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Helpful on Higgins the boatbuilder who was influential

in the aborted 1947 Cuba counter-revolutionary invasion plot.
Apparently he was an influence from the top down, but
distanced himself from the actual op.

And de Sosa the newspaper publisher, who was still
around for protests of the Basulto group plane shot
down.

Wrong Mayorga, one-arm Sutton was not the merc
glorified by SOF publisher Robert Brown, and all
that book review said about du Berrier was label
him "traitor", without substantion. He was the first
to report to US that the Japanese were heading
south, passed on info from a network of informers
that resulted in sinkings of much Japanese shipping,
then got captured and tortured for years by infamous
Japanese Impetai, didn't break, when freed told the
US troops where to find some of Jimmy Doolittle's
B25 Tokyo raid crew held in pits by the Japanese.
While recovering from captivity he drank $56.00
of milk or powdered milk which he said to bill to
the State Dept, and you would think they would
have been grateful on a number of counts and
given him the Congressional Medal of Honor, but
later when he exposed the destabilization of Vietnam
by Lansdale, they revoked his passport on the grounds
that he hadn't payed for the milk yet! Because he
wrote Background to Betrayal, manuscripted 1959,
published 1963, CIA would like to call him a "traitor"
like the book reviewer did. You know how the perps
love to label-kill a messenger, then avoid specifics
and issues. There was nothing in that review but
the label-kill with reference to HduB so that was
a dud but oh well, the rest was a great help.

duB is still alive and writing from Monaco. Actually
the book reviewer did call him a gentleman, a
"gentleman traitor", that is, and although he might
have been associated with unsavory mercenaries
and those who were associated with the JFK assassination,
I used him as a pointer to one of his associates who is
glorified by SOF publisher Brown and who, along with
Brown, was involved in the assassination or the coverup.
I can't remember the name. I'm sure you'll recognize
him if I say he had a handlebar mustache and he wasn't
Teddy Roosevelt.

I might find that name in a context close to Brown's
who was involved with him in an aborted made-for-TV
invasion of Haiti--

http://www.google.com/search?q=%22Robert+K.+Brown%22+kennedy+assassination

Mitch Werbell! And here we find the marks of the Gehlen
and Bush gang which showed up in the aborted 1947 Cuba
invasion involving Eatherly and The Saint--"Franco, Spain,
Bush fam's Brown-Bros Harriman, Argentina, Peron", note
"Willoughby" below.

Robert K. Brown's favorite merc Mitch Werbell was involved
in yet another aborted Latin American counter-revolutionary
invasion--and farther down, the JFK assassination first planned
for 1960!

http://cuban-exile.com/menu2/2pnassau.html

"Project Nassau" was the designation given by Mitch Werbell and
CBS News for the invasion of Haiti by Haitians, Cubans and American
Soldiers of Fortune.  Planning began in the Spring of 1966 when CBS
became aware. The actual designation was OPERATION ISTANBUL.
They decided to take the opportunity to film an actual Caribbean revolution.
The producer and film crew were dispatched to Miami with Mitchell
Werbell as an advisor.  Freelance journalists also filtered in, like Andrew
St. George and Tom Dunkin.  Filming for the CBS production was from a
rented boat called "The Poor Richard" by a man known as William
Harvey[check him out].  Rifles were rented by CBS and filming took place

in a South Miami park.  Most of the CBS production crew were informants

for one Government agency or another so the entire invasion was stopped

in early January 1967 with the arrest of 75 would-be invaders.  Congress

held hearings on the matter to determine if CBS was financing revolutions.
Here are some documents that pertain to this event.

http://www.maebrussell.com/Mae's%20articles/Mae's%20JFK%20article.html

CMC was actually a subsidiary of Swiss-based Permindex, whose president
was Prince Gutierez de Spadafora, Italian industrialist and large landowner.
Spadafora's daughter-in-law was related to Hjalmar Schacht. Clay Shaw,
who managed the New Orleans Intemational Trade Mart, was a director.
Another was Giorgio Mantello, aka George Mandel, who would later move
to New Orleans. Once convicted of "criminal activities" in Switzerland,
Mantello worked closely with his fellow Hungarian Nagy. One of the goals
of the CMC was that "Rome will recover once again her position as center
of the civilized world."

In New Orleans, Shaw was the respected citizen who had helped restore the
French Quarter. In Rome he was a vital member of the boards of twin
companies dealing with fascists accused of European assassinations. Shaw's
address book contained the private number of Principessa Marcelle Borghese,
now Duchessa de Bomartao, who is related to Prince Valerio Borghese.
Called the "Black Prince" and "The New Duce," Borghese was leader of the
Movimento Sociale Italiano, a neo-fascist syndicate. The Black Prince, who
was a decorated submarine captain in the First World War, was convicted
of cooperating with the nazis in WW II and given 12 years in prison.

The Black Prince is the same Borghese rescued by the CIA's James J.
Angleton. No wonder Angleton was awarded the Sovereign Military Order
of Malta by the Pope after the war.

Clay Shaw's affiliation with Permindex would plug in later to Argentina,
Spain, Rome, New Orleans and Dallas[same as Eatherly 1947 Cuba op].
The international range of hit teams, using CIA money diverted overseas
to cover companies set up by the Gehlen Organization, started coming
together after Shaw's arrest. In November, 1960 it would be Nixon versus
Kennedy. Frank Sinatra introduced Judith Exner to John Kennedy on the
eve of the New Hampshire primary. A few weeks later Sinatra introduced
Judith Exner to Chicago Mafia boss Sam Giancana. So Exner became
involved, as William Safire put it, in a "dual affair with the nation's most
powerful mobster and the nation's most powerful political leader."

Giancana was busy with more than his love life; he was hired to form
assassination teams to go after Fidel Castro. The man who retained him
was Robert Maheu, a former FBI and CIA operative. It was a classic
cutoff. Maheu never mentioned that the CIA was behind it. He intimated
to Giancana that wealthy Cuban exiles were providing the funds. This
sounded plausible, since Maheu was Howard Hughes' right-hand man.

Giancana put his Los Angeles lieutenant, Johnny Roselli, in charge of the
hit squads. In 1978 when the House Select Committee questioned him,
Roselli hinted that his assignment was aimed at Kennedy as well as
Castro. Shortly afterward, his body was found floating in an oil drum
off the Florida coast.

SS Colonel Skorzeny's CIA agents participated in terror campaigns waged
by Operation 40 in Guatemala, Brazil and Argentina. Skorzeny was also in
charge of the Paladin mercenaries, whose cover, M.C. Inc., was a Madrid
export-import firm. Dr. Gerhard Hartmut von Schubert, [formerly] of
Joseph Goebbels' propaganda ministry, was M.C. operating manager. The
nerve center for Skorzeny's operations was in Albufera, Spain. It was lodged
in the same building as the Spanish intelligence agency SCOE under
Colonel Eduardo Blanco and was also an office of the U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency.

The Albufera building was the kind of intelligence nest that was duplicated
in New Orleans in 1963. That summer Lee Harvey Oswald handed out pro-
Castro literature stamped with the address 544 Camp Street, a commercial
building. This was a blunder, because Oswald actually was under the control
of an anti-Castro operation headquartered there. His controller, W. Guy
Banister, was connected with military intelligence, the CIA and a section of
the World Anti-Communist League that had been set up by Willoughby and
his Far Pacific intelligence unit in Taiwan. ["Willoughby was down-playing
Japanese war crimes so that the perpetrators could be protected for use
against the Soviets later. This was happening in Germany where the top
nazis were writing the history of Malmedy. The tight security in which
Willoughby wrapped the project only adds to this impression. One woman
had a passkey, the wife of Dr. Mitsutaro Araki, a former exchange lecturer
in Germany, who was closely tied in with high nazis in Tokyo and the Tojo
clique. Willoughby harbored another secret that only came to light last year.
During the war, the Japanese conducted germ warfare experiments with
human beings as guinea pigs (at least 3,000 died, including an undetermined
number of captured U.S. military). The Pentagon decided that the biological
research might prove handy against the Russians, and the Japanese responsible
for the experiments were granted immunity from prosecution in return for
their laboratory records. On December 12, 1947 the Pentagon acknowledged
the "wholehearted cooperation" of Willoughby in arranging the examination
of the "human pathological material which had been transferred to Japan
from the biological warfare installations." As his final public gesture to Franco,
Willoughby lobbied the U.S. Congress in August, 1952 to authorize $100
million for the anti-Communist dictator's needs. Then he settled down in the
U.S. to do battle with the domestic enemy. As Sir Charles and his right-wing
allies saw it, Marxism wasn't the real enemy, the Liberals were.]

In The Great Heroin Coup, Henrik Kruger disclosed that the International
Fascist was "not only the first step toward fulfilling the dream of Skorzeny,
but also of his close friends in Madrid, exile Jose Lopez Rega, Juan Peron's
grey eminence, and prince Justo Valerio Borghese, the Italian fascist money
man who had been rescued from execution at the hands of the World War
II Italian resistance by future CIA counterintelligence whiz James J.
Angleton."

A subcommittee on international operations of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee prepared a report "Latin America: Murder, Inc." that is still
classified. The title repeated Lyndon Johnson's remark, three months before
he died, "We were running a Murder, Inc. in the Caribbean." The report
concluded: "The United States had joint operations between Argentina,
Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay. The joint operations were
known as Operation Condor. These are special teams used to carry out
'sanctions,' the killing of enemies."

Jack Anderson gave a few details in his column "Operation Condor, An
Unholy Alliance" August 3, 1979:

        "Assassination teams are centered in Chile. This international
        consortium is located in Colonia Dignidad, Chile. Founded by
        nazis from Hitler's SS, headed by Franz Pfeiffer Richter, Adolf
        Hitler's 1000-year Reich may not have perished. Children are
        cut up in front of their parents, suspects are asphyxiated in piles
        of excrement or rotated to death over barbecue pits."

Otto Skorzeny code-named his assault on American soldiers in the Battle
of the Bulge Operation Greif, the "Condor." He continued Condor with
his post-war special teams that imposed "sanctions," meaning the
assassination of enemies. Skorzeny's father-in-law was Hjalmar
Schacht, president of Hitler's Reichsbank. Schacht guided Onassis'
shipyards in rebuilding the German and Japanese war fleets. In 1950
Onassis signed on Lars Anderson for his whaling ships on the hunt off
Antarctica and Argentina. Anderson had belonged to Vidkum Quisling's
nazi collaborationist group in Norway during the war. Clay Shaw, who
was charged by New Orleans D.A. Jim Garrison with complicity in the
JFK assassination, was a close friend of Hjalmar Schacht.

In 1952 Nicola Malaxa moved from Whittler California to Argentina.
Malaxa had belonged to Ottovon Bolschwing's Gestapo network, as did
his associate, Viorel Trifia, who was living in Detroit. They were members
of the Nazi Iron Guard in Romania, and had felt prosecution. They had
one thing in common; they were friends of Richard Nixon.

Trifia had been brought to the U.S. by von Bolschwing. Malaxa had
escaped from Europe with over $200 million in U.S. dollars. Upon arrival
in New York he picked up another $200 million from Chase Manhattan
Bank. The legal path for his entry was smoothed by the Sullivan &
Cromwell law offices, the Dulles brothers firm. Undersecretary of State
Adolph Berle, who had helped Nixon and star witness Whittaker Chambers
convict Alger Hiss, personally testified on Malaxa's behalf before a
congressional subcommittee on immigration. In 1951 Senator Nixon
introduced a private bill to allow Malaxa permanent residence.
Arrangements for his relocation in Whittler were made by Nixon's law
office.

The dummy front cover for Malaxa in Whittler was Western Tube.
In 1946 Nixon had gotten a call from Herman L. Perry asking if he
wanted to run for Congress against Rep. Jerry Voorhis. Perry later
became president of Western Tube.

When Malaxa went to Argentina in 1952, he linked up with Juan Peron
and Otto Skorzeny. Questions were raised at the time about J. Edgar
Hoover, the Iron Guard, Malaxa and Vice President Nixon.

Before the election of 1960, a group within the Christian Right plotted
to kill John Kennedy in Van Nuys, California while he was still a
candidate. The group was a meld of anti-Castro Cubans, Minutemen
and home-grown nazis. Some were sought by Jim Garrison, following
his arrest of Clay Shaw, for testimony before the New Orleans grand
jury. When Garrison forwarded extradition papers for Edgar Eugene
Bradley, a member of the group, Governor Ronald Reagan refused to
sign them.

The leader of one of these groups, the Christian Defense League (CDL),
was the Reverend William P. Gale. During the war Gale had been an
Army colonel in the Philippines training guerilla bands. His superior
officer was

Willoughby.

By the late 1950s Gale was recruiting veterans for his "Identity" group,
which was financed by a wealthy Los Angeles man. One of the CDL's
contacts was...

Captain Robert K. Brown, a special forces professional from Fort
Benning, Georgia. Brown was working with anti-Castro Cubans,
mercenaries similar to Skorzeny's teams. Brown is now publisher of
Soldier of Fortune magazine and paramilitary texts such as Silencers,
Snipers, and Assassins. The book explains how Mitchell WerBell made
special weapons for the CIA, Bay of Pigs assault squads and other
customers. WerBell, son of a wealthy Czarist cavalry officer, perfected
a silencer so effective a gun can be shot in one room and not heard in
the next. It is ideal for assassinations.

There had been prolonged controversy about how many shots were fired
the day Kennedy was killed. The President's wounds, nicks on the limousine
and curb, and other bullet evidence indicated quite a few. But the Warren
Commission concluded there were only three. It took the testimony of
spectators in Dealy Plaza who said they only heard three. It never considered
the possibility that silencer-fitted guns were fired.

[...and much more]

-Bob

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