Now what was that about all Kings are brothers?   Monarchs in waiting
and of course we have a messiah in the wings for Lieberman?

So King Faisal, was murdered in 1968;  I still remember his son telling
us how it was the European Zionist causing all the trouble in the holy
land - that domestic jews and arabs got along fine (now this stuff made
the newspapers in our little town, and my boss picked up the bill on
this one)......

So King Faisal had said I Hate Zionists; within a year he was murdered
by a black from Berkley; I thought of the young prince at that time.

We throw a King out of othis country and Clinton wants to return deposed
Kings to throne....this was Hitler's original plan, to restore house of
Hollenzolern to throne.

Well....so much for separation of religion and state - like Israelies,
carrying little AK's around in streets, a religious state and we cannot
even say a simple prayer in school?

What is that outside on the wall of the CIA at Langley.......You Shall
Know the Truth and the Truth Shall Set You Free..........ever read all
of John 8 and what Jesus had to say about the enemy within?   The father
of lies?

Monarchs in waiting?   Thought Kings and Queens were endangered
species.....but then Osama bin Laden wants to put rightful heir to
throne back in place - and he ends up with 5 million dollar price on his
head.

So enough said.....Remember The USS Liberty....and the Truth Shall Make
you Sick.

Truth is, the Arabs have all those oil fields wired and if the enemy
moves in to grab same, goodbye  Exxon....goodbye Gulf......and camels
can still run on 45 gallons of water, round trip.

Saba

January 3, 1999
New York Times
�
Looking Past Hussein, U.S. Is Peering at a Pretender

By BARBARA CROSSETTE
UNITED NATIONS -- American officials are casting their nets wide to find
a credible opposition leader or perhaps a figurehead who might lead Iraq
after Saddam Hussein, meeting even with a man who would be king.

During the recent American and British bombing of Iraq, State Department
and Pentagon officials met with Sharif Ali bin al-Hussein, the
42-year-old heir to the throne of a short-lived modern Iraqi monarchy
that ended 40 years ago.

Ali, who leads the Constitutional Monarchy Movement, survived a
revolution in 1958 that toppled his cousin, the last King, Faisal II.
The King was killed, along with the Crown Prince, Abdullah. Ali, then
only 2 years old, was taken out of Iraq by his parents, both of whom
were also related to the royal families of Saudi Arabia and Jordan.

Ali's grandfather, the Emir of Mecca, was the uncle of Iraq's first
modern King, Faisal I, who had been handed the throne of Iraq by the
British in 1921.

Britain, given a mandate to rule Iraq after the collapse of the Turkish
Ottoman Empire in World War I, quickly set about establishing a
parliamentary system in Iraq (also short-lived) and decided to crown it
with a constitutional monarchy. This, after all, was Mesopotamia, home
to the some of the greatest monarchies of ancient history.

Ali, whose family went to Lebanon from Iraq and who now lives in London,
commands only a small movement, other Iraqi exiles say. But he thinks
nonetheless that the idea of a constitutional monarchy still has
resonance in Iraq.

"The Iraqi monarchy would be a symbol around which all parts of Iraq
would be able to rally because we're not based on any single
constituency, nor are we a political party," Ali said in an interview.
"What we look forward to is establishing democratic institutions that
would guarantee that all players in politics would be able to
participate as they wish."

Ali, whose education was largely Western, has produced a plan for a
future Iraq that he calls a National Covenant. It would restore an
Islamic monarchy pledged to protect the human rights of followers of all
religions and create a free-market economic system, a multiparty
democracy and an independent judiciary.

"It was the monarchy that achieved independence for Iraq from the League
of Nations mandate," he said. "Iraq was the first Arab nation to have
independence. The legacy of the monarchs compared to the republics that
followed -- all of them dictatorships -- have made people much more
aware of the positive roles of the monarchy."

For the moment, Ali said, he sees his mission as helping to bring a
fractured exile opposition together. "The opposition is united on the
goals of removing Saddam Hussein and his regime and of bringing him to
justice in front of an international tribunal," he said. "What we have
to do is to make our efforts more coordinated and more cooperative. The
political environment is there."

Ali said he left Washington believing that the Clinton Administration is
serious about giving the Iraqi opposition substantial help, but he
agrees with other exiles that the job of removing Hussein will have to
be done by Iraqis inside Iraq. And they, Ali said, have often had
unrealistic expectations about how much the United States and Britain
can or will do for them.

History is littered with broken American promises to Iraqis,
particularly to the Kurds in the north and Shiites in the south, whose
uprisings Washington often encouraged and then stood back and watched be
crushed.

"When President Clinton says that he is looking forward to the day of a
new regime in Iraq, it is very encouraging to the opposition to know
that the only superpower in the world is now willing to help to
establish a democratic regime in Iraq," Ali said.
"
Most Iraqis are in the opposition, basically," he said. "From even the
highest echelons, they are looking for a way out." But he said he
remains wary.
"The Iraqi people have the ability to overthrow the regime but they need
to know that if they carried this out, they would have the support of
the international community and that obstacles wouldn't be put in their
path," he said.

A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy



A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy

http://home1.gte.net/eskandar/iraqmonarchy.html


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