Did you vote for Brexit? Were you aware that the UK is a 'third country' connected to PESCO- Permanent Structured Cooperation?
Club of Rome Map - 10 kingdoms
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Original document pertaining to the foundation of the Club of Rome.
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Brexit - wot Brexit
You may recall in a post earlier this week that the Club of Rome had redrawn the world into 10 kingdoms with UK being part of the EU as shown above.
Ok so how are they going to ensure that this happens at warpspeed? Referendums take time to arrange whether they are rigged or not. So......
Found this on Twitter today 15th February 2025:
Zelenskyy repeatedly calls for a European Army at the Munich Security Conference. I have no idea as to why he's calling for an EU Army because such an army was created in 2017. He says Europe needs to come together......of course Great Britain is part of Europe. More of this later.
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Right on cue, that's where PESCO comes out of the shadows and reveals itself. What is PESCO I hear you ask? Well I had discovered its' formation in 2017 at an event I was attending in Birmingham. PESCO is an acronym for Permanent Structured Cooperation and the UK was invited to join at that time. Remember we were still 'in' until the end of 2020.
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This website lists the 26 participating member states but FAILS to list here any third countries of which the UK is one.
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So let's take a look at a document produced at the end of 2017/ January 2018.
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On December 11, 2017, 25 member states of the European Union (EU) formally launched the
permanent structured cooperation (PESCO) in the area of defense. Although the legal provisions behind PESCO have been in place since the 2009 Lisbon Treaty, they have not translated into any
concrete initiative until recently. A multitude of factors from the British decision to exit the EU and
Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 to the growing rift in foreign policy and security issues between the EU and the Trump administration, including doubts over the commitment of the latter
towards the transatlantic alliance, have played a key role in the EU’s decision to move toward a more integrated security and defense policy.
PESCO makes it possible for the participating member states to develop joint military capabilities
through a modular, PROJECT-BASED approach and deploy EACH state’s troops in joint operations. The agreement was signed with the expectation that member states will regularly increase their defense budgets. While PESCO can be considered an important step in the longer history of European defense integration, it is still too early to predict how PESCO will affect wider strategic convergence among EU member states. This will undoubtedly hinge on a variety of factors, the most notable of
which is the willingness on the part of the member states to participate in PESCO and take part in the deployment of ambitious defense projects.
Let's now take a look at a conversation in UK Parliament from last year.
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Alyn Smith says here:
I appreciate that the UK Government's attitude to PESCO is to take each project on a case by case basis but may I suggest that publishing criteria for that case-by-case assessment would be useful? It is obvious to the dogs in the street that PESCO will evolve at LIGHT SPEED and the UK risks missing out on a lot of important cooperation that could be beneficial?
I would have asked him 'in what way is going into a manufactured war beneficial and for whom exactly?'
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Heappey says that UK will provide £2.5 billion in military aid to Ukraine in 2024 - 5.
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Here Heappey says that the Department's priority is to finalise entry into the permanent structured co-operation military project before considering involvement in other projects and PESCO is a vehicle for increasing military mobility around the continent.
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So are we about to rejoin the EU?
Over to you.
Caroline Stephens
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