On
March 16, 2016 WikiLeaks launched a searchable archive for 30,322
emails & email attachments sent to and from Hillary Clinton's
private email server while she was Secretary of State. The 50,547
pages of documents span from 30 June 2010 to 12 August 2014. 7,570 of
the documents were sent by Hillary Clinton. The emails were made
available in the form of thousands of PDFs by the US State Department
as a result of a Freedom of Information Act request. The final PDFs
were made available on February 29, 2016.
A letter
from Clintons' top advisor Sidney Blumenthal to Hillary Clinton in 2009, shows that the
US establishment was deeply concerned about Cameron's unwillingness
to align with further European unification.
The
neoliberal globalists were deeply concerned about Tories'
old-fashioned neoliberalism
even before his election as prime minister. Eventually, Cameron did
the job as he re-elected by promising a referendum to the British,
although he was forced (as Jeremy Corbyn) by the globalists to take a
clear position against Brexit.
Which shows
that the British people grabbed the chance and marked a significant
victory against the global neoliberal establishment despite its
powerful mechanisms and against the odds.
A part of
the letter from WikiLeaks:
Without
passing "Go," David Cameron has seriously damaged his
relations with the European leaders. Sending a letter to Czech leader
Vaclav Klaus encouraging him not to sign the Lisbon Treaty, as though
Cameron were already Prime Minister, he has offended Sarkozy, Merkel
and Zapatero.
Within the
Conservative Party the Shadow Foreign Minister William Hague has
arduously pressured for an anti-EU stance, despite his assurances to
you that Tory policy toward Europe would be marked by continuity.
Cameron has
attempted to straddle factions, fending off calls for a national
referendum on the Lisbon Treaty. But this letter is proof positive of
his tilt to the Tory right on Europe.
The European
leaders understand that the letter signals his future policy and are
reacting accordingly. Cameron's presumptive strike has accelerated
the predicted Tory-European split from post-election to pre-election.
Whether this affects Merkel's attitude on Blair and the EU presidency
remains unclear, but Cameron's high-handed behavior is precisely the
sort of thing that provokes her.
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