|
The Anti-Comintern Pact
America's failure to sign it led to WWII
In late
1936, America had the opportunity to do the right thing and say "no" to the
murderous ideology of Communism -- an ideology that had already slaughtered 10
million innocents in Russia and had enslaved many more.
America could
have signed onto an anti-Communist pact between states. But America's
part-Jewish president F. D. Roosevelt had much earlier sided with the
Communists; indeed, recall that many of FDR's closest pals were Jewish Marxists,
or at least commie-symps.
Germany, Japan and [later] Italy signed the
Anti-Comintern Pact in '36/'37 to show that they knew the dangers that Communism
posed to the world. But FDR signaled the opposite belief, which ultimately led
America into WWII. [FDR did have an opportunity to sign the pact, as Article II
of that pact refers to third parties being invited to sign it].
Of
interest here is that the "Holocaust" had not yet occurred in 1936, so there was
no arguable or 'legit' reason why America could not have signed the pact if she
had wanted to.
More on the Anti-Comintern Pact Here
|