World War Two Was a Charade – The Proof!
- World War Two Was a Charade – The Proof!
by Henry Makow Ph.D., http://henrymakow.com/
Martin Bormann, the man who signed Hitler’s pay checks and knew everything about the Nazi war effort, was an Allied spy. The book “Op JB” (1996) by John Ainsworth-Davis describes in detail his rescue by the British from the ruins of Berlin in April 1945.
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This book is the smoking gun that proves the Second World War was a charade. While most Nazis were sincere, the movement was sponsored and controlled at the top by the Masonic Jewish bankers in order to start a war to kill “goyim” patriots on both sides and advance world government. Non-Illuminati Jews were also sacrificed in this evil agenda.
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I was suspicious that Simon & Schuster published this book amid great fanfare and a large advance. However, I have come across an account of the circumstances of publication which authenticates Ainsworth-Davis’ story.
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(Formerly, Martin Bormann was Rothschild Agent — Damning Evidence)
The second most powerful man in Nazi Germany, Martin Bormann, Hitler’s Private Secretary and Head of the Nazi Party apparatus, was an Illuminati (i.e. British) agent who ensured the destruction of both Germany and European Jewry.
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Thus, he advanced two of the Illuminati’s main goals: integrate Germany into a world government by annihilating its national, cultural and racial pretensions, and establish Israel by threatening European Jews with extinction.
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When I first made this case in June 2007, a reader suggested I read the book “OPJB,”(1996) Lieut. Commander John Ainsworth-Davis’ account of how he and Ian Fleming led a 150-man team that rescued Martin Bormann from war-torn Berlin on May 1, 1945 using river kayaks. According to this book, Bormann lived under an assumed identity in England until 1956 before dying in Paraguay in 1959.
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The title of the book stands for “Operation James Bond.” Ian Fleming took the name of the author of “A Field Guide to the Birds of the West Indies” for the Bormann rescue and later gave it to the hero of his spy series who was modelled on Ainsworth-Davis, who used the name, Christopher Creighton. He died in 2013 at age 89.
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