FELTWELL – WINSTON CHURCHILL’S GENOCIDAL WET DREAM – by Donal Kennedy

FELTWELL – WINSTON CHURCHILL’S GENOCIDAL WET DREAM

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
From June 1940 onwards Germany occupied Continental Europe’s Atlantic Coast
from the North of Norway to the the Franco/Spanish border. Britain, which for some
twenty years had used chemical weapons to “police” Iraq and other “barbarian” territories,and approved of such weapons by Britain’s protege, Sir Benito Mussolini,
a Knight of the Bath, on the people of Abyssinia, did not use them on the Continent.
 
But an RAF Squadron in Feltwell in Norfolk was equipped to spray mustard gas and
phosgene on Ireland should the Germans land there. Those weapons would not have
distinguished Orange from Green, Jew from Gentile, Infants from Geriatrics, but they
would have given Churchill orgasmic pleasure were he not incapacitated by drinking
to the success of their mission.
 
My source is a former Registrar of The Dublin Institute of Advanced Studies, 
John P. Duggan, who had served as a Colonel in the Irish Army, and published
that finding in his History of the Irish Army in 1981. The late Journalist Proinnsias MacAonghusa, who wrote under the pen-name “GULLIVER” in the Sunday Press,
wrote about it but Duggan’s findings were not challenged.
 
During the 1960s MacAonghusa was Vice-President of the Irish Labour Party,
and later served as a senior official in the Umited Nations.
 
Colonel Duggan also wrote NEUTRAL IRELAND AND THE THIRD REICH where he
alsp referred to the plot to use chemicalweapons on Ireland.
 
At the end of the war in Europe, when the Soviet Union liberated most of the continent from the Nazis, Churchill launched a hate-filled attack on Ireland, using
intemperate language, and denying her people the right to conduct their own
foreign policy, a right he never denied Holland, or Belgium, Switzerland nor Sweden,
the Soviet Union nor the United States, none of which flocked to the British colours
whn she launche the phoney war in 1939. The first 3 months of that phoney war
Britain was aiding Hitler’s ally Finland. against the Soviets.)
 
De Valera answered Churchill’s bluster, like the rational schoolmaster he was and,
without using insulting language exposed his attacker as a fool. De Valera never made an attack on the character of opponents, however blackguardly their behaviour.
He attacked behaviour he judged evil or silly.
 
Donal Kennedy
London
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