Here is some history regarding relations between India and the NWO. There are two articles - the first is about the bombing of an Air India flight from Canada with the apparent complicity of Canadian Intelligence. The second article is an interview of Robert Trumbull Crowley (1924 - 2000), who was second in command of the CIA's Directorate of Operations, which was in charge of covert operations. Crowley talks about the assassinations of Homi Bhabha, a brilliant Parsi physicist who was the first head of India's Department of Atomic Energy, and of Lal Bahadur Shastri, who was India's Prime Minister from 1964 to 1966. Both these hits were a part of a failed attempt to stop India from developing nuclear capability. India conducted its first nuclear test in 1974.
Despite this troubled history, it appears that at present, the NWO regards Pakistan as the greater threat. There has been a significant amount of cooperation between Israel and India in recent years. Most Indians today are probably quite unaware of the deeper causes of world events, and generally believe that the deaths of Bhabha and Shastri were accidental or natural.
Hopefully these articles will provide a better perspective of the history of India-NWO relations, and allow us to better understand the evolving situation.
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http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2007/05/03/bartleman-airindia.html
I warned RCMP days before Air India disaster: Bartleman
Last Updated: Thursday, May 3, 2007 | 8:16 PM ET
CBC News
Ontario Lt.-Gov. James Bartleman says he was scolded by an RCMP officer several days before the Air India disaster when he showed him a document suggesting a flight would be targeted on the weekend of the attack.
Ontario Lt.-Gov. James Bartleman, at the Air India inquiry Thursday, was in charge of the intelligence analysis and security branch of the Department of External Affairs when Air India Flight 182 blew up in 1985.Ontario Lt.-Gov. James Bartleman, at the Air India inquiry Thursday, was in charge of the intelligence analysis and security branch of the Department of External Affairs when Air India Flight 182 blew up in 1985.
Bartleman was in charge of the intelligence analysis and security branch of the Department of External Affairs when the plane blew up on June 23, 1985, killing all 329 people on board.
In testimony Thursday at the inquiry into the bombing in Ottawa, Bartleman said he found the document in his daily package of intelligence briefings in the week of June 18.
"I saw in there a document that indicated Air India was being targeted that weekend — specifically the weekend of the 22-23," said Bartleman.
"It was raw, unevaluated information. There had been so many alarms raised over the previous year about potential attacks … that I suppose it would be possible for someone to say this is just another one of these cry wolf events."
Bartleman said he personally delivered the document to a committee meeting on Sikh extremism that was going on at the same time.
'Hissed at'
When he showed the document to the senior RCMP officer at the meeting, Bartleman said he was "startled" by the reaction he got.
"He flushed and told me that of course he'd seen it, and that he didn't need me to tell him how to do his job," he said.
"That confirmed that he had seen it and that the RCMP would take that into consideration and do what was necessary. The next thing … in my memory is the downing of the aircraft."
When asked why he recalled that incident so clearly, Bartleman said he had never been "hissed at" in such a way during his career and that it made a "searing impression."
"I know what I saw and I know what happened," Bartleman said.
Bartleman said he didn't reveal the information until the inquiry was established because he assumed the matter was investigated during one of the internal reviews by the RCMP.
Family lawyer finds testimony 'astounding'
Jacques Shore, one of the lawyers for the families of the Air India victims, called the testimony "astounding." He congratulated Bartleman on his decision to go public, even if it was belated.
"I think the lieutenant-governor being here today demonstrated his courage," Shore said. "(He) recognized there was something that was left undone, in his mind, and that this was a part of the story that needed to be told."
Also testifying Thursday was former CSIS officer Lynn Jarrett, who tracked two men who would later be implicated in the attack — Talwinder Singh Parmar and Inderjit Singh Reyat.
Three weeks before the Air India bombing, she and another CSIS officer followed two men into the woods on Vancouver Island and heard a loud noise.
"There was an extremely loud bang," Jarrett testified. The officers thought it might be the men undergoing firearm training.
After the Air India bombing, the officers returned to the woods and found evidence that the noise had actually been an explosives test.
Parmar, the suspected mastermind of the Air India bombing, was arrested in November 1985 on weapons, explosives and conspiracy charges, but the charges were dropped for lack of evidence. He died in India in 1992 in what officials said was a shootout with police.
Reyat, a bomb maker, was imprisoned for manslaughter in a 2003 plea bargain.
Plane came down near Ireland
Two other men, Ripudaman Singh Malik and Ajaib Singh Bagri, were acquitted of all charges in 2005 after the costliest investigation and prosecution in Canadian history.
Of the 329 people on Air India Flight 182, 280 were Canadian citizens and 82 were children. The bombing brought the plane down over the Atlantic Ocean off the west coast of Ireland.
A separate luggage bomb destined for a second Air India flight killed two Japanese baggage handlers at Tokyo's Narita airport.
The inquiry into the disaster, headed by retired Supreme Court justice John Major, resumed Monday with a focus on leads, tips and warnings that surfaced before the disaster.
With files from the Canadian Press
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http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?ID=8966
Interview with Robert T. Crowley
Date: Friday, July 5, 1996
Commenced: 1:45 PM CST
Concluded: 2:10 PM CST
GD: Did you have a safe Fourth, Robert?
RTC: Oh my, yes, Gregory. I was out in the street firing off rockets at passing police cars. And you?
GD: No, I stayed inside. Little children setting the garage on fire with Grandma tied up inside or shooting bottle rockets into gas tanker trucks on the freeway. Plastic surgeons must have loved the Glorious Fourth back when we had real firecrackers to fire off. Missing eyes, fingers and other body parts. Terrified and singed cats and dogs, not to mention grass fires and burning shake roofs. I can just see you firing off rockets into passing cop cars, Robert. With your training and previous employment, no doubt the rockets blew the occupants into bloody cat meat.
RTC: Such an outburst of rage, Gregory.
GD: I am a man of sorrows and acquainted with rage, Robert. How about the Company setting off a small A-bomb in some hitherto harmless country and blaming it on mice.
RTC: Now that’s something we never did. In fact, we prevented at least one nuclear disaster.
GD: What? A humanitarian act? Why, I am astounded, Robert. Do tell me about this.
RTC: Now, now, Gregory, sometimes we can discuss serious business. There were times when we prevented terrible catastrophes and tried to secure more peace. We had trouble, you know, with India back in the 60s when they got uppity and started work on an atomic bomb. Loud mouthed cow-lovers bragging about how clever they were and how they, too, were going to be a great power in the world. The thing is, they were getting into bed with the Russians. Of course, Pakistan was in bed with the chinks so India had to find another bed partner. And we did not want them to have any kind of nuclear weaponry because God knows what they would have done with it. Probably strut their stuff like a Washington nigger with a brass watch. Probably nuke the Pakis. They’re all a bunch of neo-coons anyway. Oh yes, and their head expert was fully capable of building a bomb and we knew just what he was up to. He was warned several times but what an arrogant prick that one was. Told our people to fuck off and then made it clear that no one would stop him and India from getting nuclear parity with the big boys. Loud mouths bring it all down on themselves. Do you know about any of this?
GD: Not my area of interest or expertise. Who is this joker, anyway?
RTC: Was, Gregory, let’s use the past tense if you please. Name was Homi Bhabha. That one was dangerous, believe me. He had an unfortunate accident. He was flying to Vienna to stir up more trouble when his 707 had a bomb go off in the cargo hold and they all came down on a high mountain way up in the Alps. No real evidence and the world was much safer.
GD: Was Ali Baba alone on the plane?
RTC: No it was a commercial Air India flight.
GD: How many people went down with him?
RTC: Ah, who knows and frankly, who cares?
GD: I suppose if I had a relative on the flight I would care.
RTC: Did you?
GD: No.
RTC: Then don’t worry about it. We could have blown it up over Vienna but we decided the high mountains were much better for the bits and pieces to come down on. I think a possible death or two among mountain goats is much preferable than bringing down a huge plane right over a big city.
GD: I think that there were more than goats, Robert.
RTC: Well, aren’t we being a bleeding-heart today.
GD: Now, now, it’s not an observation that is unexpected. Why not send him a box of poisoned candy? Shoot him in the street? Blow up his car? I mean, why ace a whole plane full of people?
RTC: Well, I call it as it see it. At the time, it was our best shot. And we nailed Shastri as well. Another cow-loving rag head. Gregory, you say you don’t know about these people. Believe me, they were close to getting a bomb and so what if they nuked their deadly Paki enemies? So what? Too many people in both countries. Breed like rabbits and full of snake-worshipping twits. I don’t for the life of me see what the Brits wanted in India. And then threaten us? They were in the sack with the Russians, I told you. Maybe they could nuke the Panama Canal or Los Angeles. We don’t know that for sure but it is not impossible.
GD: Who was Shastri?
RTC: A political type who started the program in the first place. Babha was a genius and he could get things done so we aced both of them. And we let certain people there know that there was more where that came from. We should have hit the chinks too, while we were at it but they were a tougher target. Did I tell you about the idea to wipe out Asia’s rice crops? We developed a disease that would have wiped rice off the map there and it’s their staple diet. The fucking rice growers here got wind of it and raised such a stink we canned the whole thing. The theory was that the disease could spread around and hurt their pocketbooks. If the Mao people invade Alaska, we can tell the rice people it’s all their fault.
GD: I suppose we might make friends with them.
RTC: With the likes of them? Not at all, Gregory. The only thing the Communists understand is brute force. India was quieter after Bhabha croaked. We could never get to Mao but at one time, the Russians and we were discussing the how and when of the project. Oh yes, sometimes we do business with the other side. Probably more than you realize.
GD: Now that I know about. High level amorality. They want secrets from us and you give them some of them in return for some of their secrets, doctored of course. That way, both agencies get credit for being clever.
RTC: Well, you’ve been in that game so why be so holy over a bunch of dead ragheads?
GD: Were all the passengers Indian atomic scientists?
RTC: Who cares, Gregory? We got the main man and that was all that mattered. You ought not criticize when you don’t have the whole story.
GD: Well, there were too many mountain goats running around, anyway. Then might have gotten their hands on some weapons from Atwood and invaded Switzerland.
RTC: You jest but there is truth in what you say. We had such a weight on us, protecting the American people, often from themselves I admit. Many of these stories can never be written, Gregory. And if you try, you had better get your wife to start your car in the morning.
GD: How about my mother-in-law, Robert? Now do you see why Kimmel doesn’t want me talking to you? It isn’t that he’s afraid you might talk to me, I think he’s afraid I might corrupt you with my evil designs.
RTC: Tom means well but he’s dumb as a post. Most of the FBI are keyhole peepers at heart and should keep the hell out of espionage. Yes, Tom thinks I am getting senile and you are persuading me to give up state secrets. I may be old and I do forget names sometimes but I am not gaga yet, not by a long shot, and I’ve done a lot more important things than Tom ever did chasing car thieves and people dragging whores over state lines to a cheap motel.
GD: I don’t think you’re crazy, Robert and you know, I once discussed you with him. He wanted to know what you were talking about with me and I told him we were discussing stamp collecting. He was not happy with this. I know he views me as a terrible person but I can’t help that. He said you weren’t the person you used to be and I said who was? I asked him if he was better or worse that he had been at twenty and he got mad at me. Self-righteous, Robert, self-righteous.
RTC: Well, you certainly aren’t that, Gregory.
GD: Well, you’re not crazy and I’m not wicked. I am right, aren’t I? Please tell me I’m right, Robert. I’ll cry myself to sleep if you don’t
RTC: (Laughter) You’re a truly bad person, Gregory.
GD: I know. I told Jesus that last night when we were playing poker. He keeps hiding cards in that hole in his side.
RTC: Tell that to the Pope.
GD: We don’t get along anymore since I ran over his cat.
(Concluded at 2:10 PM CST)

Peter, thanks for posting. I was thinking along the same lines with the post on India's Dollar Shop version of 911r.
Three weeks before the Air India bombing, she and another CSIS officer followed two men into the woods on Vancouver Island and heard a loud noise.
"There was an extremely loud bang," Jarrett testified. The officers thought it might be the men undergoing firearm training.
After the Air India bombing, the officers returned to the woods and found evidence that the noise had actually been an explosives test.
So they didn't even bother to check it out, until after..
Yeah Reyat.
Not to mention that the corrupt rcmp bastards already knew about it; this attack stinks from beginning to end.