Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Charles Lindbergh American Diplomacy




As another Lame Cherry exclusive in matter anti matter.


I place here the Wisdom of American Hero from Minnesota, Charles Lindbergh, who if he had not been destroyed by Franklin Roosevelt, America and the world would have had millions of it's best producing a better generation, in there would not have been a World War II, there would not have been a Cold War, a Korea, a Vietnam.

Nazi Germany would have defeated Soviet Russia, and all would have been right with the world.

Charles Lindbergh's assessments were absolutely correct, but FDR was driven for war and dividing up the world with Stalin.

April 1941 that “even in our present condition of unpreparedness, no foreign power is in a position to invade us today.If we concentrate on our own and build the strength that this nation should maintain, no foreign army will ever attempt to land on American shores.”

Though he thought that America should be militarily prepared for a war with
Germany, Lindbergh never saw the Germans as a major threat. Before World War II, he thought that it was highly unlikely that Germany would attack Britain or France,
and even after the outbreak of war, he argued that America had little to fear from Hitler’s forces.

Rather, he feared Joseph Stalin’s Soviet Union, which had, in Lindbergh’s opinion, a culture and political system which would, if given the chance, radically alter Western civilization. He thought that war with the Soviets was inevitable, and his greatest hope lay in the possibility that a war would be confined to fighting between Hitler and Stalin. It seemed probable that Germany would be victorious in such a conflict; and by that time France and England would be stronger. Under any circumstances, I believed that a victory by Germany’s European people would be preferable to one by Russia’s semi-Asiatic Soviet Union. Hitler would not live forever, and I felt sure the
Germans would eventually moderate the excesses of his Nazi regime.

As such, Lindbergh’s second suggested way of preventing Germany from going to war with America was for the U.S. to improve its diplomatic relations with the Third Reich. Such a move would not only would prevent Germany and America from fighting, but it would also limit Soviet expansion.
In October 1938, he readily accepted an invitation from U.S. Ambassador to Germany Hugh Wilson to a dinner party at the American embassy, at which Lindbergh and Field Marshal Herman Göring were to be theguests of honour. Wilson hosted the dinner in an attempt to improve American-German relations, a turn of events which seemed possible after the Munich Conference two weeks earlier, at which France and Britain opted for a policy of appeasement.

At the dinner, without the permission of Wilson, Göring presented Lindbergh with a medal, on behalf of Adolf Hitler. Though Lindbergh was viciously condemned in later years for accepting the award, Wayne Cole argues that even if the Americans had advance notice about the medal presentation: They probably would not have changed their conduct significantly. To have refused the medal in that setting would have embarassed America’s Ambassador, offended [Göring] and worsened German-American relations at a moment when they showed a possibility of improvement.

In addition to expressing support for the Third Reich through diplomatic channels,
Lindbergh also wanted the U.S., as well as France and Britain, to strengthen their
economic and political ties with Germany.



Charles Lindbergh should have been President and should have been defended from that same ilk which dragged America into World War I. He as American correct and Franklin Roosevelt was murderously wrong.

This astute Gentleman should not be lost to history, but his vision echoed in this 21st century to save America from the Obama abyss. Instead of instigating conflict with Vladimir Putin for the profiteers and division of Europe with Big Frac selling American oil to Europeans, there must be a Lindbergh Doctrine as this blog has advocated.

American foreign policy must be AMERICAN FIRST and not this internationalism of despots as Wilson, FDR and Obama Jinn.

"If any one of these groups--the British, the Jewish, or the administration--stops agitating for war, I believe there will be little danger of our involvement.

           Charles Lindbergh- September 11, 1941



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