part 18, Ashtaroth

After Ashtaroth’s Persians failed to re-subjugate the rebellious Greeks, which were supported by Baal and Looeamong, Ashtaroth did not give up. Instead, she began working through the Persian ruler, Xerces the Great, to subjugate the Greeks and retaliate for the first “Greco-Persian war”.

Ashtaroth convinced the Persians they were going to war against “their enemies” “for their own prosperity and glory” and obsessed them to “desperate madness against the Argos’yans (Grecians) and the middle and west nations”. At the same time, Baal sent his angels “down to earth, to the Argos’yans, and obsess them, man, woman and child, and inspire them to terrible deeds of blood and havoc and death against Parsi’e’ans who are coming against them.”

Ashtaroth helped the Persian, Xerxes the Great, build “the largest army on earth, or ever shall be”, which is covered in the overlay, Ashtaroth's & Xerxes' largest army on Earth, but even so, because the Greeks were supported by both the false God Baal and the Triune head Looeamong, the Persians once again failed to re-subjugate the Greeks, which secured Greek independence from the Persian empire25.

Table 5: Persians second unsuccessful attempt to subjugate the Greeks
Asherah22 (Ashtaroth)

In mainstream history, Xerxes’ Ashtaroth-backed “second Persian invasion of Greece” in the 480s BCE is considered a direct, but delayed response to Persia’s defeat in the “first Persian invasion of Greece”23. Historical accounts add that (1) the Greek resistance was led by the Athenians and the Spartans, (2) the Persian king, Xerxes, spent several years “mustering an enormous army and navy”, and (3) the war lasted 30 years before the Greeks won and eventually expelled the Persians from Europe24.