Several sources, located in different countries, report that NATO is preparing attacks in countries of the European Union.
During the “years of lead” (from the late 1960s to the 1980s), NATO’s secret services implemented the “strategy of tension”. It was about organizing bloody attacks, attributed to extremeists, to create a climate of fear and to prevent the formation of national alliance governments, including the Communists. At the same time, NATO (supposedly defender of “democracy”) organized coup d’etats and attempted coups in Greece, Italy and Portugal.
The NATO secret services had been formed by the United States and the United Kingdom from within the CIA Political Coordination Office. They reported only to Washington and Berlin, and not to other members of the Atlantic Alliance. These services were said to be stay-behind, since they could act in the event of occupation by the USSR, and included the best specialists in the anti-communist struggle of the Nazi Reich.
Similar services had been created by Anglo-Saxons all over the world, either as advisor to pro-US governments, or clandestinely in the USSR and its associated states. They were coordinated through the World Anti-Communist League. In 1975, three US commissions were uncovered behind these networks – the Church Commission in the Senate, Pike in the House and Rockfeller in the White House. In 1977, President Jimmy Carter appointed Admiral Stansfield Turner as head of the CIA to clean up the secret service. In 1990, the Italian Prime Minister, Giulio Andreotti, revealed the existence of the branch of NATO’s secret service in Italy, Gladio. There followed parliamentary inquiry commissions in Germany, Belgium and Italy through which the whole system would have been dissolved.
However, years later, we found convincing evidence of NATO’s responsibility in the Madrid attacks of 11 March 2004 and London on 7 July 2005.
It is in this context that in France, a mobile gendarme and former legionnaire was arrested on 23 December 2018 while carrying explosives and held in the station of Lyon (Paris). After 96 hours in custody, he was indicted.
We have published numerous documents and studies on the stay-behind, including:
« Stay-behind : les réseaux d’ingérence américains », par Thierry Meyssan, Réseau Voltaire, 20 août 2001.
En 16 épisodes, le livre du professeur Daniele Ganser Les Armées secrètes de l’OTAN, qui fait autorité.
« La Ligue anti-communiste mondiale, une internationale du crime », par Thierry Meyssan, Réseau Voltaire, 12 mai 2004.