Remember the Trojan horse hoax the ancient Greeks used against the Trojans? After a futile ten-year-siege, the Greeks withdrew leaving a giant wooden horse outside the city walls apparently in homage to the victorious Trojans. The latter pulled the horse into the city amid great celebrations, but when darkness fell Greek fighters emerged from the horse and opened the gates of the city to the main Greek army hiding nearby . The Greeks then invaded and took the city. A similar deception was used against us in the so-called Arab spring. With the beginning of last century's nineties and the disintegration of the Soviet Union, a new unipolar world order emerged headed by the United States of America. It acted through an international U.S. led coalition against what it termed "Rogue states" in order to compel them to accept the new system. The second Gulf War was its first move in dealing with an international crisis. The system was further developed, with the limited participation of its allies, for the achievement of strategic objectives, especially in the area of the war against terrorism, and targeted several areas of the Middle East using so-called pre-emptive strikes, arms systems and command and control centers on a hitherto unprecedented scale. America's success didn't come by chance. The country had been planning since the Second World War to jump on the top of the world. The new world order targeted the Middle East in particular with the full participation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, which Washington was keen to maintain despite the disintegration of the Warsaw Pact after the collapse of the Soviet Union. It became, in fact, the major arm of the new world order. NATO developed, under US influence, from being a European army force to combat the old Soviet Union to one that confronted international crises threatening the West. This also obviated the possibility of its becoming a force that might one day combat the US. Sykes-Picot agreement: During the Iranian-Iraqi war of 1980, U.S. National Security Adviser "Brzezinski" said that the dilemma the US would face from then on, was how to activate the second Gulf War on the sidelines of the first Gulf War, which took place between Iraq and Iran, so that America could amend the borders delineated by the Sykes-Picot agreement. Inspired by this statement, the Jewish British orientalist, Bernard Lewis, started work in 1981 on his infamous project to dismantle the Arab and Islamic states, including Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Sudan, Iran, Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States, the North African countries and others, to turn them into cantons, micro ethnic, religious and sectarian states. And he employed a group of map-makers to work under his supervision.
In 1983, the American Congress, in the course of a secret session, sanctioned the project and it became a lively topic in the American politics of the post- Cold War era. The Great Middle East Implementation of the idea started with a US National Security Committee report. The committee is a federal advisory body known as the Hart Rodman Committee. They issued a report in February 2001 entitled: New Cosmic Security Environment in the First Quarter of the Twenty-first Century. It contains a number of studies and research papers on different world regions, including what it calls the report document, "The Great Middle East." This report identified the Middle East as "that area, which includes the Arab world, Israel, Turkey, Central Asia, the Caucasus, and the Indian subcontinent", these represent the region and, as indicated in the report, contain "the largest store of energy in the world." On February 9, 2004, the Washington Post became the first newspaper to publish a statement to the effect that the administration of US President George W. Bush was working on the drafting of an initiative to promote and disseminate democracy in the Middle East. It was re-adapting and adjusting the model used to spread freedom in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe in order to do this. Senior officials in the White House and State Department had already begun to talk with key European allies on a general comprehensive plan, to be presented in 2004, to each of the Group of Eight major powers, and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and the European Union, in Istanbul, Turkey. The alliance works for the promotion of the project through attractive ideas, such as providing comprehensive development and job opportunities as well as encouraging civil society organisations to clash with their regimes. The provision of money from the White House budget would support the activities of these organisations. The Muslim Brotherhood and organisations such as the National Assembly for Change, and persons such as El-Baradei, Mostafa Hegazi, Wael Ghoneim, Amr Hamzawy, Mustafa al-Najjar and Ahmed Maher, were the Trojan horse for the United States, and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, to enter the Middle East and Egypt. They started implementing their plan in Egypt in January 2011, using popular anger to overwhelm the regime. The fact that they did not stop trying to topple the regime after the people and armed forces foiled their plan in June 2013, should makes us employ extreme caution in January 2015 and beyond, to prevent the entry into our country of a new Trojan horse.