Allen Dulles was the top US spy during WWII when, behind the back of FDR, he did secret negotiations with Nazi leaders. This caused far more Russians to die but Dulles felt Russia and not the Germans were the natural enemy. Thanks to his efforts, a bunch of Nazi war criminals were able to escape to the US via “Nazi ratlines” that went from Germany, through Italy to Latin America, the Middle East and even the US. JFK fired Dulles (who forced him into the Bay of Pigs disaster) from the CIA in 1961. Dulles used to tell people in DC that he “was one of the few men in Washington who could send people to the deaths.” After the JFK’s death, Dulles lobbied LBJ hard to be on the Warren Commission; his self-appointed job was to keep the Commission away from looking at the CIA, and to push the “lone gunman” theory of just Oswald.
We were all told Switzerland is neutral, yet it was the Swiss banks that stashed Nazi treasures in secret accounts used to buy shit for Nazis from neutral countries (tungsten from Spain, oil from Romania, steel from Sweden, beef from Argentina); all this brought the lying Swiss bankers (who told the US they weren’t dealing with Nazis) tons of cash. JP Morgan called FDR a class traitor and his servants had to cut FDR’s picture from all Morgan’s newspapers before he read them. Himmler was a “former chicken farmer and fertilizer salesman.” Fun Fact: Himmler at one point hired Coco Chanel to “discuss strategy” – perhaps which women’s undergarments he should secretly wear.
Fritz Sander designed an incineration process that would provide heat for furnaces from the burning of corpses; Fritz’s biggest regret was he was not allowed to patent his invention. How sad, the regrets of a sociopath. US Secretary of State Cordell Hull was an anti-Semite even though he was married to a Jewish woman. He blocked helping Jews and advised FDR to reject the Jewish passengers of the boat, the St. Louis. After WWII, Goering was shocked he would be tried as a war criminal and asked his captors whether he should wear his pistol or his ceremonial dagger when he met General Eisenhower. Perhaps he too should have asked Coco Chanel, since it was a fashion question.
Churchill and FDR after the war, wanted all top Nazis taken out and executed but Stalin said no; he insisted on a trial saying, “otherwise the world would say we were afraid to try them.” Imagine our Russophobic US mainstream media ever mentioning that. George Kennan “took a strong stand against punishing Nazi war criminals.” One wonders if George thought top Nazis DIDN’T deserve punishment for their actions, who DID he think ever deserved punishment? Thanks to Allen Dulles, very few Nazis were still in prison after 1953. Dulles plotted with the SS to keep the Soviets from entering Italy after the war. In fact, “some German divisions in Italy were told not to lay down their arms but to get ready to begin battling the Red Army alongside the Americans and British.” That Dulles sure would have made a good Nazi. Truman’s defense secretary James Forrestal hated the Soviet Union as much as Dulles. Together they poured millions of dollars into Italy’s 1948 elections to support US puppets over Italian Communist Party ones. Dulles would soon be schooling a young Nixon on the importance of US foreign aid in controlling other countries (p.161). Dulles and Nixon played a large role in killing the New Deal in favor of business interests that screwed the common man (p.162). “The Dulles brothers …helped launder Nazi funds during the war.” Nixon’s silence on this was bought through the financing of his “first congressional campaign against Jerry Voorhis.” “An outraged Voorhis aide later confronted Nixon. ‘Of course, I knew Jerry Voorhis wasn’t a Communist,’ Nixon told the man. ‘I had to win,’ he went on, as if enlightening a political innocent. ‘That’s the thing you don’t understand. The important thing is to win. You’re just being naïve’.”
Hitler liked Mussolini so much he once personally told Il Duce Bag that he was “perhaps the only friend I have in the world.” I’m sure that comment hurt Henry Ford’s feelings (read “Nazi Nexus” book). Black Raven vans were invented by the Nazis in order to seal victims inside and asphyxiate them with exhaust fumes. 250,000 died this way on the Eastern front; those vans were replaced by the Auschwitz and Dachau gas chambers.
Jung said the opposite of love is not hate, but power. This book says, “There is no evidence that (Harry Dexter) White handed over classified documents or subverted US policy to correspond with the Soviet line.” Still, his career was destroyed by the Dulles crowd pretending as much during the Cold War. He was guilty mostly of “pursuing his own diplomatic initiatives with the Soviets.” Sounds like Nixon’s détente a few decades later. The author concludes, “Harry Dexter White’s death signified the final collapse of Washington’s New Deal order and the unique brand of utopian internationalism that he had championed. It was men like Nixon and Dulles who moved into the vacuum.” The Dulles brothers reached their pinnacle of power during the Eisenhower administration, a Cold War coup for the corporate class. C. Wright Mills wrote it was the first time US men in authority could talk “about an ‘emergency’ without a foreseeable end.”
Foster Dulles wrote that the US should use nuclear weapons as a FIRST, not last, resort. Nuclear terror brinkmanship, the joys of having a madman in a crowded room. The CIA’s own charter forbids it from operating domestically. The CIA’s deputy director Dulles advocated a plan (which was rejected) in “early 1952 to kill Stalin at a Paris summit meeting.”
Eisenhower was big on covert operations (he authorized both the Iran and Guatemala coups) because he wanted to avoid large-scale shooting wars and “the imperial burdens that had bankrupted Great Britain.” Iran’s Mossadegh was no Communist but was a nationalist; no wonder Noam likes to say the Cold War was in effect a war not on Communism, but on Nationalism. How dare you keep your resources away from the first dibs of our bankers and CEO’s? The Iran coup involved a CIA favorite technique, “paying military leaders to betray their country.” Those loyal to Mossadegh were killed “as a message to all officials who chose to stand by the prime minister.” Dulles saw the Iranian and Guatemalan Coups as his two biggest achievements of his CIA career; imagine thinking your two biggest achievements are making the peaceful people of TWO sovereign nations despise you. “A Washington Post editorial saw the overturning of Iran’s democratic government as a ‘cause to rejoice’.” Not to be left out, the New York Times that the illegal removal of Mossadegh “brings us hope”. No wonder why I refuse to subscribe to EITHER the Washington Post or New York Times. Thanks to CIA thievery, Iran’s national treasure (its oil) was taken out of its hands and “handed over to foreign corporations, with 40% of the spoils going to American oil producers.” As if the US oil companies “produced” one drop of oil. Funny how the only group that the Shah didn’t crush, the Islamic mandarins, were the ones who took Iran over after the fall of the Shah. So, thank the US installed Shah for Iran’s present Islamic government. And thank the US for removing Mossadegh to install the Shah who then assured the present Islamic Iranian government. Oops… Oh, and did you know that General Eisenhower “NEVER experienced combat firsthand”?
Foster Dulles “succeeded in undermining or deflecting every tentative step that the president (Eisenhower) made toward détente with the Soviet Union.” “Hope was Foster’s enemy; fear was his righteous sword.” “His belligerence was strategic.” “It was this permanent war fever that empowered the country’s military hierarchies and enriched the increasingly militarized corporate sector.” Unlike Truman who feared the CIA would create an “American Gestapo”, Eisenhower “unleashed the agency, giving Allen Dulles a license to kill that the spymaster utilized as he saw fit.” “Later in his career, any nationalist leader who seemed a problem for US interests was viewed as fair game.” Lumumba, anyone? When asked in jest why he didn’t have Nasser killed, Allen Dulles replied, “Well first you would need a fanatic, a man who would be willing to kill himself if he were caught, and he couldn’t be an outsider. He’d have to be an Arab. It would be very difficult to find just the right man” (to be a traitor to his own country and people). Not to be outdone, his brother Foster Dulles told a crowd of oil men “that if any sultan or despot were to be as unwise as Mossadegh and try to nationalize his underground treasure, the country would soon find itself the target of ‘international intervention’.” Translation: the US rogue state will illegally smoke your ass. Don’t forget that Eisenhower sent the Marines into Lebanon in 1958, “to ensure that the Beirut government remained in ‘friendly’ hands.” Shamelessly chose US interests over daring to help your own people and you are comically get called “friendly”. For this same reason when Guatemala’s (beloved by the poor) Arbenz left office he was “showered with abuse by a smartly dressed crowd of several hundred ill-wishers. ‘Assassin! Thief! Piece of shit!’ They screamed at him.”
Howard Hunt who worked for the CIA at the time said the word was out to let Arbenz walk “unscathed” because if word got out that Arbenz was hurt or killed “we’d [the CIA and the US] would get blamed for it.” Instead, as a final public humiliation, Guatemalan “authorities of the new military regime demanded that the ex-president strip to his underwear in full view of a mob of jostling reporters and cameramen, ostensibly so they could make sure he was not smuggling out cash.” The CIA went through everything of Arbenz’s, his documents, and tailed him wherever he went – Mexico City – to Switzerland, to Paris. All Arbenz stories were embellished by the CIA to vilify him better (p.253-266) around the world. Why didn’t Arbenz end up in sympathetic Latin America? “The State Department had made it clear that any nation that took in the top men from the Arbenz government would incur Washington’s wrath.” Arbenz ended up in Cuba, but the author says he was no Che or Fidel. He didn’t want a civil war in Guatemala because he “knew that the peasants weren’t trained to fight – so arming them would have just resulted in a bloody mess. He loved Guatemala and its people too much to do that.” Arbenz’s crime: standing up against the US owned United Fruit Company and Washington allies on behalf of his people. You see, United Fruit not only owned huge plantations but almost every railroad track in the country, the ONLY major Atlantic port, and the telephone system. Imagine US mainstream media telling you ANY of this. As Arbenz’s wife explained, “I hadn’t come to Guatemala to be a socialite and play bridge or golf.”
Yes, Arbenz took United Fruit land, but he paid fair prices for all of it and ONLY took the uncultivated land it owned. United Fruit had the US undersecretary of state in his pocket and Eisenhower’s UN ambassador who was heavily invested in it. Conflict of Interest American Style. Even Eisenhower’s personal secretary was in on it – her husband was its public relations director. Arbenz was offered a $2,000,000 cash bribe by the US ambassador to stop the land reform and he turned it down. He was physically threatened. When that failed too, the Dulles brothers were called in to get him removed. No wonder America is so hated worldwide with dozens of historical CIA stories like this one out there.
The CIA replaced him with a disgruntled ex-colonel named Armas who arrived in “a battered station wagon” and went to “work” subverting the Guatemalan military. “One army commander reportedly was paid $60,000 to surrender his troops.” The CIA even jammed the final radio speech of Arbenz so his people couldn’t hear it. This is the untold history of the US, that we should have all been taught in school. “Afterward, Eisenhower, ever the soldier, asked Dulles how many men he had lost. Just one, Dulles told him. ‘Incredible!’ exclaimed the president.” The death toll however of Guatemalans from the coup four decades later, was 250,000 in a population only four times larger. And Republicans wonder why immigrants try to leave their Latin American countries. The CIA released a kill list of 58 top Guatemalan leaders (w/ redacted names) as well as a 19-page CIA killing manual that “offered the most efficient ways to butcher Guatemala’s top leadership.” Let’s enjoy an excerpt: “A hammer, axe, wrench, screwdriver, fire poker, kitchen knife, lamp stand, or anything hard, heavy and handy will suffice.” The CIA thoughtfully added “persons who are morally squeamish should not attempt it.” The CIA’s blacklist just for Guatemala grew to 70,000 names – a full 10% of the adult population. Dictator Armas issued Decree 59 stating the right to arrest and hold anyone of that list of 70,000 w/o trial. Guatemalan journalists were also rounded up for torture. Vigilante groups were encouraged to rob and kill. At Tiquisate, 1,000 peasants were “lined up, and machine-gunned into open trenches.” As one dictator who replaced Armas said, “If it is necessary to turn the country into a cemetery in order to pacify it, I will not hesitate to do so.” The Eisenhower administration told the public they would turn Guatemala into a “showcase of democracy”. The author says instead it became “a bottomless well of sorrow.”
The Joe McCarthy Era lasted in Washington from February 1950 to December 1954 when he was finally censured. Flinging accusations of “treason” and “un-Americanism” was a Republican way of distinguishing itself from the Democrats at the time. “The GOP campaign in 1952 thoroughly embraced McCarthyism.” However, “Eisenhower was infuriated by McCarthy’s antics. The senator was challenging the new president’s authority to control his own government.” Did you know that Foster Dulles insisted on removing all books by Langston Hughes and Jean-Paul Sartre for US embassy libraries? And Roy Cohn also wanted to ban all music by Aaron Copland. The CIA supposedly had a “photo of (J. Edgar) Hoover orally pleasuring FBI deputy Clyde Tolson” (p.219). That would have made a nice mural for the wall as you enter FBI headquarters in DC. I can see the inscription: The FBI – Blowing the American People Since 1908. The DC bureau chief of the Chicago Tribune said, “Why the Communist opposition didn’t plant a minor on him and raise the cry of statutory rape, I don’t know.” After his downfall, Joe McCarthy (a proud alcoholic since 1947) quickly drank himself to death.
After WWII, the US kept flaming war criminals like Gehlen from the Nuremberg trials. Fascist Gehlen later wrote in his memoir that the goal was “the total annihilation of the enemy.” Meanwhile Dulles and the CIA were working on MKULTRA – brainwashing - turning unsuspecting people into murderers. Dulles wanted to specifically use LSD to create assassins and worked with Sidney Gottlieb to do so (read book Poisoner-In-Chief). This soon devolved into dispensed drug combo platters of Benzedrine, Pentothal-Natrium, LSD, and mescaline where the CIA added “disposal of the body is not a problem.” Pause to salute the American flag. More than 1,600 Nazi scientists got “Get Out of Jail Free” cards to work with US Operation Paperclip (read book Operation Paperclip). All of this was in direct violation of the US signed Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the third Geneva Convention.
US doctor (Frank Olson) said these CIA antics reminded him of Nazi Concentration Camps. The CIA preyed on “people who could not fight back”, and dosed Frank Olson himself (how dare he criticize the CIA) to the point that he was hit on the head (according to a forensic expert) before he fell from a hotel window to his death. The CIA called it a suicide as the case stayed buried for 20 years. Meanwhile, “Sidney Gottlieb and the medical people produced all kinds of poisons that a normal postmortem could not detect.” Our taxpayer dollars at work. The CIA threw money at Dominican Republic dictator Trujillo, “delivering suitcases stuffed with cash to his hotel suite”. On top of that he got $25 million annually of foreign aid “much of which ended up in his personal overseas bank accounts.” Thanks to John Foster Dulles, “never before in the history of the world has one single government more effectively supported dictatorial powers in free nations (p.321).” No wonder the American people can’t get free healthcare. Page 323 is about “the secret CIA practice of kidnapping enemies of Washington and turning them over to the merciless security machinery in undisclosed foreign locations.” In one case (the Galindez murder) the CIA got the NYC Police department to stand down. The CIA lied that Galindez had “absconded with more than $1,000,000 of CIA funds”. The CIA does whatever it wants – just ask Frank Olson before he was murdered.
The CIA then guided the arrest and death of the Congo’s Patrice Lumumba, and kept the details from JFK for almost a month. When LBJ was asked why he took the VP job, he told Claire Boothe Luce “I’m a gambling man, darlin’.” And added, “one out of every four presidents has died in office.” Two surgeons who examined JFK in Dallas remained silent for years out of straight fear about the fact that they clearly saw JFK “was struck by bullets from the front as well as rear.” This book even has a photo clearly showing JFK’s entrance wound from the front. RFK tells aides he “planned to reopen the investigation into his brother’s death” and then gets whacked.
Cuba: Che Guevara was in Guatemala when Arbenz was removed and said he clearly saw what the US and CIA was capable of. Instead, in Cuba, Castro and Guevara put the hard-core thugs of the old regime up against the wall, ran the CIA’s agents out of the country, purged the armed forces, and mobilized the Cuban people. They intentionally created something “that refused to be crushed.” Thus, Cuba went “from a vassal state of the US to a sovereign nation.” When the US turned on Cuba, Castro logically went to the Soviets for aid and the rest is history. Castro asked at the UN, what was Cuba’s crime against the US? He said, “We instituted an agrarian reform that would solve the problem of the landless peasants, …that would end, once and for all, the ghastly misery which existed in the rural areas of our country.” Attention: due to length, the end of this review is in the comment section. Like it as well. Cheers...