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UN - United Nations Charter

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A Commentary on the Charter Of The United Nations
by Norman Bentwich, LL.D. (Hon.) barrister-at-law
and Andrew Martin, Ph.D. barrister-at-law
First Published 1950.

PDFs:-

--of the text with commentary (torrent's main item);
--appendices concerning the real purpose of the United Nations taken from OMNI Publications' reissue of "Christ Was Not A Jew" by J.E. Conner (1936); and
--Myron C. Fagan: "UN Is Spawn of The Illuminati" (reformatted with single successive pages).

PREFACE:
"It is a primary condition of the establishment of peace, law and order between States that the individual citizen should understand the organization of the international community and gain some sense of world-citizenship. This consideration has been uppermost in our minds when writing this short Commentary on the Charter of the United Nations. It addresses itself not to the specialist in international law but, in the first place, to the general public interested in international affairs which, in newspaper reports of the proceedings of the United Nations, is constantly faced with references to Articles of the Charter. ..."

"The League [of Nations], no organ of which wielded compulsory powers over Member States, could be properly classified as an "association" of sovereign units. But the new world organization conceived at Dumbarton Oaks did not conform with this or any other previous type of inter-State relationship. The United Nations is more "organic" than an association of States, but less organic than a composite State. The absence of legislative powers in the General Assembly and the tacit admission of the right of withdrawal suggest an analogy with confederations. But the analogy is far from being complete. The Security Council has compulsory powers which are not unlike the powers of a federal government in the field of defence..."

Page 52:
"In contrast, the United Nations, within the limits of the Security Council's delegated powers, was meant to become a nucleus of genuine world government."

Page 89:
"...in the maintenance of peace and security, the Council acts as the agent of all Members (Article 24(1)). At this one point the Charter has drawn fairly near to the conception of a "world government"."

Some additional material from which further evidence may be derived that the U.N. is yet another step along the road to world government and that the principal players are from the group of Usual Suspects. The introduction detailing the evolution of the UN Charter is instructive as are the references above to world government, as if this were the most unremarkable commonplace.

"While the war went on the CFR was busy, through an Advisory Committee on Post-War Foreign Policy completely staffed by its appointees, laying the basis for the World State designed to come of it. This group designed the United Nations as the keystone of the World Superstate, and at the founding conference at San Francisco in 1945 the man subsequently convicted as a Communist traitor (Alger Hiss), was Secretary General."
--(Douglas Reed: "The Grand Design of the Twentieth Century" (1977)).

The background of Norman Bentwich, the principal author of the Commentary, may be gleaned from the following, randomly selected; Wikipedia and other sources no doubt can provide more:

"...during these months of battle, while British soldiers were perishing in their tens of thousands, the Jews in Britain were holding a series of mass meetings on behalf of Zionism and, according to Mr. N. Bentwich, 'there was constant communication between London, New York and Washington, either by telegraph or by personal visit.' Then, on November 2nd, 1917, Balfour's letter to Lord Rothschild was published..."

"THE JEWISH AGENCY.
A few words on who comprises the Jewish Agency, what are its aims and how it works, will not be out of place. At the Zionist Congress, held at Zurich in August, 1937, the following were some of the chief speakers. It will be noted how many of these come from the U.S.A.:
...
Mr. Norman Bentwich (Great Britain)." [14th member and second of the two from the United Kingdom.]

" 'Palestine has always been a highway of the world, it is the Belgium of the East.' Herd (from Bentwich in 'Palestine,' page 69)."
--"The Holy Land: Arab or Jew? (1938) by Capt. R. Gordon-Canning M.C.

"There is too Professor Norman Bentwich, who was Attorney-General in Palestine, of whom Dr. Norman Maclean has written: "Professor Bentwich never seems able to forget that he has been a British official." The sentence occurs in Dr. Maclean's review of Bentwich's book Judea Lives Again, which has a foreword by the same Sir Ronald Storrs, and which Dr. Maclean finds far too detached for a Jew at a time of anti-semitic atrocities. You can see how Bentwich feels about British interests and about the Arabs by this passage from another of his books: "Sir Ronald Storrs has suggested that the National Home would be 'a little loyal Jewish Ulster in a sea of potentially hostile Arabism'. The parallel is not auspicious; and before it becomes closer, the most determined attempt should be made to avoid crystallizing the hostility of the Arab people. Palestine, whether in peace or in war, must retain, in any future that can be foreseen, a special relation with the British Commonwealth."
--"The Tragedy of anti-Semitism" by A.K. Chesterton and J. Leftwich, Page 143.

~CONTENTS~

The Evolution Of The Charter.
Commentary On Articles:
Preamble.
I. Purposes And Principles.
II. Membership.
III. Organs.
IV. The General Assembly.
V. The Security Council.
VI. Pacific Settlement Of Disputes.
VII. Action With Respect To Threats To The Peace, Breaches Of The Peace And Acts Of Aggression.
VIII. Regional Arrangements.
IX. International Economic And Social Co-Operation.
X. The Economic And Social Council.
XI. Declaration Regarding Non-Self-Governing Territories.
XII. International Trusteeship System.
XIII. The Trusteeship Council.
XIV. The International Court Of Justice.
XVI. Miscellaneous Provisions.
XVII. Transitional Security Arrangements.
XVIII. Amendments.
XIX. Ratification And Signature.
Appendix I. Covenant Of The League Of Nations.
II. Charter Of The United Nations.
III. Statute Of The International Court Of Justice.
Bibliography.
Index.

~Abbreviations~

ECOSOC, Economic and Social Council;
FAO, Food and Agriculture Organization;
GA, General Assembly;
ICAO, International Civil Aviation Organization;
ILO, International Labour Organization;
IMCO, Intergovernmental Maritime Consultative Organization;
IRO, International Refugee Organization;
ITO, International Trade Organization;
ITU, International Telecommunications Union;
SC, Security Council;
TC, Trusteeship Council;
UN, United Nations;
UNESCO, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization;
UNO, United Nations Organization;
UNRRA, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration;
UPU, Universal Postal Union;
WHO, World Health Organization;
WMO, World Meteorological Organization.