- I could not believe my ears today when I heard on the
radio an interview with a British military expert who said clearly and
non-chalantly:
-
- "I was in a meetings with the US and they clearly
said over the last few years that they will shoot down or interfere with
the new European GPS sattelite."
-
- The interviewer could not believe her ears and she asked
him again to clarify if it meant that the USA would attack Europe?
-
- He replied: "Yes, the US wants to own the only GPS
sattelites, so that no one could ever use them to attack the
US."
-
- This is the FIRST clear declaration by the Zionist Elders
that they do, indeed, intend to control the whole world.
-
- I searched for an article on this US and its avowed Space
domination...
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- US Could Shoot Down Euro GPS Satellites If Used By China
In Wartime - Report
-
- Galileo, a constellation of 30 satellites and ground
stations due to go into operation in 2008, is being launched by the
European
Union and the European Space Agency to tap into a growing market of global
satellite positioning...
-
- LONDON (AFP) - The United States could attack Europe's
planned network of global positioning satellites if it was used by a
hostile
power such as China, The Business weekly reported Sunday.
-
- Galileo, a constellation of 30 satellites and ground
stations due to go into operation in 2008, is being launched by the
European
Union and the European Space Agency to tap into a growing market of global
satellite positioning.
-
- China last month became a partner in the Galileo program,
which could help provide services such as communications for the 2008
Beijing
Olympics but also has applications for strategic military use.
-
- According to a leaked US Air Force document written in
August and obtained by The Business, Peter Teets, under-secretary of the
US Air Force wrote: "What will we do 10 years from now when American
lives are put at risk because an adversary chooses to leverage the global
positioning system of perhaps the Galileo constellation to attack American
forces with precision?"
-
- The paper also reported a disagreement between EU and
US officials this month over Galileo at a London conference which led to
the threat to blow up the future satellites.
-
- The European delegates reportedly said they would not
turn off or jam signals from their satellites, even if they were used in
a war with the United States.
-
- A senior European delegate at the London conference said
his US counterparts reacted to the EU position "calmly".
-
- "They made it clear that they would attempt what
they called reversible action, but, if necessary, they would use
irreversible
action," the official was quoted as saying.
-
- Washington has long expressed doubts about Galileo, which
could compete with its Global Positioning System (GPS), although the
transatlantic
feud was reportedly ended following an agreement signed in June.
-
- US officials have voiced fears that the rival system,
which has also brought on board Russia and Israel in addition to China,
could compromise US and NATO military operations which rely on GPS for
navigation and combatant location and might also interfere with a
classified
Pentagon positioning system known as M-Code.
-
- At one point, Washington suggested that Galileo was an
unnecessary rival to GPS that merely duplicated the US system.
-
- Analysts said the US threat to Galileo's future system
exposed the true military value of the global navigation systems.
-
- Previously, officials touted only the commercial benefit
of Galileo, which is expected to tap into a burgeoning market for satellite
positioning systems that doubled from 10 billion euros in 2002 to 20
billion
euros in 2003.
-
- Brussels has also argued Galileo will create 150,000
new jobs across the European bloc.
-
- The Business warned in an editorial that technological
choices - Galileo versus GPS - now would fuel more international political
division.
-
- "Technological decisions required by Galileo mean
countries have to commit themselves to the ugly delineation of the Iraq
War: pro-America (GPS) or anti-America (Galileo)."
-
- It warned that Britain, Washington's staunchest ally
in the Iraq war, would once again find itself trapped between the two camps
- and that as a result "the Anglo-American alliance is quietly
splitting
behind the scenes".
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-
- http://www.spacedaily.com/news/milspace-04zc.html
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