Below are links to online articles by J.R. Nyquist. I strongly suggest you read Mr. Nyquist's articles. He's one of the few people left in this deluded world who still has the courage to face the harsh reality of the coming war.
War on many fronts
We are now hearing reports of intensive military activity in China, Iraq and North Korea. On Aug. 27 the People's Liberation Army was ordered to deploy crack troops to bases on the Chinese coast, opposite Taiwan. At the same time, Arab journalists have reported that Saddam Hussein is dying of cancer, and that Iraqi reservists have been mobilized. In North Korea, despite recent talk of peace and friendship from the communists, there have been threatening deployments and ongoing troop maneuvers.
What
the future holds for America
Monday, November 22, 1999 by J.R. Nyquist
-- Exact predictions about the future are almost impossible to make. For
example, nobody knows on what day the next war will begin, or what the outcome
will ...
Surprise
nuclear missile attack
Thursday, November 11, 1999 by J.R. Nyquist --
The official Russian acronym for surprise nuclear attack is VRYAN. It derives
from the Russian words, 'vnezapnoye raketno-yadernoye napadenie.' In the ...
Surprise
nuclear missile attack, part 2
Monday, November 15, 1999 by J.R. Nyquist
-- The greatest danger facing America is a possible nuclear attack from Russia.
This danger is not something imaginary. Russian nuclear missiles can reach ...
Is
nuclear war survivable?
Thursday, May 20, 1999 by J.R. Nyquist -- As I
write about Russia's nuclear war preparations, I get some interesting mail in
response. Some correspondents imagine I am totally ignorant. They point ...
Is
a military offensive being contemplated?
Monday, May 17, 1999 by J.R.
Nyquist -- 'Only the offensive leads to the attainment of victory over the
enemy,' wrote Col. Sidorenko, a Soviet military strategist in the 1970s. 'As a
type of combat, ...
| "All warfare is based on deception. Hence, when able to attack we must
seem unable; when using our forces, we must seem inactive; when we are
near, we must make the enemy believe we are far away; when we are far
away, we must make him believe we are near. Hold out baits to entice the
enemy. Feign disorder, and crush him."
- Sun Tzu |
| "There is profound error and harm in the disoriented claims of
bourgeois ideologues that there will be no victor in a thermonuclear war."
- A.S. Milovidov, Russian Military Theorist |
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