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View Full Version : Something HUGE is Brewing Down Under - US forces get nod to share Aussie bases



jackovesk
5th November 2010, 16:07
CAN ANYONE TELL ME WHY?

Be sure to Read the article Below in todays 'The Australian' newspaper to Connect...The...Dots..!

My Thoughts: This sounds like the NWO, World Govt. are coming into existense Down Under sooner than I thought!

Former Aussie PM Kevin Rudd & now Australian Foreign Minister (NWO Globalist Shill & Traitor) has been the No.1 instigator in trying to form the Asia Pacific Union, which simply means that Australia will lose it's Sovereignty and hand it over to the UN, World Bank and IMF!

I now know Why? The Singapore Stock Exchange wanted to merge with and Take Over the Australian Stock Exchange!

Aswell as the 1 million Illuminati members looking for excile into other Countries!

Those of you who are familiar with Australia's Huge New Parliament House in Canberra which was built to hold 100's of more politicians than it currently does. Designed by the Freeasons/PTB to house the World Govt with Henry Kissengers fingerprints all over it! See the Freeman clip...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBxaiv0uiLQ&feature=player_profilepage#!

Well its started...

The Australian Newspaper Article...November 06, 2010 12:00AM

AUSTRALIA has agreed to a major escalation of military co-operation with the US.
This will include more visits by American ships, aircraft and troops and their forces exercising here regularly.

Access to Australian Defence Force facilities will allow the US to step up its military presence in the Asia-Pacific region as it comes under pressure to wind down its key bases, such as Okinawa, as concern grows about China's military expansion.

Increased numbers of US personnel in Australian facilities are expected within months, and the tempo of military exercises will be stepped up as that happens.

Likely early sites are Townsville, as the primary base for army operations, the port of Darwin, the Bradshaw Field Training Area in the Northern Territory and HMAS Stirling naval base in Western Australia.

Three big announcements on military and security co-operation will be made after Monday's AUSMIN defence and foreign policy talks involving delegations headed by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and US Defence Secretary Robert Gates and Australia's Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd and Defence Minister Stephen Smith.

Sources close to the talks said this AUSMIN, in Melbourne, would be one of the most significant in the summit's 25-year history.

They said US forces would not establish new bases on Australian soil but they would be welcomed into existing facilities with the less politically risky formula of being given unfettered access to "places, not bases".

The agreement will be similar to that covering the joint intelligence-gathering facilities such as Pine Gap.

The Americans will not just be offered space on a base - they will be there with what Defence calls "full knowledge and concurrence" so that they will have a share in all processes, such as access to intelligence and maintenance facilities.

The US military may store equipment in Australia to make it easier to carry out major exercises here and to allow a faster response in humanitarian assistance after disasters in the region. The sharing of facilities was seen as the way of the future, the sources said. Australian and US forces would be "inter-operable".

The Australian development is part of a new Obama strategy to step up the US military presence in the Asia-Pacific region after reviews of strategic policy concluded that the Bush government's attempts to project power from North America were not working.

As US planners looking for ways to move forces around the world more effectively broke the globe down into regions, Australian officials worked closely with them on the Asia-Pacific.

It is understood the US will also increase co-operation with other regional allies, including Singapore and India.

Monday's announcements will include a new system to help identify and "map" objects in space over the southern hemisphere, ranging from space junk to satellites and incoming ballistic missiles. "That's becoming of more interest since North Korea began missile test launches on a southern trajectory," the sources said. That system could be set up in the Harold E. Holt Naval Communication Station in the northwest of Western Australia, which the US already uses to keep contact with its submarines.

The third leg of the AUSMIN communique will confirm a plan for much closer co-operation on ways to prevent attacks on cyber systems crucial to modern economies and military systems, and to find out where the attacks originate.

Sources said that along with the increased US diplomatic effort to engage in the region was a stronger US military presence.

"They're back with a much stronger presence," one said.

Mr Rudd yesterday set out for the first time since taking over his portfolio how his goal of an Asia-Pacific community to disarm security threats was now being achieved through the likely inclusion of the US in the East Asia Summit or ASEAN.

"Now we've just got to make it work," Mr Rudd said.

Australia had pushed hard to have the US bring New Zealand "in from the cold" and that was happening, Mr Rudd said.

His comments came as Mrs Clinton concluded a two-day visit to New Zealand to repair a decades-long rift between the two countries.

Mr Rudd said AUSMIN was likely to address common global and regional interests, including Afghanistan, Iran, the Asia-Pacific, and the current US review of its military forces.

"AUSMIN occurs at a time when the Asia-Pacific, for the first time, becomes the central strategic theatre for the world for the 21st century," Mr Rudd said.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/us-forces-get-nod-to-share-our-bases/story-fn59niix-1225948576258

truthseekerdan
5th November 2010, 16:11
CAN ANYONE TELL ME WHY?

Seems like all hell is breaking loose :jaw:

jcocks
5th November 2010, 16:19
" high wierdness" is a massive understatement.

It seems the wierdness has been shot into orbit........

Rocky_Shorz
5th November 2010, 18:33
well they now have proof these attacks around the world out of Yemen were orchestrated by Iran...

are they going to declare this an act of war worthy of a response?


Yemen bomb plot suspect tied to Iranian regime


Friday, 05 November 2010 15:37
E-mail Print PDF

Yeman explosive cartregeNCRI - A key suspect in the Yemen mail bombs plot has had close relationships with the Iranian regime’s Revolutionary Guards, United Press International reported on Wednesday.

Saif al-Adel, a former Egyptian army Special Forces colonel and onetime al-Qaida military chief, was reported in October to be in the North Waziristan region of Pakistan near the Afghanistan border, the news agency said.

“Adel, aka Mohammed Ibrahim Makkawi, fled to Iran from Afghanistan with other al-Qaida cadres when the Americans invaded in October 2001.”

“U.S. officials insist these operatives remained active and had close relationships with commanders of Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps, particularly its clandestine branch, the al-Quds Force,” UPI added.

link (http://ncr-iran.org/en/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=9209:yemen-bomb-plot-suspect-tied-to-iranian-regime&catid=162:terrorism-a-fundamentalism&Itemid=136)

Rocky_Shorz
5th November 2010, 18:43
the API complete Story...


Egyptian vet seen behind Yemen bombs plot


SANAA, Yemen, Nov. 2 (UPI) -- The key suspect in the Yemen mail bombs plot is Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri, a top al-Qaida bomb maker but the conspiracy bears the fingerprints of a more senior figure recently released by Iran after nine years of "house arrest."

Saif al-Adel, a former Egyptian army Special Forces colonel and onetime al-Qaida military chief, was reported in October to be in the North Waziristan region of Pakistan near the Afghanistan border.

Osama bin laden and al-Qaida's core leadership are believed to be holed up in the same region.

The word is that Saif al-Adel got his old job back and is once again running al-Qaida's international operations, along with another seasoned al-Qaida veteran also freed by Tehran, Abu Hafs al-Mauritani, and Saad bin Laden, one of Osama bin Laden's sons...


U.S. officials insist these operatives remained active and had close relationships with commanders of Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps, particularly its clandestine branch, the al-Quds Force.

Adel, Saad bin Laden and his younger brother Mohammed reportedly lived in the same government guest house in Tehran for several years...

API Story Link (http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2010/11/02/Egyptian-vet-seen-behind-Yemen-bombs-plot/UPI-15811288722130/)

TigaHawk
5th November 2010, 21:20
is there any audio in that clip?

all im seeing is the pictures, and no audio at all.... its dead silent.. have tried in firefox and IE - and my sound is deff working on other clips?

Edit - nevermind, problem was P.E.B.K.A.C :bowl:

bluestflame
6th November 2010, 00:04
interesting timing , just had a visit by Hillary Clinton and Opera Whinefree is due in December , even bringing her own US audience

I'm sure there's a few more dots that could do with connecting , Obama was supposed to be coming over here earlier this year but that sorta didn't happen , now he's going to India

time will tell

bluestflame
6th November 2010, 00:14
that's what i got a while ago , that for some reason because of its isolation the elite had chosen Australia as their "land of milk and Honey" slowly over time shifting the Aussie culture and supplanting thier own version , conditioning the masses for the eventual ....

anyway , that's one big intuition I got years ago and am still unpacking , they already have the global surveilance(defence?) systems here , like pine gap etc.

the fear factor is that australia "needs" US support due to close proximity of indonesia and asia and the percieved threat of invasion ( they've recently addressed laws concerning foreign ownership of AUstralian real estate )

there is also a housing crisis here , for some reason , the Aust Govt had been selling off housing commission houses yet not replacing them , the waiting list currently from what i recall is around 2 years to even get an appointment to get put on the waiting list for public housing
private housing is not being built fast enough to keep up with the demand ( yet one of the rockerfellars were over here last year to inspect some you beaute ,super duper , new fangled luxury apartment complex that i summise was purpose built for thier use )

Snowbird
6th November 2010, 01:40
The ubber rich are vacating the Homeland.


Uber :haha:

Roofie
6th November 2010, 03:58
After what has happened to the US do we really want them here????
Australia has changed dramatically over the past 30 odd years that I've been around and now I'm a father I dont want it to become like the US has.

Granted my property value may inrease a bit. May have to sell up and move to NZ....

jcocks
6th November 2010, 04:09
The ubber rich? Who are they?

(PS : I think you meant the uber rich) :D

Myra
6th November 2010, 04:10
I hear you! I'm born and basically raised in the US and I feel that they have NO BUSINESS butting into other countrie's business (I do not consider myself a part of "them") and I hate it. Some day I will expatriate because I do not agree with and cannot associate with their evil and corruption anymore.

I_Am
6th November 2010, 05:30
First they'll ignite the fire using Iran (what about one or several dirty bombs, where they trace the uranium back to the Buscheer reactor program?). Then China (China must be the reason for using Australia).
Be sure that we also will se major attacks on Internet beforehand, so that they may control the flow of info.

Rocky_Shorz
6th November 2010, 18:18
on the 25th seismographs went off around the world...

except down under...

if you were going to build an underground arc, wouldn't it be best to choose a place that isn't going to be rocking and a rolling?

TraineeHuman
7th November 2010, 00:50
During World War 1, Australian soldiers fought under the British flag. Up until the fifties, many Australians thought of themselves as "British", even though Australian culture is extremely different from the British one. (It's a culture of individual empowerment, borrowed without acknowledgment from the Aboriginal cultures, plus superficial or outward liberalism and tolerance, plus quite a lot of what was originally Irish/Celtic, and some American due to the influence of TV and the internet.) Australian soldiers marched under that flag because they assumed that the British would defend Australia in any future war.

World War 2 came, and the British said er, not this time, chaps. Australia was under attack by the Japanese -- Darwin and Sydney Harbour did get bombed slightly. So the Aussie government went running to the US for protection. The US beat back the Japs all over the Pacific, and eventually. of course, in the Japs' own country.

Ever since then, Australia's foreign policy was to "roll over" to any US request to have bases in Australia. Indeed, the bigger the US bases, the more defensive shielding the US would have to build somehow or other to protect most of Australia against military conquest by anybody (except the US, of course). I mean, the Woomera rocket range, which is separate from but not too far away from Pine Gap, used to occupy an area bigger than England.

This latest news should be seen in that context, from the Australia government's point of view. And the Australian military's assessment is that Australia faces an increasing threat of occupation by Indonesia or China as those countries become more prosperous.

Lost Soul
7th November 2010, 04:16
Thank you for that link to Freeman.

sunflower
7th November 2010, 21:09
Traineehuman, your perspective makes sense. Without the context it's difficult to get the right reason for anything.

witchy1
7th November 2010, 21:20
In the Sydney Morning Herald this morning:

China wary of PM's welcome mat for US military
http://www.smh.com.au/national/china-wary-of-pms-welcome-mat-for-us-military-20101107-17j0m.html

jackovesk
8th November 2010, 01:44
Thank you for that link to Freeman.

No worries mate...

There is heaps more interesting and insightful stuff on his site...

http://freemantv.com/

Phil
8th November 2010, 02:02
MMMMM and I have always wondered what was the real reason, the population of Australia has been dis armed and can not purchase knives, I wonder.

AtlasFactor
8th November 2010, 02:14
MMMMM and I have always wondered what was the real reason, the population of Australia has been dis armed and can not purchase knives, I wonder.

Also the reason the best & brightest Australian men were deliberately sent into machine gun fire by the British HQ, in order to weaken the gene pool (Gallipoli, WWI.)

Ahkenaten
9th November 2010, 16:25
It is just logical that the US/British Empire would seek to consolidate power in the Pacific region. Limited warfare must be continued to ensure the health of the economy and the control of the less than 1%. Beneath it all, however no one should fail to notice that virtually all manufacturing has been outsourced to China............increasingly India has become an economic and intellectual force to be reckoned with, providing as it does much of the intellectual capital to the West. So although the paradigm of China vs. the West is being spun out and the chessboard is being somewhat rearranged, it is still the same old chess board. China will NOT be merely engulfed by the West, China has historically remained aloof from the entanglements that would dilute its national character. The rearrangement of the pieces on the chessboard is a pragmatic surface development and does not represent anything new. Limited warfare must be continued at all costs as it props up economies. Underneath there are undoubtedly tacit agreements on parameters of chaos to benefit the ruling classes of all sides. Wild cards continue to be those who act autonomously. Individuals are suspect, and above all, any notion of individuality must be stamped out and destroyed at the root.

Anchor
10th November 2010, 02:31
MMMMM and I have always wondered what was the real reason, the population of Australia has been dis armed and can not purchase knives, I wonder.

Where are you getting your facts from?

You can do both those things in Australia. It certainly isn't a free for all, and you need a good reason to own a gun but if you do need one, you can have one. Lots of red tape though.

Beth
10th November 2010, 03:21
Where are you getting your facts from?

You can do both those things in Australia. I certainly isn't a free for all, and you need a good reason to own a gun but if you do need one, you can have one. Lots of red tape though.

I have also heard that you can't have gun ownership in Australia, not sure about the knives though.

Arpheus
10th November 2010, 03:32
Lol not being able to purchase knives?You have got to be kidding me?How do you chop meat veggies and do home cooking in there lol?

Anchor
10th November 2010, 04:21
Gun ownership is licensed that's all - and you have to have a pretty good reason to have one "genuine need".

http://www.ag.gov.au/www/agd/agd.nsf/Page/Firearmsregulation_Firearmsregulation

I have bought some excellent knives while I have been here. There is a chain of shops called "King Of Knives" that have a good selection.

For a firearm, just pop into a police station, fill in forms, wait, fill in more forms, go on an approved firearms course, pass a test, fill in more forms, wait a bit, fill in another form, wait a bit, buy a firearm, shoot things - store firearm in mandatory safe on in the registered location :)

Beth
10th November 2010, 04:58
Gun ownership is licensed that's all - and you have to have a pretty good reason to have one "genuine need".


So one's need to protecting themselves and their family isn't good enough? A law abiding citizen should sure have the right to carry. Also, if you look at Illinois and the years that ownership was banned there was an increase in crime. But take a look at Arizona with an open carry law, there is reduced crime. The only thing that restricted carry law does is keep guns from those that would use them to protect. Criminals will carry them regardless of law.

witchy1
10th November 2010, 05:25
jackovesk

I think you are right. Dont know if you watched (I think) Snowbirds video the other day. Asiapac is the only one left to sign an agreement under the nwo agenda. EU was the first one, American one was signed by GW without it being approved by anyone. Ill hunt it out and repost

witchy1
10th November 2010, 05:28
Here it is - I think I remember roughly where it is (its over 2 hrs long) so will let you know where to look

http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...90642797444340 (http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...90642797444340)

This issue is at around 30 mins into it. Talks about the
European Union - done
African union - not sure
Asia Union - doing now by the looks
North American Union - signed by GW will be using the Amero as currency, America/Canada/Mexico
All identified in BB in 1954.

These will all eventually merge into the One World Government - either by conquest or consent!

The whole video is a must see.

Teakai
10th November 2010, 05:33
Lol not being able to purchase knives?You have got to be kidding me?How do you chop meat veggies and do home cooking in there lol?

Hi Arpheus. This is from the Australian ABC news site dated Aug 2010:

"Retailers of knives will have to exercise caution when tough new laws are introduced, Warrnambool Police say.

The Victorian Government's new weapons laws come into effect on Sunday and include increased penalties for people carrying knives.

It will become illegal for people younger than 18 to buy controlled weapons."

I know the Big W store in the town I live in has for quite a while had a sign up saying that you have to be over 18 to buy a knife.

bluestflame
10th November 2010, 05:55
and they were talking ages ago about that proposed nuclear waste dump in the Northern Territory , I guess that's gunna get thown in as some sorta package deal , just no steak knives lol

bluestflame
10th November 2010, 05:58
methinks the dots are starting to become connected , just a matter of which ones are most concerning , like i said , it's a package deal

Ross
10th November 2010, 06:07
I have also heard that you can't have gun ownership in Australia, not sure about the knives though.

Have a clean record, Join a gun club, sit your license...easy as that. You can buy Knives just about anywhere, just cant carry them in public or flash em about.

Also talks going on about Singapore buying the ASX stock exchange...Japan are very nervous about such a deal.

Anchor
10th November 2010, 06:09
So one's need to protecting themselves and their family isn't good enough? A law abiding citizen should sure have the right to carry. Also, if you look at Illinois and the years that ownership was banned there was an increase in crime. But take a look at Arizona with an open carry law, there is reduced crime. The only thing that restricted carry law does is keep guns from those that would use them to protect. Criminals will carry them regardless of law.

I don't disagree with you, I was just correcting the widely held belief that you could not have firearms or buy knives. The statistics show that there are over 2 million registered firearms in Australia - nearly 10% . I expect there are quite a lot of unregistered ones as well.


In 2000, the United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI) conducted an International Crime Victims Survey that included comparative data on firearm ownership in Australia, the USA, Canada and the UK. From this survey the Australian Institute of Criminology (AIC) estimated that in 2000 about 10 per cent of Australian households owned a gun, reflecting a decline of 45 per cent in gun ownership since 1989. In Australia, the majority of households which owned a firearm did so for hunting or sport-related purposes.

( http://www.aph.gov.au/Library/pubs/bn/2007-08/08bn01.htm )

I acknowledge that the government has used the classic problem reaction solution approach to reducing firearm ownership down here, but it is not absolute.

John..

shiva777
10th November 2010, 06:19
couldn't resist...ozzies have the biggest knives

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01NHcTM5IA4

bluestflame
10th November 2010, 07:34
I used to make em like that , chop wood with em then dry shave your arm ...alas , no more ( i don't live out bush any more)

Leon
14th November 2010, 09:21
As I mentioned in another tread. the police in Australia are busy spending millions or arming themselves with m4 rifles at the moment, I believe WA spend excactly 1 million on these... what is going to happen down under... as the Aussie say Poor Bastards didn't know what was coming....

bluestflame
14th November 2010, 10:17
just noticed this on facebook ( yeah, I know )
seems a multinational finger in a lot of pies and i do mean a LOT of pies

serco , "the biggest company you've never heard of "


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-uyT2qEfe4c&feature=related

at end of vid .." serco was founded in 1929 as a United Kingdom division of the Radio Corporation of America and initially provided services to the cinema industry"

TigaHawk
14th November 2010, 11:40
Have a clean record, Join a gun club, sit your license...easy as that. You can buy Knives just about anywhere, just cant carry them in public or flash em about.

True enough - but with all that done you still cant own a gun and keep it in you're home. You're allowed to use the guns at the range, and perhaps buy/rent a locker and have the gun stored there.


I believe you're only allowed to keep a gun on you're property is if you have a lisence, and own a property somewhere rural (ie out bush - way out bush)

can you re-confirm this?

bluestflame
14th November 2010, 12:54
have to have a gun safe , if rifle, firing pin has to be stored in a seperate locked storage safe , ammunition in yet another storage safe ...too bad if you need it in a hurry