mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-29 09:16:21 -05:00
315 lines
17 KiB
XML
315 lines
17 KiB
XML
<xml><p>
|
|
Article: 569 of sgi.talk.ratical
|
|
From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
|
|
Subject: Top Secret: How To Kill--"The CIA's Secret Weapons Systems"
|
|
Keywords: our culture has lost its moral, ethical, and spiritual foundations
|
|
Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
|
|
Date: Wed, 8 Apr 1992 15:56:51 GMT
|
|
Lines: 321</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> unless we know MUCH MORE about the atrocities committed "in the interests
|
|
and name of `national security,'" how can we possibly become sufficiently
|
|
motivated and driven to dedicate our energies towards changing this form
|
|
of "government" by lies, dissembling, expediency, profit-as-god, and
|
|
murder? we have no idea what is "done in our name." if we did, we would
|
|
no longer be able to participate in its commoditized seductiveness because
|
|
we would not be able to look ourselves in the mirror or sleep at night.
|
|
--ratitor</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> the following is taken from the June, 1978 issue of "Gallery" magazine:
|
|
__________________________________________________________________________
|
|
THE CIA'S SECRET WEAPONS SYSTEMS
|
|
by Andrew Stark</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Exploding wine bottles, guns constructed out of pipes,
|
|
bullets made of teeth, aspirin explosives: they sound like
|
|
props from a second-rate spy story. Horrifyingly enough,
|
|
they are real. The CIA has spent a great deal of its time--
|
|
and your money--developing countless bizarre weapons for
|
|
assassination, sabotage, and mass destruction. If that's
|
|
news to you, it's because the CIA doesn't want these
|
|
products, some of which are quite easy to put together, to
|
|
fall into the "wrong hands." As for whether they are in the
|
|
right hands now--judge for yourself.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The CIA has developed many exotic and sophisticated devices
|
|
intended for use in interrogation, sabotage, and assassination.
|
|
These weapons are necessary--if you grant that what the CIA itself
|
|
does is necessary. If the CIA wants to eliminate a key KGB agent
|
|
operating in Hungary, it faces certain problems. It would be
|
|
virtually impossible to slip a deadly weapon, such as a gun or
|
|
bomb, past Hungarian customs officials. Thus, the CIA assassin
|
|
must assemble his weapon from commonly obtainable materials after
|
|
he crosses the border.
|
|
The CIA agent might decide to construct a urea nitrate
|
|
explosive, commonly known as a urine bomb. This weapon is quite
|
|
deadly, easily exploded, and consists primarily of nitric acid and
|
|
urine. The urine bomb is one of literally hundreds of murderous
|
|
weapons in the CIA arsenal.
|
|
"The New York Times" of September 26, 1975 revealed the
|
|
existence of guns that shoot cobra-venom darts. Then there was the
|
|
shoe polish compound intended to make Fidel Castro's beard fall
|
|
out, so that he would lose his "charisma." And CIA laboratories in
|
|
Fort Monmouth, New Jersey developed the famous rifle that shoots
|
|
around corners.
|
|
Some CIA weapons are designed to kill many people--deadly germs
|
|
can be released in subways; others are intended to kill a single,
|
|
specific individual--the Borgia ring contains deadly poison to be
|
|
slipped into a victim's drink; and still others are standard
|
|
weapons supplied for such missions as overthrowing the Allende
|
|
government in Chile in 1973.
|
|
The information about CIA weapons that you will read in this
|
|
article generally has not been made public before. It was not
|
|
intended to be. But your tax dollars pay for these devices; it is
|
|
your right to know about them.
|
|
There is a booklet, written in 1977 and distributed to a select
|
|
group of U.S. mercenaries, titled "CIA Improvised Sabotage
|
|
Devices." This instructional guidebook, part of "the Combat
|
|
Bookshelf," was published by Desert Publications, P.O. Box 22005,
|
|
Phoenix, Arizona 85028. If you want to know how the CIA turns a
|
|
cigar box into an explosive that can destroy a 10000-gallon
|
|
capacity storage tank, then "CIA Improvised Sabotage Devices" is
|
|
what you should read. You will need it if you want to build the
|
|
"Water-Drip Electric Delay," a bomb that requires little more than
|
|
wood scrap, a tin can, and a battery. The "Pocket Watch Electric
|
|
Delay" requires little more than a watch, a screw, and a battery.
|
|
The "Mousetrap Electric Release" is another bomb, this one
|
|
requiring a mousetrap, a trip wire, a battery, and little else. It
|
|
is described as "an excellent device to use with bazooka rockets
|
|
against trucks, tanks, or locomotives." The "Chemical
|
|
Instantaneous Initiator" is made from a sugar-chlorate mix and is
|
|
effective in sabotaging trains. The "Martini Glass Shaped Charge"
|
|
is a bomb that also can be made out of a beer can. You might want
|
|
to try to construct the "Vehicle Booby Trap." The "Potassium
|
|
Chlorate and Sugar Igniter" and the "Sawdust, Moth Flakes, and Oil
|
|
Incendiary" can be made with only what you see in their titles.
|
|
For these and more than fifty other CIA devices, step-by-step
|
|
instructions on how to make them and illustrations of what they
|
|
should look like when completed are given. Turn a wine bottle into
|
|
a bomb. Build a land-mine rocket. Manufacture napalm in your
|
|
basement. Even the simple how-tos of causing a dust explosion can
|
|
be found in "CIA Improvised Sabotage Devices."
|
|
Why is the CIA so deeply involved in sabotage techniques? The
|
|
CIA might think it is in this country's interest to delay
|
|
scientific work being done by another nation. Or, the CIA might
|
|
want to disrupt a nation's economy in the hope that the resulting
|
|
chaos will lead to civil unrest and the overthrow of the existing
|
|
government (some of this actually happened in Chile). The original
|
|
John Rockefeller used such tactics against his competitors. He
|
|
simply had their refineries blown up.
|
|
Another pamphlet the CIA would not like you to see is titled
|
|
"How to Kill," written by John Minnery, edited by Robert Brown and
|
|
Peder Lund, and published by Paladin Press, Box 1307, Boulder,
|
|
Colorado 80306. The reason the CIA would prefer that you not see
|
|
this eighty-eight-page pamphlet, which is unavailable at bookstores
|
|
and newsstands, is because it contains a number of "ingenious"
|
|
methods of doing what the title says. Also, Paladin Press, which
|
|
published a book called "OSS Sabotage and Demolition Manual," is
|
|
widely regarded by journalists as an organization with close ties
|
|
to mercenary groups and the CIA. Paladin Press doesn't want you to
|
|
know that, but how else could they have published the "OSS Sabotage
|
|
and Demolition Manual?" The Office of Strategic Services was the
|
|
precursor of today's CIA.
|
|
This writer's call to Colorado yielded the following
|
|
conversation:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> "How could you publish the "OSS Sabotage and Demolition Manual,"
|
|
I asked Peter Lund, editor and publisher of Paladin Press, "if your
|
|
organization, at the least, was not dealing with former OSS agents?
|
|
And what about "How to Kill?"
|
|
"I don't talk to journalists," Lund said.
|
|
"You're called the Paladin Press. You must publish books. Can
|
|
I order them?"
|
|
"No."
|
|
"Why not? You're a publisher, aren't you?"
|
|
"We're afraid our publications might fall into the wrong hands."
|
|
"What are the right hands?" I asked.
|
|
"I don't talk to journalists."
|
|
"Have you ever heard of Desert Publications?" I asked.
|
|
"A fine outfit," Lund said. "If they recommend you, I'll send
|
|
you our material."
|
|
"That's my problem," I said. "They don't seem to have a phone
|
|
number."
|
|
"Well, they're a good group."
|
|
"Listen," I said, "wasn't your group, and Desert Publications
|
|
besides, involved in CIA mercenary activity in Africa?"
|
|
"I don't know anything about that."
|
|
"Were you in the Special Forces?"
|
|
"July 1967 to July 1968 in Vietnam."
|
|
"Were you CIA?"
|
|
"I was MACV [Military Armed Forces Command Vietnam]."
|
|
"You weren't affiliated with CIA?"
|
|
"I didn't say that."
|
|
"What do you say?"
|
|
"We did joint operations with CIA on the Phoenix Program."
|
|
"Wasn't that a murder operation?"
|
|
"No. It was snatching people."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The Phoenix Program was designed for a job that the CIA
|
|
euphemistically described as "eliminating the Viet Cong
|
|
infrastructure." In reality, it was a rampant reign of terror run
|
|
out of CIA headquarters at Langley, Virginia. Former CIA director
|
|
William Colby later termed the program "effective." The Phoenix
|
|
Program was a naked murder campaign, as proved by every realistic
|
|
report, ranging from the Bertrand Russell Tribunal to the Dellums
|
|
Committee to admissions by CIA agents themselves. The program
|
|
killed--and *none* of these killings occurred in combat--18000
|
|
people, mostly women and children.
|
|
But what about Peder Lund, editor and publisher of Paladin
|
|
Press? The book he edited and published, "How to Kill," outlined a
|
|
surfeit of murder methods, horrific techniques of causing people to
|
|
die. For example:
|
|
"Without getting too deeply into the realm of the bizarre,"
|
|
wrote John Minnery, the author of "How to Kill" as he proceeded to
|
|
just that, "a specially loaded bullet made from a human tooth
|
|
(bicuspid) could be fired under the jaw or through the mouth into
|
|
the head. The tooth is a very hard bone, and its enamel shell
|
|
would allow it to penetrate into the brain. The intention here is
|
|
also to hide the cause of death because the examiner in his search
|
|
for a projectile will disregard bone fragments."
|
|
One last example from "How to Kill" should give you the flavor
|
|
of the book:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Lesson Nine: Hot Wire</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> "Essentially, the weapon is an electrified grid in the urinal
|
|
basin. This can take the form of a screen cover for the drain
|
|
or a metal grill. If the urinal is completely porcelain, the
|
|
screen must be added by the assassin. The drain cover is
|
|
connected to the electrical system of the washroom by means of
|
|
an insulated cord that is hidden behind the plumbing.
|
|
"What happens when the subject uses the urinal should be
|
|
obvious now. The subject's urine, which is a salty liquid and
|
|
a perfect conductor of electricity, makes contact with the
|
|
charged grid, and the shock will kill him."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> This reporter's investigation revealed that the "Hot Wire" was
|
|
child's play compared to certain other CIA weapons devices. For
|
|
instance, I was able to obtain Volumes One and Two of the "CIA
|
|
Black Book" on improvised munitions, volumes that are stamped "for
|
|
official use only" on almost every page. It is obvious why the CIA
|
|
would like these books to remain secret. With elaborate
|
|
instructions, they describe how to make high explosives from
|
|
aspirin, how to construct a nail grenade, and how to turn a Coke
|
|
bottle into a bomb.
|
|
Described in detail in the "Black Book" is the previously
|
|
mentioned urea nitrate explosive, or, as it is known to the pros,
|
|
"the piss bomb." Instructions for the preparation of this weapon
|
|
assure the maker that animal urine will do as well as human; the
|
|
important thing is to have ten cups of it, boil it down to one cup,
|
|
and mix it with the nitric acid.
|
|
Also described in the "Black Book" is how to construct a pipe
|
|
pistol, which, as the name indicates, is a gun constructed out of a
|
|
pipe. Other weapons include a cooking syringe filled with poison
|
|
that can be stabbed into "the subject's" stomach; a cyanide gas
|
|
pistol; a throat cutter gauntlet knife (razor sharp and only an
|
|
inch or so in length); and a mixture of fertilizer and aluminum
|
|
powder that can be made into a powerful bomb.
|
|
Why build murder weapons out of such weird material? Is the CIA
|
|
insane?
|
|
No. In its own way, the whole thing is perfectly logical.
|
|
The pamphlet "How to Kill" explained it all: "As most of these
|
|
devices are homemade, this precludes the possibility of their being
|
|
traced. They are, in effect, `sanitized' and perfect for
|
|
assassinations, where weapons are prohibited, or where customs in
|
|
the hostile country are stringent, so these can be made from local
|
|
materials."
|
|
Being a contract killer for the CIA is not all roses. You
|
|
cannot kill in just any way. A number of attempts have been made
|
|
on Fidel Castro's life--some with the CIA and the Mafia
|
|
cooperating--and some of them may have failed because of
|
|
restrictions imposed on the potential assassins. It would be
|
|
unacceptable for Castro's murder to be laid at the door of the CIA.
|
|
This would make Castro a martyr in the eyes of his countrymen.
|
|
Thus, a method that would suggest death by natural causes must be
|
|
found.
|
|
Abundant speculation and considerable evidence suggest that the
|
|
CIA or some other government agency arranged for the "natural"
|
|
deaths of David Ferrie, Jack Ruby, George De Mohrenschildt, and
|
|
other potential witnesses into the assassination of John Kennedy.
|
|
Some methods of killing, like the injection of an air bubble into
|
|
the bloodstream, will often go unnoticed by medical examiners.
|
|
Another hard-to-trace method of killing is to mail a snake to
|
|
the victim. This is known as killing by long distance. A
|
|
disadvantage to this method is that the snake might bite an
|
|
innocent third party who just happens to open the package. The
|
|
advantage is that once the snake has struck, the evidence can
|
|
simply slither away.
|
|
Sometimes, as the CIA knows, killing has to be done at close
|
|
range. For this purpose, a valuable weapon is the ice pick with a
|
|
blood arrester attached. The blood arrester is a cloth wrapped
|
|
near the tip of the ice pick. When the pick is shoved into the
|
|
victim, the spurting blood is absorbed by the blood arrester.
|
|
People who see the victim fall will probably think he has had a
|
|
heart attack. While the onlookers try to help the victim, the
|
|
assassin uses this valuable ten or fifteen seconds to escape
|
|
unnoticed.
|
|
Often it is advisable to use what is called in the trade a
|
|
"quiet weapon." Silenced weapons can include pistols, rifles, and
|
|
even machine guns.
|
|
Poison is a quiet killer. Here is a partial list of the poisons
|
|
the CIA has become expert at administering: oil of bitter almonds;
|
|
ant paste; cadmium, used in vapor form, and death is delayed four
|
|
hours; radiator cleaner, also causing a delayed death;
|
|
Cantharides (Spanish Fly); ethyl mercury; and freon, heated by a
|
|
flame. These poisons and many others are listed in "How to Kill."
|
|
The author then cautions the reader:
|
|
"Unless otherwise stated, these poisons are either to be
|
|
injected into the subject, or taken orally by him by adding it to
|
|
his food. Use common sense in the application of these potions
|
|
and, if possible, double the O.D. necessary."
|
|
W.H. Bowart, in his book, "Operation Mind Control" described the
|
|
CIA's use of drugs: "In 1953, the CIA made plans to purchase ten
|
|
kilograms of LSD for use in `drug experiments with animals and
|
|
human beings.' Since there are more than 10000 doses in a gram,
|
|
that meant the CIA wanted 100 million doses. The CIA obviously
|
|
intended to `corner the market' on LSD so that other countries
|
|
would not be ahead of the U.S. in their potential for `LSD
|
|
warfare.'"
|
|
Dr. Albert Hoffman, an early researcher into the uses of LSD,
|
|
was horrified by what the CIA was doing: "I had perfected LSD for
|
|
medical use, not as a weapon. It can make you insane or even kill
|
|
you if it is not properly used under medical supervision. In any
|
|
case, the research should be done by medical people and not by
|
|
soldiers or intelligence agencies."
|
|
Perhaps the most frightening weapon of all is the one that can
|
|
be used to alter weather and climate. It was used with
|
|
considerable success in Vietnam. It slowed troop movements with
|
|
heavy rains, and it destroyed the rice crop, as well. The danger
|
|
is that these climatological changes may become permanent,
|
|
affecting not only enemies of the United States, but also the
|
|
entire planet.
|
|
Finally, considerable evidence exists that the United States,
|
|
through the CIA, employed germ warfare during the Korean War. A
|
|
number of captured pilots testified that germ warfare was used, but
|
|
their testimony was dismissed as brainwashing. A Marine Corps
|
|
colonel named Frank H. Schwable signed a germ warfare confession
|
|
and, according to W.H. Bowart, "named names, cited missions,
|
|
described meetings and strategy conferences."
|
|
Schwable later repudiated his confession. But the charges of
|
|
germ warfare were taken up in front of the United Nations, and a
|
|
number of countries believed them.
|
|
The United States, incidentally, was later charged with using
|
|
nerve gas in Vietnam.
|
|
What you have read on these pages is pretty revolting stuff.
|
|
Yet, if the world ought to be saved from Communism, who can say it
|
|
is not necessary? One danger, of course, is that these terrible
|
|
weapons have been introduced into our body politic and have
|
|
produced strange and terrible fruits on our own native soil. When
|
|
assassination becomes government policy, when men are trained to
|
|
kill in every conceivable way, when morality is set aside for a
|
|
"higher good," can even the President of the United States consider
|
|
himself safe?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Andrew Stark is a pseudonym for a specialist on weaponry.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>--
|
|
daveus rattus </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> yer friendly neighborhood ratman</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> KOYAANISQATSI</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
|
|
in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
|
|
5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.</p></xml> |