July 12, 1994: A Day Of Infamy For Germany

Between the end of World War II and July 12, 1994 Germany enjoyed a constitutionally entrenched principle which kept the nation's military inside her own borders. The nation was expected to write off all lost traditionally German territories to Poland and Russia, territories which were seceded for the purpose of seeing the Communist Empire advance deeper into the heartland of Europe.

(Thanks, America, Britain and France, for importing Imperialist (...) Bolshevism into Europe by defeating the nations which were fighting to keep it off the map anywhere, only to declare it the West's greatest threat afterwards! What were you fighting Germany

for in the first place?).

The refurbished image of Communism as co-victor over Germany became quickly altered into the World's greatest threat, and hence NATO was formed, of which post war Germany was made an instant member. It was not until NATO powers saw the need for pouncing on other nations under some phony "human rights" pretext, that the western allied war mentality discovered that Germany was beautifully protected by her constitution from participating in Anglo-Saxon inspired war escapades, i.e. Bosnia, and the unjustifiable war against Iraq, which should have been viewed as an internal Arab dispute created by British arbritary boundary carving in the first place!

Germany was put under pressure to make a constitutional change in favour of (western imperialist) intent to use her war machine against any nation of independent thought and leadership. The German Government caved in under this pressure, and on July 12, 1994 a Constitutional Court set up for the purpose of making

that change, opened the flood gate again for German participation in all sorts of underhanded shadowy military operations as concocted by debauched interests of the Western elite. East Timor is the latest example, where Germany will also contribute some kind of military related support.

(...) Blackmail on Germany is enormous. Military blackmail is merely one phase of humiliation of the German consciousness. This Supreme Court of Germany decision must be REVERSED and the German military not be allowed to operate outside of German territory unless attacked!

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July 12, 1994: Germany ends military ban.

Germany's Constitutional Court ended the ban on sending German troops to fight outside the country. The ban had been in effect since shortly after World War II, when Germany was disarmed. (Japan has a similar ban.) The ruling would allow German troops to join in peacekeeping missions of the United Nations or the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). The restriction on German military action abroad had been criticized by other countries because it prevented Germany from participating in the Persian Gulf War of 1991 and in the Bosnia crisis. As if to signal the change in status, Germany military units marched in the Bastille Day celebration in Paris on July 14. It was the first time German troops had appeared in France since the country was liberated from German occupation in 1945.

Excerpted from Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia
 



Article Written By sentanaries

I am one of many Commanders in the Federation of Unified Starships. Our purpose for being here is to prepare all humanity for a successful evacuation off this planet, and later on to return for becoming the seed people for repopulating earth in a New Era.

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