>>>Keep digging, find what/where/why of clinton's long trip to Russia.
I don't even think that much would be out there if it wasn't for Col. Holmes notorized statement. The only history out there now on all of this are the sites the Vets are putting up.
I think we need them to add more. I never knew half of this.
>>>I have it in my mind that he was in a training camp there,
the same type of terrorist training camps that the September Gang of Mexico got in the 1960's.
I'll never cease to be amazed. From here:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1209454/posts?page=8#8
World Peace Council
Look here: http://www.cubafriends.ca/whoweare/orlando_interview.php
Orlando Fundora López, president of the World Peace Council, headed by a Cuban for the first time.
Excerpts:
>>>>Fundora: In 1994, a conference took place in Mexico, which in my opinion was a landmark event, really, because the forces regrouped again, and a secretariat which had disappeared was approved, made up of the national committees from Japan, France, Portugal, Palestine and Cuba.
>>>>Fundora: The former Soviet Union and the socialist countries were the main support of the World Peace Council, and when that entire world began to collapse, the same representatives from the Soviet committee on the council began to take a different attitude. For example, they wanted to substitute the presidency of Romesh Chandra with that of an unknown and lackluster character from the Nordic countries. We didn't allow it; many members of the council joined us.
We used to call Chandra the priest of peace. Educated at Cambridge (Britain), cultured, he not only participated with Gandhi in the struggle for peace, but also brought to the World Council the need to support liberation and anti-colonial movements during the 1960s and 70s.
>>>>Fundora: A movement of intellectuals has always existed. This idea of creating a movement for world peace emerged in a Polish village in 1948, from no less than Irene and Frederic Joliot-Curie, Nobel Prize winners for Physics and Chemistry, respectively; the famous painter Pablo Picasso; Chilean poet Pablo Neruda; Pablo Casals (one of the great maestros of the cello) and the famous African-American actor, Paul Robeson, who were all there. That was its birth. And the individuals sustaining this movement today are figures from the arts, sciences, journalism and education.