It should be no surprise to
anyone in the world at this point in history, that the CIA holds no allegiance
to any country.
January 19, 2020
“There
is a kind of character in thy life, That to the observer doth thy history,
fully unfold.”
–
William Shakespeare
Once again we find ourselves in
a situation of crisis, where the entire world holds its breath all at once and
can only wait to see whether this volatile black cloud floating amongst us will
breakout into a thunderstorm of nuclear war or harmlessly pass us by. The majority
in the world seem to have the impression that this destructive fate totters
back and forth at the whim of one man. It is only normal then, that during such
times of crisis, we find ourselves trying to analyze and predict the thoughts
and motives of just this one person. The assassination of Maj. Gen. Qasem
Soleimani, a true hero for his fellow countrymen and undeniably an essential
key figure in combating terrorism in Southwest Asia, was a terrible crime, an
abhorrently repugnant provocation. It was meant to cause an apoplectic fervour,
it was meant to make us who desire peace, lose our minds in indignation. And
therefore, that is exactly what we should not do.
In order to assess such
situations, we cannot lose sight of the whole picture, and righteous
indignation unfortunately causes the opposite to occur. Our focus becomes
narrower and narrower to the point where we can only see or react moment to
moment with what is right in front of our face. We are reduced to an obsession
of twitter feeds, news blips and the doublespeak of ‘official government
statements’.
Thus, before we may find firm
ground to stand on regarding the situation of today, we must first have an
understanding as to what caused the United States to enter into an endless
campaign of regime-change warfare after WWII, or as former Chief of Special Operations
for the Joint Chiefs of Staff Col. Prouty stated, three decades of the
Indochina war.
An Internal Shifting of Chess
Pieces in the Shadows
It is interesting timing that
on Sept 2, 1945, the very day that WWII ended, Ho Chi Minh would announce the
independence of Indochina. That on the very day that one of the most
destructive wars to ever occur in history ended, another long war was declared
at its doorstep. Churchill would announce his “Iron Curtain” against communism
on March 5th, 1946, and there was no turning back at that point. The
world had a mere 6 months to recover before it would be embroiled in another
terrible war, except for the French, who would go to war against the Viet Minh
opponents in French Indochina only days after WWII was over.
In a previous paper I wrote
titled “On
Churchill’s Sinews of Peace”, I went over a major re-organisation of the American
government and its foreign intelligence bureau on the onset of Truman’s de
facto presidency. Recall that there was an attempted military coup d’état,
which was exposed by
General Butler in
a public address in 1933, against the Presidency of FDR who was only
inaugurated that year. One could say that there was a very marked disapproval
from shadowy corners for how Roosevelt would organise the government.
One key element to this
reorganisation under Truman was the dismantling of the previously existing
foreign intelligence bureau that was formed by FDR, the Office of Strategic
Services (OSS) on Sept 20, 1945 only two weeks after WWII was officially
declared over. The OSS would be replaced by the CIA officially on Sept 18,
1947, with two years of an American intelligence purge and the internal
shifting of chess pieces in the shadows. In addition, de-facto President Truman
would also found the United States National Security Council on Sept 18, 1947,
the same day he founded the CIA. The NSC was a council whose intended function
was to serve as the President’s principal arm for coordinating national
security, foreign policies and policies among various government agencies.
In Col. Prouty’s book he states, “In 1955, I was designated to establish an office of special operations
in compliance with National Security Council (NSC) Directive #5412 of March 15,
1954. This NSC Directive for the first time in the history of the
United States defined covert operations and assigned that role to the Central
Intelligence Agency to perform such missions, provided they had been
directed to do so by the NSC, and further ordered active-duty Armed Forces
personnel to avoid such operations. At the same time, the Armed Forces were
directed to “provide the military support of the clandestine operations of the
CIA” as an official function.”
What this meant, was that there
was to be an intermarriage of the foreign intelligence bureau with the
military, and that the foreign intelligence bureau would act as top dog in the
relationship, only taking orders from the NSC. Though the NSC includes the
President, as we will see, the President is very far from being in the position
of determining the NSC’s policies.
An Inheritance of Secret Wars
“There is no instance of a nation benefitting from prolonged warfare.”
– Sun Tzu
On January 20th,
1961, John F. Kennedy was inaugurated as President of the United States. Along
with inheriting the responsibility of the welfare of the country and its
people, he was to also inherit a secret war with communist Cuba run by the CIA.
JFK was disliked from the onset
by the CIA and certain corridors of the Pentagon, they knew where he stood on
foreign matters and that it would be in direct conflict for what they had been
working towards for nearly 15 years. Kennedy would inherit the CIA secret operation
against Cuba, which Prouty confirms in his book, was quietly upgraded by the
CIA from the Eisenhower administration’s March 1960 approval of a modest
Cuban-exile support program (which included small air drop and over-the-beach
operations) to a 3,000 man invasion brigade just before Kennedy entered office.
This was a massive change in
plans that was determined by neither President Eisenhower, who warned at the
end of his term of the military industrial complex as a loose cannon, nor
President Kennedy, but rather the foreign intelligence bureau who has never
been subject to election or judgement by the people. It shows the level of
hostility that Kennedy encountered as soon as he entered office, and
the limitations of a President’s power when he does not hold support from these
intelligence and military quarters.
Within three months into JFK’s
term, Operation Bay of Pigs (April 17th to 20th 1961)
was scheduled. As the popular revisionist history goes; JFK refused to provide
air cover for the exiled Cuban brigade and the land invasion was a calamitous
failure and a decisive victory for Castro’s Cuba. It was indeed an
embarrassment for President Kennedy who had to take public responsibility for
the failure, however, it was not an embarrassment because of his questionable
competence as a leader. It was an embarrassment because, had he not taken
public responsibility, he would have had to explain the real reason why it
failed. That the CIA and military were against him and that he did not have
control over them. If Kennedy were to admit such a thing, he would have lost
all credibility as a President in his own country and internationally, and
would have put the people of the United States in immediate danger amidst a
Cold War.
What really occurred was that
there was a cancellation of the essential pre-dawn airstrike, by the Cuban
Exile Brigade bombers from Nicaragua, to destroy Castro’s last three combat
jets. This airstrike was ordered by Kennedy himself. Kennedy was always against
an American invasion of Cuba, and striking Castro’s last jets by the Cuban
Exile Brigade would have limited Castro’s threat, without the U.S. directly
supporting a regime change operation within Cuba. This went fully against the
CIA’s plan for Cuba.
Kennedy’s order for the
airstrike on Castro’s jets would be cancelled by Special Assistant for National
Security Affairs McGeorge Bundy, four hours before the Exile Brigade’s B-26s
were to take off from Nicaragua, Kennedy was not brought into this decision. In
addition, the Director of Central Intelligence Allen Dulles, the man in charge
of the Bay of Pigs operation was unbelievably out of the country on the day of
the landings.
Col. Prouty, who was Chief of
Special Operations during this time, elaborates on this situation “Everyone connected with the planning of the
Bay of Pigs invasion knew that the policy dictated by NSC 5412, positively
prohibited the utilization of active-duty military personnel in covert
operations. At no time was an “air cover” position written into the official
invasion plan…The “air cover” story that has been created is incorrect.”
As a result, JFK who well
understood the source of this fiasco, set up a Cuban Study Group the day after
and charged it with the responsibility of determining the cause for the failure
of the operation. The study group, consisting of Allen Dulles, Gen. Maxwell
Taylor, Adm. Arleigh Burke and Attorney General Robert Kennedy (the only member
JFK could trust), concluded that the failure was due to Bundy’s telephone call
to General Cabell (who was also CIA Deputy Director) that cancelled the
President’s air strike order.
Kennedy had them.
Humiliatingly, CIA Director
Allen Dulles was part of formulating the conclusion that the Bay of Pigs op was
a failure because of the CIA’s intervention into the President’s orders. This
allowed for Kennedy to issue the National Security Action Memorandum #55 on
June 28th, 1961, which began the process of changing the
responsibility from the CIA to the Joint Chiefs of Staff. As Prouty states, “When fully implemented, as Kennedy had
planned, after his reelection in 1964, it would have taken the CIA out of the
covert operation business. This proved to be one of the first nails in John F.
Kennedy’s coffin.”
If this was not enough of a
slap in the face to the CIA, Kennedy forced the resignation of CIA Director
Allen Dulles, CIA Deputy Director for Plans Richard M. Bissell Jr. and CIA
Deputy Director Charles Cabell.
In Oct 1962, Kennedy was
informed that Cuba had offensive Soviet missiles 90 miles from American shores.
Soviet ships with more missiles were on their way towards Cuba but ended up
turning around last minute. Rumours started to abound that JFK had cut a secret
deal with Russian Premier Khrushchev, which was that the U.S. would not invade
Cuba if the Soviets withdrew their missiles. Criticisms of JFK being soft on
communism began to stir.
NSAM #263, closely overseen by
Kennedy, was released on Oct 11th, 1963, and outlined a policy
decision “to withdraw 1,000 military
personnel [from Vietnam] by the end of 1963” and further stated that “It should be possible to withdraw the bulk of
U.S. personnel [including the CIA and military] by 1965.” The Armed Forces
newspaper Stars and Stripes had
the headline U.S. TROOPS SEEN OUT OF VIET BY ’65. Kennedy was winning the game
and the American people.
This was to be the final nail
in Kennedy’s coffin.
Kennedy was brutally shot down
only one month later, on Nov, 22nd 1963. His death should not
just be seen as a tragic loss but, more importantly, it should be recognised
for the successful military coup d’état that it was and is. The CIA
showed what lengths it was ready to go to if a President stood in its way. (For
more information on this coup refer to District Attorney of New Orleans at the
time, Jim Garrison’s book. And the excellently researched Oliver Stone movie
“JFK”)
Through the Looking Glass
On Nov. 26th 1963,
a full four days after Kennedy’s murder, de facto President Johnson signed NSAM
#273 to begin the change of Kennedy’s policy under #263. And on March 4th,
1964, Johnson signed NSAM #288 that marked the full escalation of the Vietnam
War and involved 2,709,918 Americans directly serving in Vietnam, with
9,087,000 serving with the U.S. Armed Forces during this period.
The Vietnam War, or more accurately
the Indochina War, would continue for another 12 years after Kennedy’s death,
lasting a total of 20 years for Americans.
Scattered black ops wars
continued, but the next large scale-never ending war that would involve the
world would begin full force on Sept 11, 2001 under the laughable title War on
Terror, which is basically another Iron Curtain, a continuation of a 74 year
Cold War. A war that is not meant to end until the ultimate regime changes are
accomplished and the world sees the toppling of Russia and China. Iraq was
destined for invasion long before the vague Gulf War of 1990 and even before
Saddam Hussein was being backed by the Americans in the Iraq-Iran war in the
1980s. Iran already suffered a CIA backed regime change in 1979.
It had been understood far in
advance by the CIA and US military that the toppling of sovereignty in Iraq,
Libya, Syria and Iran needed to occur before Russia and China could be taken
over. Such war tactics were formulaic after 3 decades of counterinsurgency
against the CIA fueled “communist-insurgency” of Indochina. This is how today’s
terrorist-inspired insurgency functions, as a perfect CIA formula for an
endless bloodbath.
Former CIA Deputy Director
(2010-2013) Michael Morell, who was supporting Hillary Clinton during the
presidential election campaign and vehemently against the election of Trump,
whom he claimed was being manipulated by Putin, said in a 2016 interview with
Charlie Rose that Russians and Iranians in Syria should be killed covertly to ‘pay the price’.
Therefore, when a drone stroke
occurs assassinating an Iranian Maj. Gen., even if the U.S. President takes
onus on it, I would not be so quick as to believe that that is necessarily the
case, or the full story. Just as I would not take the statements of President
Rouhani accepting responsibility for the Iranian military shooting down ‘by
accident’ the Boeing 737-800 plane which contained 176 civilians, who were
mostly Iranian, as something that can be relegated to criminal negligence, but
rather that there is very likely something else going on here.
I would also not be quick to
dismiss the timely release, or better described as leaked, draft letter from
the US Command in Baghdad to the Iraqi government that suggests a removal of
American forces from the country. Its timing certainly puts the President in a
compromised situation. Though the decision to keep the American forces within
Iraq or not is hardly a simple matter that the President alone can determine.
In fact there is no reason why, after reviewing the case of JFK, we should
think such a thing.
One could speculate that the
President was set up, with the official designation of the IRGC as “terrorist”
occurring in April 2019 by the US State Department, a decision that was
strongly supported by both Bolton and Pompeo, who were both members of the NSC
at the time. This made it legal for a US military drone strike to occur against
Soleimani under the 2001 AUMF, where the US military can attack any armed group
deemed to be a terrorist threat. Both Bolton and Pompeo made no secret that
they were overjoyed by Soleimani’s assassination and Bolton went so far as to
tweet “Hope this is the first step to regime change in Tehran.” Bolton has also
made it no secret that he is eager to testify against Trump in his possible
impeachment trial.
Former CIA Director Mike
Pompeo was recorded
at an unknown conference recently,
but judging from the gross laughter of the audience it consists of wannabe CIA
agents, where he admits that though West Points’ cadet motto is “You will not
lie, cheat, or steal, or tolerate those who do.”, his training under the CIA
was the very opposite, stating “I was
the CIA Director. We lied, we cheated, we stole. It was like we had entire
training courses. (long pause) It reminds you of the glory of the American
experiment.”
Thus, it should be no surprise
to anyone in the world at this point in history, that the CIA holds no
allegiance to any country. And it can be hardly expected that a President, who
is actively under attack from all sides within his own country, is in a
position to hold the CIA accountable for its past and future crimes.
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