5-12-08

 

Little George Heads to Mid East to Get Killed?

 

Why is Little George heading to the Mid East? Oil hitting $126 per barrel indicates a Mid East escalation of War is in the cards. Will Little George be the main event which triggers the war? In the Book of Revelations was it not prophesied that the antiChrist would receive a head injury and survive? We know Satan's filthy Frenchman, Jacob "Holocaust" Rothschild loves the sensational and illogical because he gave us September 11, the Holocaust, the Princess Di murder, and 5-8-08 Barack Hussein "Kenya Sunni al-Queda" Obama. Certainly if Iran or any Shiite group made an attack on Little George's life it could trigger a mass retaliation on Shiites and Iran. Motive and means equal action. What does Jacob Rothschild, the Federal Reserve Fraud and the Neocons want most? What does Little George want? Rothschilds and Rockefellers want oil prices to rise to $250.00 per barrel. They want the communi$t$, Saddam Hussein's Sunni al-Queda, fighting and stealing Iran and Russia's Caspian Sea oil. They want 5-8-08 Barack Hussein "Kenya Sunni al-Queda" Obama the next US president. They want the USA under martial law. What does Little George want? Little George wants his legacy - the biggest embarrassment to the history of the United States - improved. An attack on Little George life might achieve these goals. Would Little George really be killed or would it be another scam like the UDay, Quisay, Saddam Hussein, Ken Lay faked deaths? Don't know.

Is this the last picture of Little George? Little George's death may be worse for the world than Lincoln's, and this is written in the hope it promotes awareness and helps prevent an event such as this.

 

 

 

 

 


 

Bush heads to Middle East amid dark omens by Laurent Lozano
Sun May 11, 8:20 AM ET


WASHINGTON (AFP) - US President George W. Bush heads back to the Middle East this week, where his efforts to forge Israeli-Palestinian peace face growing skepticism with barely nine months left in his term.

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The five-day trip is anchored on the 60th anniversary of Israel as a modern state, a stop in Saudi Arabia to mark 75 years of US relations with the kingdom, and talks in Egypt with a broad range of regional leaders.

The visit is Bush's second in four months -- after seven years in which he did not set foot in either Israel or the Palestinian territories -- and Bush aides see it as a blend of symbol and substance.

"It's going to be a mix," said US national security adviser Stephen Hadley.

The White House has taken care not to raise expectations, perhaps not only because of the lack of significant progress over the past few months, but because of the turmoil in Israel over the past few days.

Bush was due to meet Wednesday with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who faces mounting calls to resign over a criminal probe into allegations he took bribes from a millionaire US financier.

After months of highlighting what it called good relations between Olmert and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, Washington now describes peace efforts as the principally the work of two governments.

Olmert, a political survivor, has not been charged, but his legal woes could make it more difficult to convince Israelis to make the tough concessions all sides agree will be needed to reach a peace deal with the Palestinians.

"It is an Israeli domestic matter. We don't want to poke our nose into it, but we fear this crisis will reflect in terms of military escalation or more building in the settlements," said lead Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat.

And "in case of early elections, the peace process will be put on hold," he added.

Olmert and Abbas agreed in November, at a US-sponsored conference in Annapolis, Maryland, to revive stalled peace efforts with an eye on reaching a deal on the outlines of a Palestinian state by year's end.

Since that optimistic pledge, however, causes for skepticism have piled up.

Israel has announced plans to pursue construction in Jewish settlements in occupied Palestinian lands -- a core dispute. And the United States has said that its ally has not done enough to improve Palestinian quality of life.

Another major obstacle is Hamas's control of the Gaza Strip, launch site for frequent rocket or mortar attacks on Israel, which the Palestinian militant group does not recognize.

Bush, who visited the Abbas-controlled West Bank in January, has no plans to visit the Palestinian territories this time, nor to hold a joint summit with Olmert and Abbas -- though he will see the Palestinian leader in Egypt May 17.

"At this point, we think the bilateral negotiations are key. We can be encouraging those negotiations to go forward. A lot of it is better done, quite frankly, in private than in public," said Hadley.

The US president, often accused of ducking the peace effort to focus on the war in Iraq, could face Arab criticism for focusing his trip so much on Israel, where he will address the Knesset, the country's parliament.

"It's hard to remember a less auspicious time to pursue Arab-Israeli peacemaking than right now. The politics on the ground are absolutely miserable," says Middle East expert Jon Alterman.

Bush faces another crisis in Lebanon, where Israel foe Hezbollah -- the two fought a war in 2006 -- has led in recent days an armed campaign against forces loyal to the pro-Western government.

The volatile situation in war-torn Iraq, Iran's growing confidence, and Syria's defiance -- experts see many of these as signs of diminished US clout in the region, even as sky-high gasoline prices hurt US pocketbooks.

On May 16, Bush visits Saudi Arabia, which he hopes will help push the peace process but also play a larger role in stabilizing Iraq. He was also to express US concerns about the dramatic rise in oil prices.