A New Cold War? The Fight Against the 'New World Order' and Britain's Fate
I am not, by and large, a conspiracy theorist.
The only British danger to NWO hegemony therefore is an outright win by a Euro-skeptic Conservative party at the next election, due in or before June 2006. To avoid this, the NWO and its supporters in the British media (about 90 percent of it) are attempting to destabilize the leadership of Iain Duncan-Smith by playing up attempts to remove him and by circulating (almost certainly phony) stories of financial irregularities, thus weakening him for the party conference at which he traditionally reconnects with Conservative supporters.
This benefits them in two ways; it opens the possibility of the Conservative party getting a new leader, and, at a minimum, it shows the Conservatives as a weak, divided party, thus preventing them from capitalizing on Labor's mistakes. Of the potential leadership candidates, the only pro-NWO figure, Kenneth Clarke, now has little support in the party because of his huge distance from the party mainstream, but there are also "modernizing" factions, led by Michael Portillo and David Davis, who would blur the policy differences with Labor, as well as perpetuating internal party strife - as the removal of Margaret Thatcher in 1990 showed. Any forced change of leadership that was not to a figure clearly in tune with the party mainstream would be deeply debilitating for several years. To stop the NWO's Europe project, the Conservatives need to win the next election outright, picking up over 170 seats from Labor and the Liberal Democrats - only a total focus by the party on that objective will render it attainable. Any other result allows a Labor-Liberal Democrat coalition, which perpetuates the NWO's control of Britain, and of Europe as a whole.
Martin Hutchinson is UPI's Business and Economics Editor. This adapted text from UPI's weekly "The Bear's Lair" column is used with permission of UPI.