The Case Against Nixon and the Vatican and the Rupture Point with Bureaucracy

From 1946 onward Richard Nixon and maybe before 1946 was beholden to the Rockefeller GOP line. Certainly this included in the Nixon White House as president when he would meet with the Rockefellers. In the library frankly for memory I don’t remember if that was vice President Nixon I think it was it may have been President Nixon as well more likely it was both

NODULE ONE
THE CIA WAS BEHIND THE ASSASSINATION OF WORLD LEADERS FROM ITS INCEPTION
The following material does not bear directly on the Kennedy
assassination and if you are familiar with the intelligence community and are anxious to get to the Oswald go to Nodule 2. It deals with the formation and staff of the CIA, biographical sketches of notable figures associated or targeted by the CIA, and CIA Operations. It is an orientation to the convoluted world of the intelligence community and was provided to give the reader some idea as what President Kennedy was up against when he tried to reign in the CIA.
The conspiracy to assassinate John F. Kennedy came out of
a long history of Cold War intrigue that began with the formation of the CIA. In July 1947, the United States Congress passed the National Security Act. As a result, the Central Intelligence Group (CIG), a spy agency that was an intelligence-gathering operation, became the CIA. On December 19, 1947, Defense Secretary James Forrestal sponsored an unpublished annex to policy
directive NSC/4. As a result, the CIA established the Office of Special 18COUP D’ETAT IN AMERICA VOLUME ONE
Operations, a covert action instrumentality. Angleton and former FBI
S.A. William King Harvey [CIA Office of Security #32 814], directed
the Office of Special Operations. Their boss, Roscoe Hillenkoetter,
Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, was intent on preventing
the Communists from winning the elections which were scheduled
for April 18, 1948, in Italy. Hillenkoetter assigned Angleton this task.
Angleton formed the Office of Special Operations Special
Procedures Group.
In June 1948, the National Security Council adopted NSC
10/2, a directive that authorized paramilitary activities against the
Soviet Union. On September
1, 1948, the Office of Special
Operations of the CIA created a subsidiary organization known as
the Office of Policy Coordination. In October 1950, General Walter
Bedell Smith replaced Admiral Hillenkoetter as the Director of the
Central Intelligence Agency.
In January 1951, General Walter Bedell Smith appointed
FRANK WISNER as CIA Deputy Director (Plans) for the Office of
Policy Coordination. The Korean War necessitated an absorption of
the Office of Policy Coordination by the Plans Division of the CIA. In
January
1951, Frank
Wisner was
appointed CIA Assistant
DD/Plans. Frank Wisner, born into a prominent Southern family,
studied law at the University of Virginia and was a member of the
law firm of Carter, Ledyard & Milburn. After a brief Navy
commission, he was assigned to OSS, where he was an illegal who
19COUP D’ETAT IN AMERICA VOLUME ONE
worked inside Germany during the war. From 1946 to 1947 Frank Wisner was a partner in Carter, Ledyard & Milburn. On November 12, 1947, Frank Wisner was appointed Deputy Assistant to the Secretary of State. Frank Wisner was CIA DD/P from 1952 to 1958. In 1959 he became Chief of Station in London. In 1962 he resigned from the Agency after suffering a series of nervous breakdowns. He drank heavily and contracted hepatitis. On October 29, 1965, Frank Wisner committed suicide by shooting himself with a 20-gauge shotgun on his Maryland farm. He was 56.

This is what John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy believed mostly though that is rarely asserted by historians.

Governance and Foreign Policy can occur by Persuasion and Force of Arms, and in non-wartime, Subversion by Sabotouge, false flags, assasination, and dissinformation.

Genesis of the U.S. Navy’s SEa, Air, Land (SEAL) Teams

As directed by President Eisenhower, the U.S. began planning for what we know today as the “Bay of Pigs” operation. President Eisenhower’s administration actually completed all of the planning and training for this operation, but did not approve its execution, which he left for President Kennedy to sort out.

As early as 1958, the Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Arleigh A. Burke proposed initiation of covert measures designed to keep the Communist powers off balance. Understanding where President Eisenhower and later Kennedy wanted to focus in the area of Unconventional Warfare, Admiral Burke directed the OPNAV staff to organize new or existing Navy units for smaller conflicts.

In early 1960, because of the crisis in Laos and Cuba and the increasing insurgency in South Vietnam, Admiral Burke directed his staff to prepare options with respect to unconventional warfare. Among other recommendations, the staff suggested “that the Underwater Demolition Teams and Marine reconnaissance units were considered organized and capable of expansion into unconventional warfare.”

More concrete steps were taken on 13 September 1960 when an OPNAV Unconventional Activities Working Group was formally established. This group reported to Admiral Wallace M. Beakley, Strategic Plans Division, Assistant Chief of Naval Operations for Fleet Operations and Readiness, and was directed to investigate “naval unconventional activity methods, techniques and concepts, which may be employed effectively against Sino-Soviet interests under conditions of cold war.”

The concept for special operations units within the Navy, and even the acronym SEAL had already emerged in outline form by 10 March 1961, when preliminary recommendations of an Unconventional Activities Committee were sent to the CNO for review and concurrence. Included among these was a recommendation for a wide range of “additional unconventional warfare capabilities within, or as an extension of our amphibious forces;” and, emphasized operations conducted in “restricted waters.”

The committee also proposed establishment of one unit each, under the Pacific and Atlantic amphibious commanders that “would represent a center or focal point through which all elements of this specialized Navy capability (naval guerrilla warfare) would be channeled. An appropriate name for such units could be SEAL units, SEAL being a contraction of SEA, AIR, LAND, and thereby, indicating an all-around, universal capability.” Initial units would consist of 20 to 25 officers and 50 to 75 enlisted men.

On 3 May 1961, Admiral Burke signed a memorandum to his staff stipulating that: “We should have a record of all Naval personnel, particularly officers, who have been especially trained in guerrilla warfare, UDT, psychological warfare, and what the Army calls “Special Forces Training… I know this is going to be difficult, but we are going to have to take over such operations as river patrol in the Saigon Delta, in the Mekong River, and other areas. Our people will have to know thoroughly how to fight and live under guerrilla conditions.”

Two months later on 13 May 1961 Admiral Beakley addressed a memo to the CNO that proposed a concept of operations, a detailed mission and tasks statement for SEAL Teams, and other background information – including UDT special operations during the Korean War. Admiral Beakley wrote, “If you agree in the foregoing proposals, I will take action to establish a Special Operations Team on each coast.”

Several weeks later in a special message personally delivered to the Congress on 25 May 1961 entitled, “Urgent National Needs,” President Kennedy remarked:

“I am directing the Secretary of Defense to expand rapidly and substantially, in cooperation with our Allies, the orientation of existing forces for the conduct of non-nuclear war, paramilitary operations, and sub-limited or unconventional wars. In addition, our special forces and unconventional warfare units will be increased and reoriented. Throughout the services new emphasis must be placed on the special skills and languages which are required to work with local populations.”

The above remarks in President Kennedy’s speech are the closest he came to actually directing formation of SEAL Teams.

While they began organizing as early as November 1961, two SEAL Teams were officially authorized by the CNO that December, and both units were formally established in January 1962. Their mission: conduct unconventional warfare, counter-guerrilla warfare, and clandestine operations.

https://wordpress.com/post/targetedmanhattanprojectvictim.wordpress.com/5053

The allegiance with Mafia and other groups the FBI and other espionage agencies counted in their arsenals.

The dedication the FBI, CIA, Great Britian, the Dulles brothers, Wild Bill Donovan, and others had for this was intellectually nearly perfect and the most illegal acts conceivable.

As a viewer I Edward Paul Donegan watched an episode of M*A*S*H something akin to this reasoning.

Preventative Medicine was the 23rd episode of Season 7 of the M*A*S*H TV series, also the 170th overall series episode. The episode was written by Tom Reeder, and directed by Tony Mordente. The episode originally aired on CBS-TV on February 19, 1979.

Synopsis

Hawkeye finds himself dealing with a reckless front line commander with a very high casualty rate. Meanwhile, Klinger pulls out some heavier stops with yet another ploy to get a Section Eight.

Detailed episode summary

During OR, the doctors notice that many of the patients have multiple entry wounds from multiple directions. Potter explains that these wounded are part of Lieutenant Colonel Lacy’s unit, the 603rd Battalion, which sustains more casualties than any other in Korea; while all the other units were retreating, Lacy ordered his men to stay and fight a little longer.

Later, Lacy himself arrives in camp, and seems to be quite the charmer. He’s complimentary to Radar, Potter, and Margaret. He tries to be cordial to Hawkeye and B.J., but knowing of his casualty record they are indifferent to Lacy’s kind words, and it is soon revealed that his men outright despise him; one of them, Corporal North, confides in Hawkeye that if he gets sent back to Lacy’s unit, he swears that he will kill him. Lacy comes in to Post Op and makes a speech about how their bravery has inspired him to submit a plan to HQ to for a dangerous mission up Hill 403. Hawkeye and B.J. are disgusted, and Potter futilely tries to talk Lacy out of it.

The next morning in the Mess Tent, Lacy joins Margaret, who is openly attracted to him – until he tells her about his plan to go up Hill 403, casually adding that he expects 20-30% casualties – approximately a hundred men, according to Margaret. Horrified, she asks what makes the hill so important; when Lacy callously responds, “Well, getting it”, an offended Margaret excuses herself and leaves the Mess Tent.

Lacy then tries to talk to Hawkeye and B.J., and Hawkeye reveals his own repulsion of Lacy’s duplicity, how he is cold, calculating, and cares nothing about his men, but then turns into a cheerleader as the wounded are being carted off the battlefield; Lacy’s smug and condescending attitude only reinforces Hawkeye’s belief about him. Later, while Hawkeye and B.J. are in Post Op, Lacy arrives to give his wounded their Purple Hearts, but none of them want them, and one of the soldiers goes into cardiac arrest when he sees Lacy. Hawkeye yells at him to get out of Post Op, but when Lacy is about to argue back, Radar tells him that General Higgins is on the phone from HQ. After he leaves, Hawkeye tells Radar to keep Lacy out.

Hawkeye and B.J. resuscitate the solder and walk into Radar’s office as Lacy is on the phone. Apparently the conversation is not going Lacy’s way, as General Higgins has turned down his plan as being too risky. Hawkeye and B.J. overhear the conversation and gloat, but Lacy has another plan to take Hill 403: subterfuge, using reconnaissance which he knows usually draws fire. Once the shooting starts, Lacy is sure that nobody will know who started what.

B.J. is disgusted, but Hawkeye appears to have a change of heart about Lacy; he compliments him and invites him to the Swamp for some drinks. B.J. is initially shocked, but Hawkeye quietly insinuates to him that he has a plan is to slip Lacy a mickey to get him off the line. After a couple of drinks mixed by Hawkeye, Lacy doubles over in pain, and while B.J. quickly diagnoses it as gastritis, Hawkeye argues it is appendicitis, requiring surgery. Hearing this, Lacy protests, saying he’ll lose his command if he’s off the line for too long, which only empowers Hawkeye to order Lacy to be prepped for surgery.

In the scrub room, Hawkeye and B.J. have it out – B.J. reminds Hawkeye that what he’s doing is mutilation and unethical, but Hawkeye, citing doctors back home who do needless surgeries for money, believes it will save the lives of all the soldiers who, with Lacy reassigned, won’t have to climb Hill 403. B.J. warns Hawkeye that he’ll hate himself for the rest of his life, but Hawkeye replies, “I’ll be able to hate myself with a clear conscience”, and performs the appendectomy, but B.J. refuses to help.

Weary, Hawkeye later returns to the Swamp and quietly admits that he tossed Lacy’s “pink and perfect” appendix into the scrap bucket. But then B.J. informs a disbelieving Hawkeye that more wounded are on the way, just a few seconds before the P.A. announces it. B.J. adds: “You treated a symptom – the disease goes merrily on.” He helps a tired and frustrated Hawkeye back to his feet, and the two return to the OR.

https://mash.fandom.com/wiki/Preventative_Medicine_(TV_series_episode)

Similarly in House M.D. President Dibala was the ruthless African dictator that was the patient in the episode The Tyrant. He was killed by the treatment that Foreman gave him because Chase masked what Dibala’s real illness was.

WETDIVISION is the calculus that irregular forms of killings or Targeted Killings such as the FBI use can reshape the battle landscape such that a better outcome will emerge.

Henry Kissinger asserted Good foreign policy is probably not Fair foreign policy but what must occur.

For those like Robert F. Kennedy lifelong anti mafia man and Ted Gunderson anti racketeering to be in the same organization as J. Edgar Hoover, Dulles, and others was a disaster and the rupture point between bureau and their Secrataries.

What does bureau mean in government?

Definition of bureau

a division of a government department or an independent administrative unit. an office for collecting or distributing news or information, coordinating work, or performing specified services

Command Decisions are high level decisions for irregular acts for reasons only the very top know.

Thus the Cabal of the very top must impose their will down to reluctant bureuas who may not like what they are ordered to do, will likely not want to do what they are told to do.

It this rupture Ted Gunderson, Robert F. Kennedy, and John F. Kennedy fell into as they broke with Wild Bill Donovan, Dulles, and the Windsors to protect the US Constitution as if it were a Bureua that would not be budged.

Published by Edward Paul Donegan

Civil libertarian https://archive.org/download/genoracketeering_202001/JulyDistUSSS.zip

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