Chris:
What do you make of this? Seems like wishful fantasy to me.
JoeSubj: Sounds interesting to me. Gerhard
Date: Saturday, March 15, 2003 8:09:06 AM
From:
3/15/03
If you miss receiving the DAILY Dove
Report, you may read it at the following website:
http://www.fourwinds10.com/
(also has Dove Voice Reports and Dove radio interviews).
Below also is an article about a CIA Intelligence Analyst who has gone to
Sweden where he may safely speak out about the lies being told by the Bush
gang. As I have said, there are some good people at the CIA and I’m happy
to have an opportunity to show this side of the agency. The Bush gang
have certain groups in the CIA that do the Bush gang’s dirty work, but
like all parts of our government, there are also other GOOD people in the
CIA trying to do their jobs and having to deal with the Bush gang’s
heavy-handed tactics.
As soon as NESARA is announced, many exposes about our corrupt government
officials will appear. People like this CIA Intelligence Analyst will be
able to freely speak the truth here in the U.S. and we will all be much
wiser for hearing the truth. NESARA Yes!
Date: Wednesday, February 19, 2003 4:31 PM
Subject: NESARA CONFIRMATIONS: THREE IN ONE TOWNSHIP
Sweden Offers Free-speech Refuge To U.S. Officials
By Dennis Hans
Friday 21 February 2003
Sweden Providing Platform for U.S.
Officials Cowed by Bush intimidated bureaucrats regain their voice as
protected guests of a genuinely democratic regime.
STOCKHOLM - Blaine Williams hasn't stopped grinning since he arrived in
Sweden two weeks ago. Several times a day he'll approach a complete
stranger, offer a handshake and a smile, introduce himself as a former CIA
analyst from America, and proceed to tell the bewildered Swede all the
things he knows that directly contradict President George W. Bush's
declarations about Saddam Hussein's intentions and capabilities.
"Free at last!" Williams exclaimed to a reporter as he sat on his front
porch and waved to new neighbors. "I was stuck in a totalitarian
bureaucracy for 14 months.
What a relief it is to say in public who I am and what I think."
Williams is the first of dozens of former U.S. government employees
expected to take refuge in Sweden over the next several months, courtesy
of a bold project of the new social democratic government.
On October 15, the Swedish Parliament appropriated 500 million dollars for
the "Palme Plan." Named for former Swedish president Olaf Palme, it
promotes the virtues of free and honest speech among government officials
in underdeveloped democracies.
"Swedes have always been generous in providing economic aid to countries
with underdeveloped economies," said Erland Carlsson, the parliamentarian
who conceived the Palme Plan. "But we've done little to promote democratic
development in underdeveloped democracies."
Some leaders of underdeveloped democracies have welcomed Sweden's
"democracy teams," encouraging their efforts to create a culture of candor
and transparency in the corridors of power.
Those efforts comprise the overt component of the Palme Plan. The covert
component kicks in when a leader is hostile to the very notions of candor
and transparency.
Palme, who was Carlsson's political mentor, believed his greatest failure
as president was his inability, during the Vietnam War, to persuade U.S.
officialdom of the virtues of public candor. "Palme believed that if the
national security bureaucracy had not been cowed into silence in the face
of a torrent of deceit from a determined White House, the U.S. would never
have invaded and destroyed Vietnam," Carlsson said.
An October 8 story in the Houston Chronicle, by Jonathan Landy and Warren
Strobel
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/nation/1607676, convinced Carlsson
that the same suffocating environment had enveloped key sectors of the
Bush administration.
Thirteen officials from the CIA, State Department and Pentagon, many with
vast experience in the Middle East and South Asia, told Landy and Strobel
the same thing: The White House has squelched dissent, imposed conformity
and silence, demanded skewed analyses to justify its hard line, and
repeatedly exaggerated or falsified intelligence information to inflate
the Saddam threat.
What most alarmed the Swedish MP was that none of the analysts were
willing to be quoted by name. Some were too frightened even to be quoted
anonymously.
"I couldn't help thinking that if these informed, respected patriots could
raise their voices openly and in unison, they'd stop the administration's
chicken hawks in their tracks," Carlsson said. "Public and congressional
support for the war path would whither, and the president would be exposed
as the world's most crooked 'straight shooter.'"
Borrowing Bush's Brilliant Idea
When Bush insisted that U.N. weapons inspectors be able to take Iraqi
scientists and their families outside of Iraq for interviews, thus
protecting the scientists from possible retaliation by Saddam's secret
police, Carlsson had the solution that had eluded Palme so many years ago.
"That's it!" he told a colleague. "We'll offer U.S. bureaucrats and their
families safe passage to Sweden and a secure environment from which they
can speak freely and publicly to the folks back home. They can stay here
at our expense until a climate of openness and honesty prevails in the
Bush administration."
In addition to Williams, 28 other bureaucrats and their families are en
route to Stockholm. All were spirited out of Washington by a team of
Swedish secret agents who had honed their rescue skills in Yugoslavia and
the Congo.
Once the former officials settle into their new homes and get comfortable
with saying who they are and what they think, they'll spend their time
giving speeches an interviews.
Former CIA analyst Williams is already a sensation on Swedish TV as a
regular guest on the top-rated chat show, Nugen Farger ("Hard Rugby"). On
a recent edition, he parsed a string of Bush's statements on Iraq,
including assertions at a Republican fundraiser that Saddam Hussein hopes
to deploy al Qaeda as his "forward army" against the West, and that "we
need to think about Saddam Hussein using al Qaeda to do his dirty work, to
not leave fingerprints behind."
"I can assure you," Williams told Swedish viewers, "that no one at CIA
believes a word Bush said. What's more, no one at CIA believes that Bush
believes a word Bush said."
Strong words, and Williams anticipates an echo chamber as more of Sweden's
newest residents regain their voice. But he wonders if members of the U.S.
news media, particularly those he calls "the boobs on the tube," will dare
to listen.
