Queen Elizabeth and the speech for the Third World War

It was 1983, at the height of what the history books label as Second Cold War. A short period, but characterized by a abrupt awakening of tensions between the West and the Soviet Union, both more and more militarists. In that context, with conflicts spreading patchily across the planet, the Queen Elizabeth I prepare a message to be read to subjects in the event of an outbreak of the Third World war.

A speech solemnfortunately never pronounced, remained in a drawer for about thirty years and revealed in 2013 by National Archives Of London. Today, those words of hope and comfortare back dramatically topical due to the imminent confrontation between Ukraine and Russia in the region of Donbass. “Diplomacy is making the last few extreme attempts“, International leaders have been repeating for days,” unfortunately war is one step away“.

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Many therefore went to reread that text, in which His Majesty – representing a world on the brink of atomic destruction – invited the subjects to pray and be steadfast. “I have never forgotten the pain I felt when my sister and Ihuddled by our school radio, we listened the words of our fatheron that tragic day of 1939», In which the United Kingdom declared war on Germany.

“In my life, not even for a moment I had imagined that terrible moment would take place aeven for me “, began the sovereign in the monologue. “And instead the madness of war is still spreading, with far greater dangers to those we have already faced: the enemy, in fact, is not the soldier with the rifle, or the aviator that wanders in the skies above our city, but the deadly power of abused technology “.

“Whatever it is terror lurkingthe qualities they helped to keep intact our freedom already twice in this sad century, they will be again our strength. If families remain united, giving shelter to those who are not protected, the will to survive of our country will not be able be broken. My message, therefore, is simple: help those who are alone and let your family be the fulcrum of hope“.

A warm speech but which neither the queen nor any other head of state hopes to ever have to pronounce.

Source: Vanity Fair

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