DESTRUCTION OF THE Khmer nation : BY ANTI-KHMER RACE GROUP : DEMON KISSINGER 
-NIXON 1969-2010.
Henry Kissinger 
 THE FACE OF A DEMON & criminal 

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 



DESTRUCTION OF THE Khmer nation : BY ANTI-KHMER RACE GROUP : DEMON KISSINGER 
-NIXON 1969-2011.SIDESHOW: KISSINGER, NIXON AND THE DESTRUCTION OF CAMBODIA 






  
SATAN Kissinger, in His Own Words 






"Military men are just dumb stupid animals to be used as pawns in foreign 
policy." - Henry Kissinger, quoted in "Kiss the Boys Goodbye: How the United 
States Betrayed Its Own POW's in Vietnam"  
 
2. THE US INVASION OF CAMBODIA, A NEUTRAL COUNTRY, A UN MEMBER COUNTRY, AN 
ALLIED OF THE US GOVERNMENT.

3. THE ABANDONMENT OF CAMBODIA TO THE COMMUNIST IN 1975.

4. THE KILLING OF OVER 600,000 CAMBODIAN INNOCENTS ( The
 3,500 bombing sorties resulted in 600,000 deaths. The American bombing 
of Cambodia was a closely guarded secret primarily because the U.S. was 
not at war with Cambodia.)WHAT DID HENRY KISSINGER DO TO THE  KHMER PEOPLE  IN 
CAMBODIA ? The US sellout of the KHMER PEOPLE IN CAMBODIA in 1975, THROUGH 
SATAN HENRY KISSINGER.(CFR AGENT)  WHICH  HAD LED TO AMERICA TO DECLINE &  
ENTER A PERIOD OF  DECADENCE.
  
 
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.
 GOD BLESS AMERICA THE LAND THAT I LOVE !
THE EVIDENCE OF A CRIME . 
THIS MAN : William Lawrence Saunders,  
"Dear Mr. President:
I am in sympathy with the Soviet form of government as that best suited for the 
Russian people...



Letter to President Woodrow Wilson (October 17, 1918) from 
William Lawrence Saunders, 
chairman, Ingersoll-Rand Corp.; 
director, American International Corp.; and 
deputy chairman, Federal Reserve Bank of New York" by Antony Sutton FROM  
WILLIAM LAWRENCE SAUNDERS ( FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF NEW YORK ) ALGER HISS TO 
HENRY KISSINGER AND LOOK TO CHINA AND THE DECLINE OF DOLLAR TODAY.

 

 

IN 1970 satan Henry Kissinger, shown here with Zhou Enlai and Mao Zedong, 
negotiated rapprochement with the People's Republic of China
 

in 2011 satan Henry Kissinger has arranged the death of US dollar.Mission 
accomplished by FED 'S AGENTS .
WORLD NEWS  JANUARY 17, 2011 

Hu Highlights Need for U.S.-China Cooperation, Questions Dollar

By ANDREW 
BROWNE 
BEIJING—Chinese President Hu Jintao emphasized 
the need for cooperation with the U.S. in areas from new energy to space ahead 
of his visit to Washington this week, but he called the present U.S. 
dollar-dominated currency system a "product of the past" and highlighted moves 
to turn the yuan into a global currency.






View Full ImageAssociated Press 
Chinese President Hu Jintao delivers a speech at a 
plenary session of the Communist Party of China Central Commission for 
Discipline Inspection in Beijing on Jan. 10. Mr. Hu's state visit to Washington 
begins Wednesday.
"We both stand to gain from a sound China-U.S. relationship, and 
lose from confrontation," Mr. Hu said in written answers to questions from The 
Wall Street Journal and the Washington 
Post.
Mr. Hu acknowledged "some differences and sensitive issues between us," but 
his tone was generally compromising, and he avoided specific mention of some of 
the controversial issues that have dogged relations with the U.S. over the past 
year or so—including U.S. arms sales to Taiwan that led to a freeze in military 
relations between the world's sole superpower and its rising Asian rival.
On the economic front, Mr. Hu played down one of the main U.S. arguments for 
why China should appreciate its currency—that it will help China tame 
inflation. 
That is likely to disappoint Washington, which accuses China of unfairly 
boosting its exports by undervaluing the yuan, making its products cheaper 
overseas. The topic is expected to be high on U.S. President Barack Obama's 
agenda when he meets Mr. Hu at the White House on Wednesday.
Mr. Hu also offered a veiled criticism of efforts by the U.S. Federal Reserve 
to stimulate growth through huge bond purchases to keep down long-term interest 
rates, a strategy that China has loudly complained about in the past as fueling 
inflation in emerging economies, including its own. He said that U.S. monetary 
policy "has a major impact on global liquidity and capital flows and therefore, 
the liquidity of the U.S. dollar should be kept at a reasonable and stable 
level."





Hu Goes to Washington
See photos of past visits.






View SlideshowGetty Images 
Mr. Hu arrived in the U.S. Apriul 12, 
2010.
Mr. Hu's responses reflect a China that has grown more confident in recent 
years—especially in the wake of the global financial crisis, from which it 
emerged relatively unscathed. 
Mr. Hu reiterated China's belief that the crisis reflected "the absence of 
regulation in financial innovation" and the failure of international financial 
institutions "to fully reflect the changing status of developing countries in 
the world economy and finance." He called for an international financial system 
that is more "fair, just, inclusive and well-managed."
Mr. Hu, who also heads China's ruling Communist Party, rarely interacts with 
the international media. The Wall Street Journal submitted a series of 
questions 
to China's Foreign Ministry for Mr. Hu to answer. The Washington Post also 
submitted questions. The Foreign Ministry supplied Mr. Hu's responses to seven 
questions—but did not address questions about imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize 
winner Liu Xiaobo, China's growing naval power and complaints about alleged 
Chinese cyberattacks, among others.
Mr. Hu's veiled criticism of the Fed reflects widespread feelings among 
developing nations that U.S. interest-rate policy is devaluing the dollar, 
prompting flows of capital overseas and creating inflation elsewhere. China and 
other developing countries would like the Fed to factor in those consequences 
when it makes decisions. Fed officials counter that their mandate is to bolster 
the U.S. economy and that a stronger U.S. economy is in the interests of China 
and other countries, which depend heavily on trade and investment from the U.S. 

This could be a major issue of contention between Messrs. Hu and Obama. The 
U.S. blames Chinese currency undervaluation—not Fed policy making—for worsening 
competitive and inflation problems overseas.


 
"This is a new ballgame in the first inning," says 
Eurasia Group's Ian Bremmer about China's rise. In an interview with WSJ's 
Rebecca Blumenstein, Bremmer discusses the growth of Chinese economic and 
military power and President Hu's U.S.visit.
Some of Mr. Hu's most significant comments dealt with the future of the 
dollar and currency exchange rates.
"The current international currency system is the product of the past," he 
said, noting the primacy of the U.S. dollar as a reserve currency and its use 
in 
international trade and investment.
The comment is the latest sign that the dollar's future continues to concern 
the most senior levels of the Chinese government. Beijing fears not only that 
loose U.S. monetary policy is fueling inflation, but that it will erode the 
value of China's holdings of dollars within its vast foreign-exchange reserves, 
which reached $2.85 trillion at the end of 2010.
China's central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, created an international stir 
in March 2009 by calling for the creation of a new synthetic reserve currency 
as 
an alternative to the dollar. Mr. Hu's comments add to the sense that China 
intends to challenge the post-World War II financial order largely created by 
the U.S. and dominated by the dollar.
Mr. Hu called attention to China's accelerating effort to expand the role of 
its own currency, describing recent moves to allow greater use of the yuan in 
cross-border trade and investment—while acknowledging that making it a fully 
fledged international currency "will be a fairly long process."
China's moves already have spawned a thriving market for offshore trading of 
yuan in Hong Kong, and are widely seen as first steps toward making the yuan an 
international currency in line with China's new prominence as the world's 
second 
largest economy. Mr. Hu offered an enthusiastic endorsement of what are 
officially described as currency "pilot programs." They "fit in well with 
market 
demand as evidenced by the rapidly expanding scale of these transactions," he 
said.
Mr. Hu didn't signal any changes on the most sensitive aspect of China's 
currency policy: the exchange rate. 



 
WSJ's Jake Lee speaks to Heard on the Street Asia Editor 
Mohammed Hadi about Chinese President Hu Jintao's comments on currencies, 
balancing the Chinese economy and China's growing clout 
abroad.
Last week, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner reiterated the U.S. 
position that a stronger yuan is in China's own best interests, because it 
would 
help tame rising inflation that has become a key risk to China's rapid growth, 
which is underpinning the global economic recovery. A stronger yuan would 
reduce 
the price of imports in local-currency terms.
But Mr. Hu shrugged off the U.S. argument, saying that China is fighting 
inflation with a whole package of policies, including interest-rate increases, 
and "inflation can hardly be the main factor in determining the exchange rate 
policy."
Further, Mr. Hu suggested that inflation was not a big worry, saying prices 
were "on the whole moderate and controllable." He added: "We have the 
confidence, conditions and ability to stabilize the overall price level."
The U.S. argues that the yuan's real exchange rate—that is, the exchange rate 
as adjusted for the higher inflation level in China than the U.S.—is rising at 
a 
10% annual rate. Treasury officials have argued to China that its policy 
options 
are limited—either it can boost the exchange rate to fight inflation, or 
inflation will effectively boost the value of China's currency. 
While the U.S. says some Chinese economic officials buy that argument, it 
hasn't been widely adopted within China, as Mr. Hu's comments illustrate. But 
the U.S. feels that economics and time are on its side. Even so, the 
administration and Congress will continue to press China to boost the pace of 
its currency appreciation. 
Mr. Hu renewed a Chinese pledge to offer a level playing field in China for 
U.S. companies, which have complained about aggressive Chinese moves to usurp 
their technology and shut them out of massive government-procurement 
contracts.
"All foreign companies registered in China are Chinese enterprises," Mr. Hu 
said, responding to concerns that China discriminates in government procurement 
against foreign businesses as part of its drive to encourage so-called 
indigenous innovation. 
He added: "Their innovation, production and business operations in China 
enjoy the same treatment as Chinese enterprises."
The U.S. has been pressing China to revamp its plans for indigenous 
innovation, which foreign companies say put them at a disadvantage in 
competition with China's state-owned firms, which limits the types of 
government 
development projects and requires that companies get government approval to 
participate. China has pledged to join the World Trade Organization's 
government 
procurement agreement, which limits a country's ability to discriminate. But 
the 
U.S. and other countries say that so far China's WTO offer is inadequate 
because 
it exempts provinces, municipalities and state-owned enterprises. Last month 
China pledged to amend a buy-Chinese provision. During the Hu visit, the U.S. 
hopes to see some other commitments on this front from China.
Mr. Hu began his answers with a relatively upbeat assessment of China-U.S. 
relations, which he said had "on the whole enjoyed steady growth" since the 
start of this century.
He spoke of expanding cooperation from economy and trade into new areas like 
energy, infrastructure development and aviation and space. "We should abandon 
the zero-sum Cold War mentality," he said, and "respect each other's choice of 
development path."
On the diplomatic front, Mr. Hu entirely glossed over what has been one of 
the most dramatic developments of the past year—a series of disputes between a 
more assertive China and its neighbors that has given the U.S. an opening to 
shore up its relations with a part of the world that felt neglected by 
Washington while it fought wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In the past year, China has feuded with Japan over the seizure of a Chinese 
fishing boat and its crew off disputed islands; opened deep differences with 
South Korea because of its subdued response to military provocations by North 
Korea; and alarmed countries in Southeast Asia by declaring the South China Sea 
and its energy and mineral riches one of its "core interests."
"Mutual trust between China and other countries in this region has deepened 
in our common response to tough challenges, and our cooperation has 
continuously 
expanded in our pursuit of mutual benefit and win-win outcomes," Mr. Hu said, 
ignoring the regional turmoil.—Jason Dean in 
Beijing 
and Bob Davis in Washington 

contributed to this article. 


                                          

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