Thursday, August 4, 2016

Gleiwitz incident: A German 9/11 which became a pre-text for the Second World War


The Gleiwitz incident was a false 
flag operation by Nazi forces 
posing as Poles on 31 August 
1939,  The goal was to use the orchestrated 
attack as a pretext for invading Poland.

It has not remained a hidden fact in post 9/11 era that false flag operations serve specific propaganda goals of governments and intelligence agencies to fuel hatred against a specific nation or religion or ethnic group. Yet the history tells us that one of the earliest false flag attacks were carried out in Germany by Hitler. Recently false flag attacks in France and Germany are being used against the refugees and Muslims by racist groups and right-wing political parties which have stirred tremendous violence.

It should not be surprising if these organisations who are openly using Nazi slogans and depicting themselves as Nazis are staging false flag attacks like Cologne sex scandal to demonize already victimized conflict and poverty ridden refugees. 
According to independent new media outlets and analysts, 9/11 is called granddaddy of false flag attacks. Yet the actual ancestor of 9/11 was Gleiwitz incident that was carried out by Nazi regime on the eve of World War-2 in August 1939.
Reichstag fire in 1933
used to fuel hatred against 
communist which played a 
central role in the foundation 
of Nazi Germany 
One of them was  Reichstag fire in 1933 which was used to inflame Germans against the communists. It should be noted that Nazi general Franz Halder testified at the Nuremberg trials that Nazi leader Hermann Goering admitted to setting fire to the German parliament building in 1933, and then falsely blaming the communists for the arson. This incident played a pivotal role in the establishment of Nazi party.
But the actual great granddaddy of 9/11 was Gleiwitz false flag operation in which Nazi soldiers killed Polish prisoners at a radio station on German-Polish borders and posed as polish soldiers announced that Poland has attacked Germany. This impression of Polish aggression over Germans allowed Hitler a legitimate reason to invade Poland.  
SS-Sturmbannführer Alfred Naujocks admitted at Nuremberg trial that he organised the Gleiwitz incident on the orders from Reinhard Heydrich and Henrich Muller, Chief of Nazi intelligence Gestapo.


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