FALSE FLAG OPERATION (1950): In a speech to the National Press Club, in the District of Columbia, Dean G. Acheson, Esq., secretary of state, implies that Korea is outside the United States security interests, thus inviting increased communist influence in the region:
This defensive perimeter runs along the Aleutians to Japan and then goes to the Ryukyus. …
The defensive perimeter runs from Ryukyus to the Philippine Islands. …
So far as the military security of other areas in the Pacific is concerned, it must be clear that no person can guarantee these areas against military attack.
· · · · · ·
[T]he Asian peoples are on their own, and know it. …
Postscript: Five months later, taking Acheson as his word, the communist Democratic People’s Republic of (North) Korea invaded the kleptocratic Republic of (South) Korea.
NOTES:
- A false flag operation is a clandestine action usually carried out by a group with an agenda, done in such a way to mislead a population into believing it is being done by someone else.
- In the opinion of history, and of the editors and writers, we are forced to agree on prima facie evidence alone that this is a False Flag incident at least in the military way.
- As an attorney (Officer of the Court) Acheson was ineligible to serve in two branches of government at the same time, according to Article I, Section 6 [Clause 2].
[added 8/30/2022] Thanks to Jim Lorenz and Bill Holmes for this entry.
Subsequent Events:
References:
James Carroll, House of War: The Pentagon and the disastrous rise of American power, (Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2006), 188.
The Power and the Glory.htm
www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15732.htm
False flag – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_flag
How to Start a War The American Use of War Pretext Incidents.htm
globalresearch.ca/PrintArticle.php?articleId=28554
Acheson speech 1950
web.viu.ca/davies/H323Vietnam/Acheson.htm