Russia is about to terminate the 2 + 4 peace treaty!

Russia is about to terminate the 2 + 4 peace treaty!

The German government is breaking its promise of peace! Is the re-division of Germany imminent?

The Crimean Germans are making serious accusations against the German government: They accuse it of ignoring the peace promise of their ancestors. In February 2024, they therefore submitted a petition to the Russian Federation Council to terminate the Two Plus Four Treaty.

This treaty, which enabled the reunification of Germany in 1990, is now facing termination. In order to terminate the treaty, three bodies in Russia must agree. Two of the three bodies have already agreed, only the State Duma is still pending.

As soon as the State Duma also gives the green light, President Putin will be instructed to withdraw the ratification of the treaty.

This would have far-reaching consequences:

Germany could be divided into occupation zones again and all treaties that Germany has concluded since 1990 would be void. This also applies to membership of the European Union, NATO and the WHO

And even if Germany has not violated the treaty, as the German side claims, it is still terrible how everything is heading towards a major conflict and people are being killed who are forced as soldiers to die for their country.


But there is silence in the West!

While the EU leaders want to quickly accept Ukraine into the EU, they are ignoring the looming danger of a new division of Germany.

Is this the beginning of a new war in the middle of Europe?

It is high time that the people of Europe wake up and recognize the fatal consequences of current politics!

This explosive news can no longer be ignored! Share this news with everyone who is important to you and let us work together for peace and the future!

I think it’s great when you want to die for your fatherland as a soldier and can sit on the couch in front of the TV and watch this film. But it’s a film!

But it’s also film-worthy when the decision-makers and warmongers at home on the couch or in front of the camera repeatedly send children from other foreign families to war to die instead of fighting themselves or even sending their own children to war!

How can Zelensky’s Half-grown and former actor still sleep, knowing that he has wiped out almost an entire generation, while he is shopping at Tiffany’s, abroad of course? Is he a hero?

So the government leaders show us, the people, again and again how they do it up there.

Why not equal rights for all?

Go abroad, where there is peace and go shopping with “Mummy”…

If you are interested in this, we can help you. We will show you ways to obtain a second citizenship legally, how and where you can obtain a residence permit, and advise you on which countries are interesting for your tailored needs.

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Two plus four treaty – the promise of peace from our ancestors

On October 3, 1990, East Germany officially joined the Federal Republic of Germany in the West. This ended the 45-year division and the communist German Democratic Republic dissolved. German reunification marked one of the last events of the Cold War in Europe. It ended the East-West division and ushered in a new era of cooperation.

At the end of World War II, the Allies divided defeated Germany into four occupation zones. The Soviet Union controlled what would become East Germany, and the United States, Britain, and France each controlled one zone of West Germany. The capital city of Berlin in East Germany was similarly divided. In 1961, Soviet troops built a wall enclosing the parts of the city occupied by the Western powers and preventing free movement from East Germany to West Berlin. During the Cold War, the division of Germany and the existence of the Berlin Wall served as a visible reminder of the struggle between the forces of communism and capitalism.

In 1989, an impulse for reform swept Eastern Europe, fueling new hopes in Germany for an end to the divided state. After Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev made it clear that his government would not intervene to prevent the loss of communist governments in Eastern Europe’s satellite states, the reform process swept Hungary and Poland. After Hungary opened its borders, East Germans began traveling through Hungary to West Germany, causing a significant population loss in the German Democratic Republic. Meanwhile, mass demonstrations demanding reforms and freedom of travel remained unstoppable by Soviet and East German forces, culminating in the decision to reopen travel between East and West on November 9, 1989. Euphoric citizens of both countries began tearing down the Berlin Wall that same evening, without encountering organized resistance.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the question of whether and when the two German states would be reunified remained open. Forces within both German societies pushed for unity, and after travel restrictions were lifted, the two countries sought a single currency system. In March 1990, elections were held in the German Democratic Republic, overwhelmingly electing West German leader Helmut Kohl and Western-affiliated parties such as the Christian Democrats and the Social Democrats. This paved the way for the dissolution of the East German government and the integration of the state into West Germany under the existing constitutional structure of the Federal Republic of Germany.

Although the German people pressed for immediate reunification, other governments expressed deep concern about the security implications of a strong, united German republic returning to Europe. The four powers that had participated in the post-war occupation of Germany expressed varying degrees of concern, although the United States overcame its objections relatively quickly and supported the Bonn government. For Britain, France, and the Soviet Union, however, the wounds inflicted on them by World Wars I and II were not so easily forgotten, and all three states needed assurances that a reunified and remilitarized Germany would not pose a threat. The collapse of the Warsaw Pact in Eastern Europe also meant that at the same time that the German question was resurfacing, the balance of power in Europe was undergoing a massive shift. To address all of these concerns, the six countries held a series of negotiations that became known as the “2+4 talks,” involving the two German states as well as the four occupying powers.

One of the most difficult issues for negotiators was the question of Germany’s relationship with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) after reunification. The United States was very interested in German participation, which would provide it with an opportunity for continued involvement in Western Europe and, ideally, deter a unified Germany from expansionist goals. At first, Gorbachev opposed German NATO membership. However, when German reunification seemed inevitable in the mid-1990s, he eventually agreed to a compromise in which the unified state would become a member of NATO but would also agree to a drastic reduction in its combined armed forces and refrain from military exercises in East Germany. These conclusions, along with Germany’s commitment not to develop weapons of mass destruction and to respect the border with Poland (which was created after World War II and codified in the Helsinki Final Act of 1975), were enough for the Soviet Union and the rest of Europe to accept German reunification.

Ultimately, reunification came much more quickly than expected. On October 3, 1990, the Federal Republic of Germany officially took over the East German state. The driving force behind reunification ultimately came from the German people, not the diplomatic process surrounding the issue. Nevertheless, U.S. support for reunification proved crucial at several points. By putting German reunification on the agenda even before the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989, the U.S. was able to support German integration into the European Economic Community and other existing institutions in the region. Although U.S. allies in Western Europe remained cautious on the issue of reunification, the U.S. decision to support Kohl and commit all forces to the 2+4 negotiations helped advance the process of German reunification. The U.S. also played an important role in developing a common position on reunification by proposing a solution acceptable to both East and West that would keep Germany in NATO.

These policies ultimately helped create an environment that allowed the rest of Europe to be receptive to the proposed reunification of Germany. The Final Settlement Treaty marked the end of Germany and Berlin’s special status under the control of the Four Powers, and the process of troop withdrawal began. On December 2, 1990, the first all-German elections since 1933 were held.


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GCI UNIT Worldwide is a division of TCME-Group Worldwide, one of the world’s leading professional corporate investment and foreign trade advisory firms, with a total of 17 divisions in various countries and headquartered in Malaysia.

GCI-UNIT Worldwide is very much a hallmark of high-quality service and professional excellence in many different practice areas.

With our department we are a global provider of Citizenship by Investment Programs, Honorary Citizenship, Residency Programs and Citizenship Solution over Economic Ministry. We are able to identify rare and exceptional opportunities for our clients around the globe, mainly combining sound investments with the benefits of permanent residence, passport and citizenship in this country

Our legal team and specialist lawyers are well-known in the global immigration field and have over 25 years of experience in fast-track dual citizenship programs.

We currently work with more than 70 countries, advise governments and help find investors for their projects and focus on high-net-worth individuals (HNWI) or companies that have at least double-digit million assets.

In contrast to the classic agent who wants to sell you a second citizenship, we see ourselves as a “boutice” for a special clientele.
It’s not just a question of which citizenship program is best for you, how much it costs in the respective country, but what happens after that?
Are there good international schools there for your children?
What are the business opportunities in the respective country?
What about health care, how much taxes do you have to pay in the country?
Can I obtain a second citizenship in a country of my choice even though it does not offer an official citizenship program, but the government is interested in individuals or investors who provide a benefit to the country and are therefore granted citizenship!

We are at home in every country where we offer you a residence permit or citizenship, we work locally with our tax advisors and lawyers and of course we know the country and its mentality.

In our opinion, it is not enough to just want to sell citizenship based on books or dangerous half-knowledge.

Another specialty area of full-service consulting is investment opportunity and solutions in Europe, particularly in the Balkans, Africa, Asia, the United Arab Emirates, the Caribbean and the Pacific.

Since 2016, we have been, among other things, an important mentor for various business groups, economists, financial managers, investment advisors, business leaders, lawyers and notaries in the implementation and development of programs as:

YOUR CHANCE FOR A BETTER LIFE

Global Citizenship Investment (GCI) is a global provider of:

Citizenship programs
Honorary citizenship
Citizenship through investment
Residency program
Citizenship through repatriation
Granting of citizenship in the special interest of the Republic

Therefore, we are able to identify rare and exceptional opportunities for our clients around the globe, combining, above all, solid investments that lead to the benefits of permanent residence, passport and citizenship in this country.

In addition, we are in direct contact with several governments interested in appointing business people with a specific network as honorary consuls should a suitable candidate emerge.

If you would like to discuss your internationalization and diversification plans, book a consultation session* or email us at: [email protected]

GCI UNIT Worldwide Group
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Kuala Lumpur 50450, Malaysia

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