA 












 


 
 

WITH PRESIDENT REAGAN : US FOREIGN POLICY TOWARD CAMBODIA WAS ANTI COMMUNIST, 
AGAINST THE VIETNAMESE OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA.
*President Reagan's address to the 43d Session of the United Nations General 
Assembly in New York, New York,September 26, 1988.
"Mr. Secretary-General, there are new hopes for Cambodia, a nation whose 
freedom and independence we seek just as avidly as we sought the freedom and 
independence of Afghanistan. We urge the rapid removal of all Vietnamese troops 
...."
 
* WITH PRESIDENT CLINTON : US FOREIGN POLICY IS PARTNERSHIP WITH THE VIETNAMESE 
COMMUNISTS , AND THE VIETNAMESE OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA .
 
* PRESIDENT CLINTON JUST FORGETS THE 10 YEARS EFFORTS FROM THE PREVIOUS 
ADMINISTRATION BY IGNORING THE 10 UN RESOLUTIONS CALLING VIETNAM TO QUIT 
CAMBODIA.
 
FOR CAMBODIA 
Strong Resolution on Cambodia Human Rights Abuses.
Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights. The vote was 28 in favor, 8 against, and 5 abstentions.

Oct. 21, 1986 The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution A/RES/41/6, by vote 
of 116-21 with 13 abstentions, calling for a withdrawal of Vietnamese forces 
from Cambodia.
*
CAMBODIA today remains OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM 1979-2010.
President BILL CLINTON :announced the formal normalization of diplomatic 
relations with Vietnam on July 11, 1995. Subsequent to President Clinton's 
normalization announcement, in August 1995, both nations upgraded their Liaison 
Offices opened during January 1995 to embassy status. As diplomatic ties 
between the nations grew.
While Vietnam continues to occupy Cambodia as of today despite these 10 UN 
resolutions ?
THE CLINTONS ARE BECOMING NOW THE ANTI KHMER PEOPLE TODAY BY THESE ACTS 
As of today,Cambodia is still occupied by the Vietnamese troops despite the 
call from the US president to Vietnam to cease her occupation of Cambodia since 
1988.
 
Cambodia needs Independence from Vietnam and the Vietnamese invaders.
Vietnam must cease her occupation of Cambodia at once.
 

BURY


 



























 












 
 
 
 
 















 



 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 





















 


 
 



 


 








 






                                          

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org

Reply via email to