Above Top Secret Newsletter - http://www.AboveTopSecret.com

Number 22 - 16th July, 2000

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MIND CONTROL AND THE UPCOMING INTERVIEW

As most of Mailing List subscribers should now know, I will shortly have
the opportunity to speak to a high-ranking government official with
backgrounds pertaining to U.S. Mind Control programs and the CIA.

I have so far received hundreds of questions and will try to put as many
forward as I can. I will keep all of you updated on the situation and will
make the interview available through the Members "Authorised Only" Section.

Note: I have not yet released the Login ID and password.

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THIS WILL GET THE NEW WORLD ORDER CONSPIRACISTS GOING

This new act will surely cause a stir within the community of NWO
conspiracists. Is this a step to create a single world police force?

UNITED NATIONS RAPID DEPLOYMENT POLICE AND SECURITY FORCE ACT OF 2000

HR 4453 IH

106th CONGRESS

2nd Session

H. R. 4453

To encourage the establishment of a United Nations Rapid Deployment Police
and Security Force.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

May 15, 2000

Mr. MCGOVERN (for himself, Mr. PORTER, and Mrs. MORELLA) introduced the
following bill; which was referred to the Committee on International
Relations

A BILL

To encourage the establishment of a United Nations Rapid Deployment Police
and Security Force.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

This Act may be cited as the United Nations Rapid Deployment Police and
Security Force Act of 2000'.

SEC. 2. FINDINGS.

The Congress finds the following:

      (1) United States Presidential Decision Directive 71 calls
          for a stronger United States response to maintaining order
          in societies recovering from conflict. It aims to improve
          coordination of United States efforts and to enhance the
          ability of other countries, the United Nations, and
          regional organizations to plan, mount, and sustain
          operations in support of the rule of law.

      (2) In a press briefing on February 24, 2000, Secretary of
          State Madeleine Albright stated the following: The
          recent slowness in deploying desperately needed
          civilian police to Kosovo provides only the latest
          evidence that present international capabilities are
          not adequate. And the ongoing deployment of CIVPOL
          teams to East Timor and Sierra Leone show that the need
          will not soon diminish. In response, we must recognize
          that old models of peacekeeping don't always meet
          current challenges. Peace operations today often
          require skills that are neither strictly military nor
          strictly police but, rather, a combination of the two.
          The international community needs to identify and train
          units that are able to control crowds, deter vigilante
          actions, prevent looting and disarm civilian agitators
          while, at the same time, winning the trust of the
          communities in which they are deployed.'.

      (3) In his April 2000 report, We the Peoples, The Role of the
          United Nations in the 21st Century', United Nations
          Secretary General Kofi Annan states that only member
          nations of the United Nations can fix the structural
          weakness of United Nations peace operations . . . Our
          system for launching operations has sometimes been compared
          to a volunteer fire department, but that description is too
          generous. Every time there is a fire, we must first find
          fire engines and the funds to run them before we can start
          dousing any flames. The present system relies almost
          entirely on last minute, ad hoc arrangements that guarantee
          delay, with respect to the provision of civilian personnel
          even more so than military. Although we have understandings
          for military standby arrangements with Member States, the
          availability of the designated forces is unpredictable and
          very few are in a state of high readiness. Resource
          constraints preclude us even from being able to deploy a
          mission headquarters rapidly.'.

      (4) The December 1999 United Nations Report on the Independent
          Inquiry into the Actions of the United Nations During the
          1994 genocide in Rwanda' indicates that in April 1994, the
          United Nations Security Council failed to deploy 5,500
          United Nations peacekeepers to Rwanda within two weeks of
          the initial violence, thereby allowing the conflict to
          escalate. The 6-month estimated cost of the deployment
          would have been $115,000,000. Instead, the genocide
          consumed 800,000 lives along with $2,000,000,000 in
          humanitarian aid.

      (5) In Srebrenica, Bosnia, on July 11, 1995, Bosnian Serb
          troops forced the retreat of Dutch United Nations
          peacekeepers who were part of the United Nations Mission in
          Bosnia and Herzegovina (UNMIBH) from a safe haven',
          resulting in the massacre of 7,000 Bosnian civilians and
          expulsion of 40,000 Bosnian civilians.

      (6) The United Nations peacekeeping budget estimate for the
          United Nations Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina from July
          1, 1997, to June 30, 1998, was $165,600,000, while the
          North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO)-sponsored
          intervention in the Serbian province of Kosovo cost
          $37,000,000 per day.

      (7) In July 1999, 4,700 civilian police officers were requested
          to be deployed to the Serbian province of Kosovo but, as of
          April 17, 2000, the United Nations has deployed only 2,901
          of the requested police officers, resulting in the
          breakdown of law and order and the escalation of unrest in
          Kosovo.

      (8) In May 2000, Revolutionary United Front rebels in Sierra
          Leone, in violation of the ceasefire and peace accords,
          captured and held prisoner approximately 500 United Nations
          Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) peacekeepers. The
          weapons, equipment, and vehicles of the peacekeepers were
          also seized. The UNAMSIL force had been deployed too slowly
          and was undertrained and understaffed, consisting of only
          8,700 peacekeepers of the 11,000 peacekeepers requested by
          the United Nations Security Council.

      (9) On February 24, 2000, the United Nations Security Council
          approved a United States-sponsored proposal to send 5,537
          troops on an observer mission to the Democratic Republic of
          the Congo (to be known as the United Nations Organization
          Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUC)), a
          Republic 1/3 the size of the United States, to monitor the
          implementation of the Lusaka accords. However, it will take
          at least three months to deploy the required forces. On
          April 25, 2000, South African Foreign Minister Dlamini-Zuma
          urged rapid deployment of the troops and stated [i]f
          deployment is very slow [the accords] can fall apart... The
          troops should have been deployed a long time ago.

     (10) The United States has the power in the United Nations
          Security Council to veto decisions that are not within the
          national interests of the United States.

SEC. 4. ESTABLISHMENT OF A UNITED NATIONS RAPID DEPLOYMENT POLICE AND
SECURITY FORCE.

(a) ESTABLISHMENT- The President shall direct the United States
representative to the United Nations to use the voice, vote, and influence
of the United States to urge the United Nations--

      (1) to establish a United Nations Rapid Deployment Police
          and Security Force that is rapidly deployable, under
          the authority of the United
          Nations Security Council, and trained to standardized
          objectives;

      (2) to recruit personnel to serve in this Force; and

      (3) to provide equitable and reliable funding for the United
          Nations Rapid Deployment Police and Security Force.

(b) MISSION STATEMENT- The United Nations Rapid Deployment Police and
Security Force should have a mission statement that provides for the
following:

      (1) The United Nations Rapid Deployment Police and Security
          Force will engage in operations when--

      (A) the United Nations Security Council determines that an
          imminent threat to the peace requires a preventive
          deployment of forces and the Security Council deems it as
          an appropriate response;

      (B) the United Nations Security Council determines ongoing
          gross violations of human rights or breaches of the peace
          require rapid intervention by the international community
          and the Security Council deems it as an appropriate
          response;

      (C) peace has been restored to a region but the rule of law has
          not yet been reestablished and when national civilian
          police or United Nations member nations personnel are not
          available and the Security Council deems it as an
          appropriate response; or

      (D) the United Nations Rapid Deployment Police and Security
          Force can utilize its personnel to help train the military
          and civilian police of member nations of the United Nations
          to better participate in international peace operations.

      (2) The United Nations Rapid Deployment Police and Security
          Force will consist of not more than 6000 personnel who are--

      (A) placed under the authority of the United Nations Security
          Council;

      (B) under the direction of the Secretary General of the United
          Nations;

      (C) deployed only by United Nations Security Council resolution;

      (D) volunteers from United Nations member nations employed
          directly by the United Nations;

      (E) trained as a single unit, appropriately equipped, expressly
          for international peace operations including civilian
          policing; and

      (F) rapidly deployable.

      (3) The United Nations Rapid Deployment Police and Security
          Force will be organized as a sub-department within the
          United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations or
          under the control of the United Nations's Military Staff
          Committee and will contain personnel trained as military
          staff officers and civilian police officers to be deployed
          immediately to a potential conflict area.

      (4) The deployment of the United Nations Rapid Deployment
          Police and Security Force will be limited to a maximum of 6
          months, at which time the Police and Security Force would
          be replaced by personnel supplied by United Nations member
          nations.

      (5) The basing and infrastructure service of the United Nations
          Rapid Deployment Police and Security Force will be leased
          from existing member nations' institutions.

SEC. 5. REPORT ON UNITED NATIONS RAPID DEPLOYMENT POLICE AND SECURITY
FORCE.

Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the
President shall prepare and transmit to the Congress a report on the
progress of negotiations with the United Nations and its member nations
regarding the creation of a United Nations Rapid Deployment Police and
Security Force described in section 3.

SEC. 6. DEFINITIONS.

In this Act:

      (1) The term international peace operations' means--

      (A) any such operation carried out under chapter VI or chapter
          VII of the Charter of the United Nations; and

      (B) any such United Nations operation that includes civilian
          policing.

      (2) The term rapidly deployable' refers to the capacity to
          deploy military or civilian personnel to a region
          undergoing conflict within 15 days of the enactment of a
          United Nations Security Council resolution authorizing a
          deployment.

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Simon Gray - Webmaster/Founder of http://www.AboveTopSecret.com
E-Mail - [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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