Monday, May 9, 2011

Francophonie Act Of War? - Roméo-Adrien LeBlanc - Canadian Airborne Regiment: Disbanded - Anglophone Members Prevented From Monitoring Joint Venture

May 9, 2011

Dear Prime Minister Harper:

Did Governor General disband the Airborne in a Francophonie act of war?

Abel Danger believes the late Roméo-Adrien LeBlanc – a former Governor General of Canada – disbanded the Canadian Airborne Regiment in 1995 to prevent Anglophone members from monitoring a joint venture between francophone members and Crown Agents’ Sisters to attack the United States on 911 in a ‘Francophonie’ act of war.

Abel Danger Mischief Makers - Mistress of the Revels - 'Man-In-The-Middle' Attacks

Roméo-Adrien LeBlanc PC CC CMM ONB CD (December 18, 1927 – June 24, 2009) was a Canadian journalist, politician, and statesman who served as Governor General of Canada, the 25th since Canadian Confederation. LeBlanc was born and educated on Canada's east coast and also studied in France prior to becoming a teacher and then a reporter for Radio-Canada. He was subsequently elected to the House of Commons in 1972, whereafter he served as a minister of the Crown until 1984, when he was moved to the Senate and became that chamber's Speaker. He was in 1994 appointed as governor general by Elizabeth II, Queen of Canada, on the recommendation of Prime Minister of Canada Jean Chrétien, to replace Ramon John Hnatyshyn as viceroy, and he occupied the post until succeeded by Adrienne Clarkson in 1999, citing his health as the reason for his stepping down. His appointment as the Queen's representative caused some controversy, due to perceptions of political favouritism, though he was praised for raising the stature of Acadians and francophones, and for opening up Rideau Hall to ordinary Canadians and tourists alike. On August 8, 1974, LeBlanc was sworn into the Queen's Privy Council for Canada, giving him the accordant style of The Honourable; however, as a former governor general of Canada, LeBlanc was entitled to be styled for life with the superior form of The Right Honourable .. Born on December 18, 1927 and raised in Memramcook, New Brunswick, LeBlanc obtained bachelor degrees in arts and education from the Collège St-Joseph before studying French civilization at the Université de Paris. He then moved on to teaching for nine years — at Drummond's high school from 1951 to 1953 and the New Brunswick Teachers' College in Fredericton from 1955 to 1959 — after which he obtained work between 1960 and 1967 as a journalist with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's French language broadcaster, Radio-Canada, serving in the bureaus in Ottawa, the United Kingdom, and the United States. His first marriage, to Joslyn "Lyn" Carter, with whom LeBlanc had two children, lasted from 1966 to 1981; in 1994, he married Diana Fowler, who also had two children from a previous marriage. LeBlanc stepped into the realm of politics when he became the press secretary for successive prime ministers Lester B. Pearson and Pierre Trudeau.” .. “Diana Fowler LeBlanc, CC (born 1940 in Toronto) is the widow of former Governor General of Canada, Roméo LeBlanc, during whose term she was a Viceregal consort. During the 1960s she was in the broadcasting industry, stationed at the Paris offices of Radio-Canada and then the London office of CBC [where she was allegedly recruited as a Crown Agents Sister to build a Matrix 5 virtual war room capability to support francophone propaganda attacks on the Anglosphere] ... King's Hall, Compton, Quebec 1959: University of Paris, French Civilization, diploma 1996: McGill University, Bachelor of Social Work”

“The Canadian Airborne Regiment was a Canadian Forces formation created on April 8, 1968. It was not an administrative regiment in the commonly accepted British Commonwealth sense, but rather a tactical formation manned from other regiments and branches. It was disbanded in 1995 after the Somalia Affair .. On Allard's retirement, the unit was established in Edmonton, Alberta, in 1968. This was a large Air Transport Command base. The prairie weather is ideal for specialized parachute training, and Edmonton is the "gateway to the North". But the location in western Canada was disputed by some for operational reasons in that Canada's rapidly declining troop strength was consequently heavily skewed to that part of the continent where neither its population nor its NATO commitments justified. There was a full brigade in the West, plus the Airborne. In central and eastern Canada, there were only four battalions of infantry. The Edmonton location also created linguistic problems. The Airborne's French-speaking elements had initially been left at CFB Valcartier in Quebec, but they too were moved to Alberta in 1970. There, it became difficult to keep them up to strength, particularly as many married leaders refused to make their career in an environment unsuitable for their families. Finally, in the face of recruiting and retention problems, as well as operational concerns, the Airborne was moved to CFB Petawawa in Ontario, where it remained until it was disbanded. The Airborne Regiment also suffered from frequent reorganizations. Initially conceived as a small brigade, its lack of resources forced it from the start to become a rather large tactical "regiment" with two infantry "commandos", one English-speaking and the other mostly French-speaking, as well as one artillery battery, one engineer field squadron, one signal squadron, and a service company. The Somalia Affair was a Canadian military scandal in the mid-1990s. It began with the brutal 1993 beating death of a Somali teenager, Shidane Arone, at the hands of two Canadian soldiers participating in the United Nations humanitarian efforts in Somalia. The crime, documented by photos, shocked the Canadian public and brought to light internal problems in the Canadian Airborne Regiment that went beyond the two soldiers directly involved. Also of interest are the theories that the experimental malaria drugs that they were taking could have caused some of the behaviour. Questions were asked about why 2 Commando was chosen for that mission despite disciplinary problems at the time. Perhaps most damaging to the leadership of the Canadian military was how it reacted after the events became public, as accusations of covering up the event surfaced. Eventually a public inquiry was called. Despite being controversially cut short by the government at the time led by Prime Minister Jean Chrétien and Minister of National Defence David Collenette, the Somalia Inquiry found deep problems in the leadership of the Canadian Forces. The affair led to the disbanding of Canada's elite Canadian Airborne Regiment [in a decision, allegedly extorted from the late Roméo-Adrien LeBlanc, then Governor General of Canada, by his wife, Diana Fowler LeBlanc], greatly damaged the morale of the Canadian Forces, and damaged both the domestic and international reputation of Canadian soldiers [as the Anglophone chain of command was switched to officers corrupted by Francophonie procurement frauds, including Governor General Le Blanc’s Bombardier EW pilot and homicidal pedophile Russell Williams!]"

Your counter-intelligence people may be out of their depth; please don’t hesitate to call.
http://www.abeldanger.net/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hawkscafe/

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