THE CRIMES OF GENOCIDAL RACIST MANIAC "WINSTON CHURCHILL"
https://crimesofbritain.com/2016/09/13/the-trial-of-winston-churchill/
Crimes of Britain
Monitoring the CRIMES OF BRITAIN
England celebrates their genocides. The ‘Winston Churchill note’ has
entered circulation. Honouring a man who swilled on champagne while 4
million men, women and children in Bengal starved due to his racist
colonial policies.
The trial of Churchill:
Churchill was a genocidal maniac. He is fawned over in Britain and held
up as a hero of the nation. He was voted ‘Greatest Briton’ of all time.
Below is the real history of Churchill, the history of a white
supremacist whose hatred for Indians led to four million starving to
death, the man who loathed Irish people so much he conceived different
ways to terrorise them, the racist thug who waged war on black people
across Africa and in Britain. This is the trial of Winston Churchill,
the enemy of all humanity.
THE TRIAL OF WINSTON CHURCHILL:
Afghanistan:
Churchill found his love for war during the time he spent in
Afghanistan. While there he said “all who resist will be killed without
quarter” because the Pashtuns need “recognise the superiority of race”.
He believed the Pashtuns needed to be dealt with, he would reminisce in
his writings about how he partook in the burning villages and peoples homes:
“We proceeded systematically, village by village, and we destroyed the
houses, filled up the wells, blew down the towers, cut down the great
shady trees, burned the crops and broke the reservoirs in punitive
devastation.” – Churchill on how the British carried on in Afghanistan,
and he was only too happy to be part of it.
Churchill would also write of how “every tribesman caught was speared or
cut down at once”. Proud of the terror he helped inflict on the people
of Afghanistan Churchill was well on the road to becoming a genocidal
maniac.
Greece:
The British Army under the guidance of Churchill perpetrated a massacre
on the streets of Athens in the month of December 1944. 28 protesters
were shot dead, a further 128 injured. The British demanded that all
guerrilla groups should disarm on the 2nd December 1944. The following
day 200,000 people took to the streets, and this is when the British
Army under Churchill’s orders turned their guns on the people. Churchill
regarded ELAS (Greek People’s Liberation Army) and EAM (National
Liberation Front) as “miserable banditti”, these were the very people
who ran the Nazis out. His actions in the month of December were purely
out of his hatred and paranoia for communism.
The British backed the right-wing government in Greece returned from
exile after the very same partisans of the resistance that Churchill
ordered the murder of had driven out the Nazi occupiers. Soviet forces
were well received in Greece, this deeply worried Churchill. He planned
to restore the monarchy in Greece to combat any possible communist
influence. The events in December were part of that strategy.
In 1945, Churchill sent Charles Wickham to Athens where he was in charge
of training the Greek security police. Wickham learned his tricks of the
trade in British occupied Ireland between 1922-1945 where he was a
commander of the colonial RUC, responsible for countless terror.
In April 1945 Churchill said “the [Nazi] collaborators in Greece in many
cases did the best they could to shelter the Greek population from
German oppression” and went on to say “the Communists are the main foe”.
India:
“I’d rather see them have a good civil war”. – Churchill wishing
partition on India
Very few in Britain know about the genocide in Bengal let alone how
Churchill engineered it. Churchill’s hatred for Indians led to four
million starving to death during the Bengal ‘famine’ of 1943. “I hate
Indians. They are a beastly people with a beastly religion” he would say.
Bengal had a better than normal harvest during the British enforced
famine. The British Army took millions of tons of rice from starving
people to ship to the Middle East – where it wasn’t even needed. When
the starving people of Bengal asked for food, Churchill said the
‘famine’ was their own fault “for breeding like rabbits”. The Viceroy of
India said “Churchill’s attitude towards India and the famine is
negligent, hostile and contemptuous”. Even right wing imperialist Leo
Amery who was the British Secretary of State in India said he “didn’t
see much difference between his [Churchill] outlook and Hitler’s”.
Churchill refused all of the offers to send aid to Bengal, Canada
offered 10,000 tons of rice, the U.S 100,000, he just point blank
refused to allow it. Churchill was still swilling champaign while he
caused four million men, women and children to starve to death in Bengal.
Throughout WW2 India was forced to ‘lend’ Britain money. Churchill
moaned about “Indian money lenders” the whole time. The truth is
Churchill never waged war against fascism. He went to war with Germany
to defend the British Empire, he said this about India during WW2 “are
we to incur hundreds of millions of debt for defending India only to be
kicked out by the Indians afterwards”.
In 1945 Churchill said “the Hindus were race protected by their mere
pullulation from the doom that is due”. The Bengal famine wasn’t enough
for Churchill’s blood lust, he wished his favourite war criminal Arthur
Harris could have bombed them.
Iran:
“A prize from fairyland beyond our wildest dreams” – Churchill on Iran’s oil
When Britain seized Iran’s oil industry Churchill proclaimed it was “a
prize from fairyland beyond our wildest dreams”. Churchill meddled in
Iranian affairs for decades, he helped exclude Iranians from their
natural resources and encouraged the looting when most lived in severe
poverty.
In June 1914 Churchill proposed a bill in the House of Commons that
would see the British government become become the major shareholder of
the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. The company would go on to refrain from
paying Iran its share of the dividends before paying tax to the British
exchequer. Essentially the British were illegally taxing the Iranian
government.
When the nationalist government of Mohammad Mosaddegh threatened British
‘interests’ in Iran, Churchill was there, ready to protect them at any
cost. Even if that meant desecrating democracy. He helped organise a
coup against Mosaddegh in August 1953. He told the CIA operations
officer that helped carry out the plan “if i had been but a few years
younger, I would have loved nothing better than to have served under
your command in this great venture”.
Churchill arranged for the BBC to send coded messages to let the Shah of
Iran know that they were overthrowing the democratically elected
government. Instead of the BBC ending their Persian language news
broadcast with “it is now midnight in London” they under Churchill’s
orders said “it is now exactly midnight”.
Churchill went on to privately describe the coup as “the finest
operation since the end of the war [WW2]”. Being a proud product of
imperialism he had no issue ousting Mosaddegh so Britain could get back
to sapping the riches of Iran.
Iraq:
“I am strongly in favour of using poisoned gas against the uncivilized
tribes… it would spread a lively terror.” – Churchill on the use of gas
in the Middle East and India
Churchill was appointed ‘Secretary of State for the Colonies’ in 1921
and he formed the ‘Middle East Department’ which was responsible for
Iraq. Determined to have his beloved empire on the cheap he decided air
power could replace ground troops. A strategy of bombing any resistance
to British rule was now employed.
Several times in the 1920s various groups in the region now known as
Iraq rose up against the British. The air force was then put into
action, indiscriminately bombing civilian areas so to subdue the population.
Churchill was also an advocate for the use of mustard and poison gases.
Whilst ‘Secretary for War and Air’ he advised that “the provision of
some kind of asphyxiating bombs” should be used “for use in preliminary
operations against turbulent tribes” in order to take control of Iraq.
When Iraqi tribes stood up for themselves, under the direction of
Churchill the British unleashed terror on mud, stone and reed villages.
Churchill’s bombing of civilians in ‘Mesopotamia’ (Kurdistan and Iraq)
was summed up by war criminal ‘Bomber Harris’:
“The Arab and Kurd now know what real bombing means within 45 minutes a
full-sized village can be practically wiped out, and a third of its
inhabitants killed or injured, by four or five machines which offer them
no real target, no opportunity for glory as warriors, no effective means
of escape”. – Arthur ‘Bomber’ Harris
Ireland:
“We have always found the Irish a bit odd. They refuse to be English” –
Churchill
In 1904 Churchill said “I remain of the opinion that a separate
parliament for Ireland would be dangerous and impractical”. Churchill’s
ancestry is linked to loyalism to Britain, he is a direct descendent of
the ‘Marquis of Londonderry’ who helped put down the 1798 United
Irishmen rising. He would live up to his families reputation when it
came to suppressing revolutionary forces in Ireland.
The Black and Tans were the brainchild of Churchill, he sent the thugs
to Ireland to terrorise at will. Attacking civilians and civilian
property they done Churchill proud, rampaging across the country
carrying out reprisals. He went on to describe them as “gallant and
honourable officers”. It was also Churchill who conceived the idea of
forming the Auxiliaries who carried out the Croke Park massacre, firing
into the crowd at a Gaelic football match, killing 14. Of course this
didn’t fulfill Churchill’s bloodlust to repress as people who he
described as “odd” for their refusal “to be English”, he went on to
advocate the use of air power in Ireland against Sinn Fein members in
1920. He suggested to his war advisers that aeroplanes should be
dispatched with orders to use “machine-gun fire or bombs” to “scatter
and stampede them”.
Churchill was an early advocate for the partitioning of Ireland. During
the treaty negotiations he insisted on retaining navy bases in Ireland.
In 1938 those bases were handed back to Ireland. However in 1939
Churchill proposed capturing Berehaven base by force. In 1941 Churchill
supported a plan to introduce conscription in the North of Ireland.
Churchill went on to remark”the bloody Irish, what have they ever done
for our wars”, reducing Ireland’s merit to what it might provide by way
of resources (people) for their imperialist land grabs.
Kenya:
Britain declared a state of emergency in Kenya in 1952 to protect its
system of institutionalised racism that they established throughout
their colonies so to exploit the indigenous population. Churchill being
your archetypical British supremacist believed that Kenya’s fertile
highlands should be only for white colonial settlers. He approved the
forcible removal of the local population, which he termed “blackamoors”.
150,000 men, women and children were forced into concentration camps.
Children’s schools were shut by the British who branded them “training
grounds for rebellion”. Rape, castration, cigarettes, electric shocks
and fire all used by the British to torture the Kenyan people under
Churchill’s watch.
In 1954 in a British cabinet meeting Churchill and his men discussed the
forced labour of Kenyan POWs and how to circumvent the constraints of
two treaties they were breaching:
“This course [detention without trial and forced labour] had been
recommended despite the fact that it was thought to involve a technical
breach of the Forced Labour Convention of 1930 and the Convention on
Human Rights adopted by the Council of Europe”
The Cowan Plan advocated the use of force and sometimes death against
Kenyan POWs who refused to work. Churchill schemed to allow this to
continue.
Caroline Elkins book gives a glimpse into the extent that the crimes in
Kenya were known in both official and unofficial circles in Britain and
how Churchill brushed off the terror the colonial British forces
inflicted on the native population. He even ‘punished’ Edwina
Mountbatten for mentioning it, “Edwina Mountbatten was conversing about
the emergency with India’s prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, and the
then colonial secretary, Oliver Lyttleton. When Lyttleton commented on
the “terrible savagery” of Mau Mau… Churchill retaliated, refusing to
allow Lord Mountbatten to take his wife with him on an official visit to
Turkey”.
Palestine:
“I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger.”
In 2012 Churchill was honoured with a statue in Jerusalem for his
assistance to Zionism.
He regarded the Arab population Palestine to be a “lower manifestation”.
And that the “dog in a manger has the final right to the manger”, by
this he meant the Arabs of Palestine.
In 1920 Churchill declared “if, as may well happen, there should be
created in our own lifetime by the banks of the Jordan a Jewish State
under the protection of the British Crown which might comprise three or
four millions of Jews, an event will have occurred in the history of the
world which would from every point of view be beneficial”.
A year later in Jerusalem he told Palestinian leaders that “it is
manifestly right that the Jews, who are scattered all over the world,
should have a national centre and a National Home where some of them may
be reunited. And where else could that be but in this land of Palestine,
with which for more than 3,000 years they have been intimately and
profoundly associated?”.
At the Palestine Royal Commission (Peel) of 1937, Churchill stated that
he believed in intention of the Balfour Declaration was to make
Palestine an “overwhelmingly Jewish state”.
He went on to also express to the Peel Commission that he does “not
admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians
of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong
has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a
higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come
in and taken their place”.
Four years later he wrote of his desire for a ‘Jewish state’to be
established after the second war world. The establishment of the
colonial settler state however was done on the watch of the British
Labour Party under Attlee, who were always there to back their Tory
counterparts when it came to British foreign policy.
‘British Guiana’:
Churchill ordered the overthrowing of the democratically elected leader
of ‘British Guiana’. He dispatched troops and warships and suspended
their constitution all to put a stop to the governments nationalisation
plan.
China:
“I think we shall have to take the Chinese in hand and regulate them” –
Churchill His hope from this was for “Ayran stock to triumph”…
Erich von Manstien:
Churchill donated funds for this Nazi war criminals defence when he was
on trial after WW2.
Immigration to Britain:
Churchill suggested the motto “Keep England White” when debating the
adoption of new laws limiting immigration from the Caribbean.
Mussolini:
Churchill extolled Mussolini – “If I were Italian, I am sure I would
have been with you entirely from the beginning” and “what a man
[Mussolini] ! I have lost my heart!… Fascism has rendered a service to
the entire world”.
On his own people:
Churchill suggested “100,000 degenerate Britons should be forcibly
sterilised/others put in labour camps to halt decline of British race”.
He also went on to suggest that “for tramps and wastrels there ought to
be proper labour colonies where they could be sent”.
Sudan:
Churchill bragged that he personally shot at least three “savages”
whilst there.
Robert Emmet (Irish Republican leader):
Churchill plagiarised his famous “we shall fight on the beaches” from
Emmet’s speech from the dock.
Russia:
He urged the US to “wipe” out the Kremlin with an atomic bomb hoping it
would “handle the balance of Russia”.
World War 1:
“I love this war. I know it’s smashing and shattering the lives of
thousands every moment”.
World War 2:
Churchill’s cabinet during WW2 obsessed about British people viewing
black GIs favourably.