“If our dreams for Zionism are to end in the smoke of assassins’ pistols and our labors for its future are to produce a new set of gangsters worthy of Nazi Germany, many like myself will have to reconsider the position we have maintained so consistently and so long in the past,” Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill.*....CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE>>>

Surprisingly, Churchill made the above admission in the British House of Commons on 17 November 1944 almost 80 years ago. Yet, Churchill’s words could come from a modern editorial about the war in Gaza. Thus, the Prime Minister took time out from fighting World War II to complain about Israeli terrorism while the Holocaust was still under way.

Interestingly, an act of Zionist terrorism in Egypt prompted Churchill’s remark. On 6 November 1944, two members of the Stern Gang, a Zionist terrorist group also known as Lehi, shot Walter Edward Guinness, 1st Baron Moyne, in Cairo. Moyne, a Conservative politician, was serving as British Minister-Resident in the Middle East in 1944. One of Moyne’s jobs was to oversee British policy in Palestine.

Stern Gang members were angry at Moyne because he enforced the British government’s severe limits on immigration to Palestine. Some people think Moyne’s actions led to the deaths of one million Hungarian Jews at Auschwitz…CONTINUE READING>>

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