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[414] <strong>Final</strong> <strong>Judgment</strong> 511<br />

facilities came to an abrupt end. And less than one year later Red China<br />

exploded its first nuclear bomb.<br />

Was this, in fact, a joint Chinese-Israeli operation? Although it is<br />

now an "open secret" that Israel has nuclear weapons, Israel had to have<br />

tested its capabilities somewhere. And in 1964, it now appears likely,<br />

Israel did test its own first nuclear bomb—in secret conjunction with its<br />

secret ally, the People's Republic of China. The "official" story is that<br />

Israel "may have" conducted its "first" atomic test off the coast of South Africa<br />

in 1979, but, as we have seen, there is evidence to suggest otherwise.<br />

The assassination of John F. Kennedy by Red China's secret ally, the<br />

Mossad, in league with the Mossad's other allies in the CIA and the Lansky<br />

Crime Syndicate, made possible the success of the joint Israeli-Red Chinese<br />

nuclear bomb project that would have been frustrated had JFK lived.<br />

THE ISRAELI LOBBY REACTS<br />

In the United States, the Israeli lobby—and Israel's partisans within<br />

what was then the "hard-line anti-communist" administration of Ronald<br />

Reagan—seem to have been fully enthusiastic about Israel's "new" alliance<br />

with Red China (as though, of course, they weren't aware of it already).<br />

For example, the Washington Times reported that: "Assistant Defense<br />

Secretary Richard Perle, the [Reagan] administration official most<br />

responsible for trying to deny U.S. weapons technology to [Soviet-bloc]<br />

communist countries is said to favor the Israel-China arms link. Also said to<br />

favor the traffic is Stephen Bryen, a deputy assistant secretary of defense, [a<br />

Bryan's principal deputy] who was formerly president of the Jewish<br />

Institute for National Security Affairs," 1048 an influential lobby for Israel.<br />

So it was that Jewish power brokers in the highest ranks of the Reagan<br />

administration, known for their devotion to Israel's cause (and for their<br />

fervent criticisms of the Soviet Union), came forth as heavy-duty advocates<br />

of the Israeli-Red Chinese alliance. Some might question, obviously, how<br />

"anti-communist" people such as Bryen and Perle really were (in light of<br />

the fact that Red China, of course, is a communist country). However, it's<br />

clear that Bryen and Perle, among others, were simply endorsing the new<br />

policy because that is precisely what Israel wanted.<br />

And, of course, by 2003—when the United States launched a "preemptive"<br />

invasion of Iraq, with strong prodding from pro-Israel partisans, it<br />

was the aforementioned Richard Perle who was a virtual ringmaster in<br />

organizing the public relations drumbeat on behalf of war.<br />

In any event, although the facts about this alliance between Israel and<br />

China were there for those who were interested, the press (during this<br />

period) did not make too much of the open dealings between Red China and<br />

Israel, inasmuch as this was before the Soviet Union fell and the Cold War<br />

was still unofficially underway. What's more, there were still widespread<br />

concerns about both Soviet and Chinese communism among segments of

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