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 General de armata
 
  
 Group: Members
 Posts: 2399
 Member No.: 499
 Joined: February 09, 2005
 
 
 
  
 |   With all this talk about nuclear programs, nuclear non-proliferation etc., I think it is interesting to read these almost prophetic lines:
 
 
 | QUOTE |  | No time was lost by the respective Governments of
 Great Britain and the United States in ratifying the
 peace made through the Syndicate, and in concluding a
 military and naval alliance, the basis of which should
 be the use by these two nations, and by no other
 nations, of the instantaneous motor. The treaty was
 made and adopted with much more despatch than generally
 accompanies such agreements between nations, for both
 Governments felt the importance of placing themselves,
 without delay, in that position from which, by means of
 their united control of paramount methods of
 warfare, they might become the arbiters of peace.
 
 The desire to evolve that power which should render
 opposition useless had long led men from one warlike
 invention to another. Every one who had constructed a
 new kind of gun, a new kind of armour, or a new
 explosive, thought that he had solved the problem, or
 was on his way to do so. The inventor of the
 instantaneous motor had done it.
 
 The treaty provided that all subjects concerning
 hostilities between either or both of the contracting
 powers and other nations should be referred to a Joint
 High Commission, appointed by the two powers; and if
 war should be considered necessary, it should be
 prosecuted and conducted by the Anglo-American War
 Syndicate, within limitations prescribed by the High
 Commission.
 
 The contract made with the new Syndicate was of the
 most stringent order, and contained every provision
 that ingenuity or foresight of man could invent or
 suggest to make it impossible for the Syndicate to
 transfer to any other nation the use of the
 instantaneous motor.
 
 Throughout all classes in sympathy with the
 Administrative parties of Great Britain and the United
 States there was a feeling of jubilant elation on
 account of the alliance and the adoption by the two
 nations of the means of prohibitive warfare.
 
 Reduction of military and naval forces, and gradual
 disarmament, was now the policy of the allied nations.
 Such forces and such vessels as might be demanded for
 the future operations of the War Syndicate were
 retained. A few field batteries of motor-guns were all
 that would be needed on land, and a comparatively small
 number of armoured ships would suffice to carry
 the motor-guns that would be required at sea.
 
 Now there would be no more mere exhibitions of the
 powers of the instantaneous motor-bomb. Hereafter, if
 battles must be fought, they would be battles of
 annihilation.
 
 This is the history of the Great Syndicate War.
 Whether or not the Anglo-American Syndicate was ever
 called upon to make war, it is not to be stated here.
 But certain it is that after the formation of this
 Syndicate all the nations of the world began to teach
 English in their schools, and the Spirit of
 Civilization raised her head with a confident smile.
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 The Great War Syndicate (1889)http://emotionalliteracyeducation.com/clas...ine/wsynd10.htm  So did this virtually unknown author knew something or did he have a very powerful imagination? I think he knew something, he had some good connections in this Syndicate....    
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