In December 2004, Council on Foreign Relations member Robert L.
Hutchings, Chairman of the National Intelligence Council of the CIA,
presented the US president, members of Congress, cabinet members and
key officials involved in policymaking a 123-page report titled
“Mapping the Global Future” (http://www.foia.cia.gov/2020/2020.pdf ).
In the preface Hutchings gives special recognition to Council on
Foreign Relations member Matthew Burrows, Director of the NIC’s
Analysis and Production Staff. The project took about a year and
involved more than 1000 people.
The report foresees pervasive insecurity

“We foresee a more pervasive sense of insecurity—which may be as much
based on
psychological perceptions as physical threats—by 2020. Even as most of
the world
gets richer, globalization will profoundly shake up the status quo—
generating
enormous economic, cultural, and consequently political convulsions.
With the
gradual integration of China, India, and other emerging countries into
the global
economy, hundreds of millions of working-age adults will become
available for
employment in what is evolving into a more integrated world labor
market.

This enormous work force—a growing portion of which will be well
educated—will be
an attractive, competitive source of low-cost labor at the same time
that
technological innovation is expanding the range of globally mobile
occupations.

The transition will not be painless and will hit the middle classes of
the
developed world in particular, bringing more rapid job turnover and
requiring
professional retooling. Outsourcing on a large scale would strengthen
the antiglobalization movement. Where these pressures lead will depend
on how political
leaders respond, how flexible labor markets become, and whether
overall economic
growth is sufficiently robust to absorb a growing number of displaced
workers.”

The report foresees International Terrorism :

“The key factors that spawned international terrorism show no signs of
abating
over the next 15 years. Facilitated by global communications, the
revival of Muslim
identity will create a framework for the spread of radical Islamic
ideology inside and
outside the Middle East, including Southeast Asia, Central Asia and
Western Europe,
where religious identity has traditionally not been as strong. This
revival has been
accompanied by a deepening solidarity among Muslims caught up in
national or
regional separatist struggles, such as Palestine, Chechnya, Iraq,
Kashmir, Mindanao,
and southern Thailand, and has emerged in response to government
repression,
corruption, and ineffectiveness. Informal networks of charitable
foundations,
madrassas, hawalas1, and other mechanisms will continue to proliferate
and be
exploited by radical elements; alienation among unemployed youths will
swell the ranks
of those vulnerable to terrorist recruitment.

We expect that by 2020 al-Qa’ida will be superceded by similarly
inspired Islamic
extremist groups, and there is a substantial risk that broad Islamic
movements akin to
al-Qa’ida will merge with local separatist movements. Information
technology, allowing
for instant connectivity, communication, and learning, will enable the
terrorist threat to
become increasingly decentralized, evolving into an eclectic array of
groups, cells, and
individuals that do not need a stationary headquarters to plan and
carry out operations.
Training materials, targeting guidance, weapons know-how, and fund-
raising will
become virtual (i.e., online).”

The report lays out four possible scenarios for the future :
“Davos World provides an illustration of how robust economic growth,
led by China
and India, over the next 15 years could reshape the globalization
process—giving it
a more non-Western face and transforming the political playing field
as well.

Pax Americana takes a look at how US predominance may survive the
radical
changes to the global political landscape and serve to fashion a new
and inclusive
global order.

A New Caliphate provides an example of how a global movement fueled by
radical
religious identity politics could constitute a challenge to Western
norms and values
as the foundation of the global system.

Cycle of Fear provides an example of how concerns about proliferation
might
increase to the point that large-scale intrusive security measures are
taken to
prevent outbreaks of deadly attacks, possibly introducing an Orwellian
world.”

On December 12, 2005 Elizabetth Bumiller published an Article in the
NY Times titled 21st-Century Warnings of a Threat Rooted in the 7th.
The article is about the word “Caliphate”. The article is a limited
hangout mentioning six members of the Council on Foreign Relations but
links only one of them to the CFR.  "Just as we had the opportunity to
learn what the Nazis were going to do, from Hitler's world in 'Mein
Kampf,' " [Council on Foreign Relations member ] General Abizaid said,
"we need to learn what these people intend to do from their own
words." Two Council on Foreign Relations members, George Shuster and
William Langer edited the English version of “Mein Kampf” in 1939.
Instead of warning the American The Council on Foreign Relations
brought Hitler and the National Socialists to power to cause World War
II. ( http://www.bilderberg.org/roundtable/emhitler.html ).

The Council on Foreign Relations is now bringing Islamic Radicals to
power to escalate the War on Terror and bring about World War III. The
unrest in the Middle East is part of the Council on Foreign Relations
plan. Sceanario three, A New Caliphate, is unfolding. The  Tunisian
and Egyption revolutions in the middle east are a giant step forward
in the plan.

Meanwhile the Council on Foreign Relations War on Terror is advancing
scenario four, the Cycle of Fear, as western nations like the USA and
Britain infringe on the liberties of their citizens, strip away their
privacy, dignity and freedom and by turn into police states.

The article follows. The article has been modified to identify the
Council on Foreign Relations members.

Defense Secretary [Trilateral Commission member] Donald H. Rumsfeld
said it in a speech last Monday in Washington and again on Thursday on
PBS. Eric S. Edelman, the under secretary of defense for policy, said
it the week before in a round table at the Council on Foreign
Relations. Stephen J. Hadley, the national security adviser, said it
in October in speeches in New York and Los Angeles. [Council on
Foreign Relations member] Gen. John P. Abizaid, the top American
commander in the Middle East, said it in September in hearings on
Capitol Hill.

Vice President[Council on Foreign Relations member ] Dick Cheney was
one of the first members of the Bush administration to say it, at a
campaign stop in Lake Elmo, Minn., in September 2004.

The word getting the workout from the nation's top guns these days is
"caliphate" - the term for the seventh-century Islamic empire that
spanned the Middle East, spread to Southwest Asia, North Africa and
Spain, then ended with the Mongol sack of Baghdad in 1258. The term
can also refer to other caliphates, including the one declared by the
Ottoman Turks that ended in 1924.

Specialists on Islam say the word is a mysterious and ominous one for
many Americans, and that the administration knows it. "They recognize
that there's a lot of resonance when they use the term 'caliphate,' "
said [Council on Foreign Relations member ] Kenneth M. Pollack, a
former Central Intelligence Agency analyst and now a scholar at the
Saban Center at the Brookings Institution. [Council on Foreign
Relations member ] Zbigniew Brzezinski, [Council on Foreign Relations
member ] President Jimmy Carter's national security adviser, said that
the word had an "almost instinctive fearful impact."

So now, [Council on Foreign Relations member ] Mr. Cheney and others
warn, Al Qaeda's ultimate goal is the re-establishment of the
caliphate, with calamitous consequences for the United States. As Mr.
Cheney put it in Lake Elmo, referring to Osama bin Laden and his
followers: "They talk about wanting to re-establish what you could
refer to as the seventh-century caliphate" to be "governed by Sharia
law, the most rigid interpretation of the Koran."

Or as Mr. Rumsfeld put it on Monday: "Iraq would serve as the base of
a new Islamic caliphate to extend throughout the Middle East, and
which would threaten legitimate governments in Europe, Africa and
Asia."

[Council on Foreign Relations member ] General Abizaid was dire, too.
"They will try to re-establish a caliphate throughout the entire
Muslim world," he told the House Armed Services Committee in
September, adding that the caliphate's goals would include the
destruction of Israel. "Just as we had the opportunity to learn what
the Nazis were going to do, from Hitler's world in 'Mein Kampf,'
" [Council on Foreign Relations member ] General Abizaid said, "we
need to learn what these people intend to do from their own words."

A number of scholars and former government officials take strong issue
with the administration's warning about a new caliphate, and compare
it to the fear of communism spread during the Cold War. They say that
although Al Qaeda's statements do indeed describe a caliphate as a
goal, the administration is exaggerating the magnitude of the threat
as it seeks to gain support for its policies in Iraq.

In the view of John L. Esposito, an Islamic studies professor at
Georgetown University, there is a difference between the ability of
small bands of terrorists to commit attacks across the world and
achieving global conquest.

"It is certainly correct to say that these people have a global
design, but the administration ought to frame it realistically," said
Mr. Esposito, the founding director of the Center for Muslim-Christian
Understanding at Georgetown. "Otherwise they can actually be playing
into the hands of the Osama bin Ladens of the world because they raise
this to a threat that is exponentially beyond anything that Osama bin
Laden can deliver."

[Council on Foreign Relations member ] Shibley Telhami, the Anwar
Sadat professor for peace and development at the University of
Maryland, said Al Qaeda was not leading a movement that threatened to
mobilize the vast majority of Muslims. A recent poll [Council on
Foreign Relations member ] Mr. [Council on Foreign Relations member ]
Telhami conducted with Zogby International of 3,900 people in six
countries - Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Jordan, the United Arab
Emirates and Lebanon - found that only 6 percent sympathized with Al
Qaeda's goal of seeking an Islamic state.

The notion that Al Qaeda could create a new caliphate, he said, is
simply wrong. "There's no chance in the world that they'll succeed,"
he said. "It's a silly threat." (On the other hand, more than 30
percent in [Council on Foreign Relations member ] Mr. Telhami's poll
said they sympathized with Al Qaeda, because the group stood up to
America.)

The term "caliphate" has been used internally by policy hawks in the
Pentagon since the planning stages for the war in Iraq, but the
administration's public use of the word has increased this summer and
fall, around the time that American forces obtained a letter from
Ayman al-Zawahiri, the No. 2 leader in Al Qaeda, to Abu Musab al-
Zarqawi, the leader of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia. The 6,000-word letter,
dated early in July, called for the establishment of a militant
Islamic caliphate across Iraq before Al Qaeda's moving on to Syria,
Lebanon and Egypt and then a battle against Israel.

In recent weeks, the administration's use of "caliphate" has only
intensified, as Mr. Bush has begun a campaign of speeches to try to
regain support for the war. He himself has never publicly used the
term, although he has repeatedly described the caliphate, as he did in
a speech last week when he said that the terrorists want to try to
establish "a totalitarian Islamic empire that reaches from Indonesia
to Spain."

Six days earlier, Mr. Edelman, the under secretary of defense, made it
clear. "Iraq's future will either embolden terrorists and expand their
reach and ability to re-establish a caliphate, or it will deal them a
crippling blow," he said. "For us, failure in Iraq is just not an
option."

The events of the last few weeks in Tunisia and Egypt  have emboldened
the terrorists and expanded their reach and ability to re-establish a
caliphate. Was this what the CFR had in store for the World when they
backed Bin Laden during the Soviet/Afghan War? (http://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=8dMlcxDn2D0&NR=1&feature=fvwp#)

-- 
Please consider seriously the reason why these elite institutions are not 
discussed in the mainstream press despite the immense financial and political 
power they wield? 
There are sick and evil occultists running the Western World. They are power 
mad lunatics like something from a kids cartoon with their fingers on the 
nuclear button! Armageddon is closer than you thought. Only God can save our 
souls from their clutches, at least that's my considered opinion - Tony

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