Dynastic Successions Free Book

https://archive.org/download/genoracketeering_202001/DynasticSuccessions.epub

https://targetedmanhattanprojectvictim.blog/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/dynastic-successions-6.pdf

Ed Donegan’s theory argues that seemingly separate events in twentieth-century and twenty-first-century history are connected by hidden family identities, Cold War intelligence operations, aviation history, atomic-age secrecy, and political succession planning.

Dynastic Successions: The CIA in Control of US and Other Presidencies is a political, historical, and autobiographical work by Edward Paul Donegan. The book argues that hidden intelligence networks, especially connected to the CIA and Cold War covert operations, shaped American and foreign presidential succession, foreign policy, and public historical narratives.

The work combines memoir, conspiracy theory, Cold War history, intelligence criticism, and political interpretation. It builds on themes associated with Col. L. Fletcher Prouty, John Stockwell, John Pilger, Ted Gunderson, William Colby, Mark Lane, and other critics of covert power.

Accept No Substitutes

Short 1 page intro https://targetedmanhattanprojectvictim.blog/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/dynastic-successions-hello-world.pdf

At the center of the theory is Donegan’s own family history, especially his father, James Paul Donegan, whom Donegan connects to World War II aviation, atomic testing, Korean War reconnaissance, and circles associated with intelligence figures such as Fletcher Prouty and E. Howard Hunt.

The theory then expands from family history into a larger Cold War conflict between two models of American power: one associated with open aid, development, diplomacy, and support for newly independent nations; the other associated with covert intelligence operations, elite transatlantic networks, strongman politics, and hidden control.

Donegan also asserts that hidden family lineages, adoption, altered records, and protected identities were part of this covert world. In his account, these hidden identities connect European aristocratic history, the von Trapp family, Joseph Kennedy Sr., Dean Rusk, the Vatican, the OSS/CIA, and later American political families.

McMartin Preschool becomes, in Donegan’s theory, not merely a local institution but a hidden Cold War site connected to child development testing, identity management, psychological research, and intelligence-linked placement of children.

The theory further claims that Barack Obama Jr. and his family were part of Cold War and post-Cold War planning connected to Indonesia, USAID, the Seattle World’s Fair era, and the larger military-industrial vision of the twenty-first century.

The purpose of the book is not simply to prove one isolated claim, but to show how a long chain of disconnected public events may form a single hidden historical pathway when viewed through Donegan’s autobiographical experience, family history, Cold War intelligence networks, and recurring patterns of secrecy, surveillance, and silencing.