mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
196 lines
13 KiB
XML
196 lines
13 KiB
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
|
|
<div class="article">
|
|
<p> THE KENNEDY FILES
|
|
FILE #3</p>
|
|
<p> Copyright 1992 by Mark D. Turner
|
|
P.O. Box 1955, Bluefield, WV 24701-6955
|
|
The Outer Limits BBS - 703-322-2529</p>
|
|
<p>=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
This file may be freely distributed but Mark D. Turner retains all
|
|
copyrights. Do not make any changes to this file, please. Comments
|
|
and suggestions for future issues are appreciated.
|
|
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-</p>
|
|
<p> THE GEORGE BUSH CONNECTION</p>
|
|
<p>In this day and age when some people can not even name the president
|
|
of the United States, it is not the least bit surprising that most
|
|
have no knowledge of George Bush's possible connections to the Kennedy
|
|
assassination. The relationship has its roots in Bush's "former"
|
|
employment with the CIA. As CIA agents have been quoted in the past,
|
|
you never really leave the Agency.</p>
|
|
<p> THE CIA DID IT!</p>
|
|
<p>Many researchers place the blame for the murder of John F. Kennedy on
|
|
the CIA. The easiest way to clear the mafia or other non-governmental
|
|
groups is to look at the massive cover-up that the government has
|
|
participated in over the years. If mafia boss Carlos Marcello had
|
|
really ordered the hit, could he have had the CIA and FBI suppress so
|
|
much evidence from the public for so long? Could he have had the
|
|
normal security lowered for the assassination? Could he have had the
|
|
Washington D.C. phone system knocked out of order for an hour right
|
|
as the shooting took place? Could he have convinced the Warren
|
|
Commission to release such an idiotic official version of the murder?
|
|
Of course not. The set-up and cover-up had to take place INSIDE of
|
|
the government, not outside.</p>
|
|
<p>The CIA seemed to have the most (and best) motives for the elimination
|
|
of Kennedy. During the Eisenhower presidency, the CIA came up with a
|
|
plan to invade Cuba at the Bay of Pigs. The thought was that the
|
|
citizens would hear of the attack and join in to overthrow Castro.
|
|
Former Cubans were trained by the CIA and the U.S. government fur-nished them with weapons and transportation. Since it was near the
|
|
end of his administration, Eisenhower put the plan on hold so the
|
|
new president would not have to deal with any problems which might
|
|
arise from the mission.</p>
|
|
<p>Upon entering office Kennedy decided that the plan's requirement of 16
|
|
planes would obviously reveal American backing of the plot. The plan
|
|
had hoped that American involvement would not become known to the
|
|
world. The use of 16 planes would make American backing obvious to
|
|
everyone. Kennedy cut the number of planes down to six. As the date
|
|
of the invasion neared, Kennedy decided against the plan and announced
|
|
in the press that the United States would not invade Cuba with the
|
|
military.</p>
|
|
<p>The CIA went ahead with the plan and quickly found that things were
|
|
not going as they had hoped for. They asked for more planes but were
|
|
told they would have to be held back until the forces captured a Cuban
|
|
airport. Then, the planes could be sent and the explanation would be
|
|
that they were captured planes which the rebels had put into use. The
|
|
CIA-backed rebels never got that far and were quickly defeated. The
|
|
citizens of Cuba never joined them in the fight. The CIA, as has been
|
|
revealed in books by participants, blamed Kennedy for the defeat. The
|
|
books and papers reveal a deep hatred for the imagined betrayal.</p>
|
|
<p>Later, Kennedy formed a panel to keep him informed as to what was
|
|
going on in Vietnam. American involvement was still low at this
|
|
point but Kennedy was worried. He has been quoted as saying he could
|
|
not justify sending American boys half-way around the world to fight
|
|
communism when it existed just south of Florida in Cuba. One of the
|
|
panel's members was Allen Dulles, head of the CIA. Kennedy caught
|
|
him in various lies and fired him. The fact that the CIA had kept
|
|
training Cubans for another invasion until Kennedy finally sent in
|
|
FBI agents to break up their camps and confiscate their weapons was
|
|
another reason for the dismissal. Other high-ranking CIA officials
|
|
were fired, too, including the brother of Dallas' mayor. Kennedy
|
|
changed the operating procedure of the CIA so they would have to get
|
|
approval for any future covert actions from Robert Kennedy.</p>
|
|
<p>Due to persistent problems with the CIA and their continual involve-ment in matters which were not their concern, Kennedy declared that
|
|
he was going to shatter the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter
|
|
them to the winds. Even former president Truman, who had created
|
|
the CIA, expressed concerns about their behavior. Kennedy was
|
|
apparently going to leave their destruction until after the next
|
|
election but did start withdrawing troops from Vietnam, much to the
|
|
dislike of the CIA. One of Johnson's first moves after he replaced
|
|
Kennedy as president was to increase American involvement in Vietnam.
|
|
It seems he owned an airline company that was contracted to fly troops
|
|
back and forth across the Pacific Ocean, but that is another matter.</p>
|
|
<p>Later, E. Howard Hunt, on behalf of the CIA, faked cables to implicate
|
|
John F. Kennedy in the assassination of South Vietnam's president, Ngo
|
|
Dinh Diem. So, it is apparent that the CIA disliked Kennedy and had
|
|
the means to set-up and cover-up the assassination. Now, it is known
|
|
that they convinced the Warren Commission that the Soviet Union and
|
|
Cuba had murdered Kennedy. They scared the members into believing
|
|
that revealing this to the American public would result in a nuclear
|
|
war in which millions would be killed. To further this theory, they
|
|
produced fake evidence showing that Oswald had visited the Soviet and
|
|
Cuban embassies in Mexico to arrange the killing and escape. The head
|
|
of the CIA operations in Mexico has since admitted that no such real
|
|
evidence ever existed. A Warren Commission investigator has admitted
|
|
that they acted to save millions by sacrificing one man (Oswald).</p>
|
|
<p>The job was not too hard to pull off since former CIA-head Allen
|
|
Dulles was a member of the Commission. He was the only one to attend
|
|
more than half of the hearings and was also in charge of deciding
|
|
what intelligence data was seen by the other members. President
|
|
Johnson didn't seem to find it strange to appoint the man that
|
|
Kennedy had fired to investigate his hated former boss' murder.</p>
|
|
<p> SO HOW DOES BUSH FIT IT?</p>
|
|
<p>Although he denies it, there is a growing body of evidence that George
|
|
Bush was working for the CIA as early as 1961. Many feel he was
|
|
actually recruited during his college days (which is when he joined
|
|
the Skull and Bones Society, a front for the Illuminati). Bush claims
|
|
to have been working for his own oil company during the early 1960's.
|
|
It would make for a convenient front since he claims to have been off-shore on drilling rigs for weeks at a time. The rigs were located all
|
|
over the world. Was he really on the rigs or was he running around on
|
|
CIA business? The various biographies of Bush are all sketchy on this
|
|
phase of his life.</p>
|
|
<p>During this time, Bush had moved to HOUSTON, Texas. His wife was,
|
|
of course, BARBARA. His oil company was ZAPATA Off Shore Co. (which
|
|
he named after a communist Mexican revolutionary who would invade
|
|
towns and murder every man, woman and child. Bush also named an
|
|
earlier oil company after Zapata, a questionable choice for a hero).
|
|
The code name for the Bay of Pigs invasion was Operation ZAPATA!
|
|
A former high-ranking Pentagon official, Col. Fletcher Prouty, was
|
|
the man who secured two Navy ships for the operation. He has told
|
|
of seeing the two ships repainted to non-Navy colors for the
|
|
invasion. The ships were given the new names HOUSTON and BARBARA!</p>
|
|
<p>Of course, maybe the names were just coincidences, but Bush was
|
|
living in Houston with Barbara and running Zapata in 1961 during
|
|
the planning of the invasion. The name "Operation Zapata" was top
|
|
secret and known only to a very few.</p>
|
|
<p>In 1977 and 1978, the government released nearly 100000 pages of
|
|
documents on the Kennedy assassination. One which slipped out by
|
|
mistake was from the FBI to the State Department written a few days
|
|
after the assassination. The State Department was worried that anti-Castro groups in Miami might stage another invasion of Cuba in the
|
|
aftermath of the JFK murder. The FBI informed them that they had
|
|
questioned both pro-Castro and anti-Castro groups and could find no
|
|
information about such plans. The memo went on to state that the
|
|
information was passed along to "George Bush of the Central Intelli-gence Agency" the day after the assassination.</p>
|
|
<p>Why was the information passed along to the CIA? Probably because of
|
|
their previous invasion attempt and other planned attacks. Why George
|
|
Bush? Probably because he was involved in previous invasion plans!</p>
|
|
<p>When the document first surfaced no one paid much attention to it.
|
|
When the presidential campaigns began for the 1980 election then the
|
|
name George Bush caught researchers' eyes. When asked about the
|
|
memo, Bush denied working for the CIA at the time. As evidence built
|
|
that it was indeed him, the CIA claimed it was a different George Bush
|
|
although their policy had always been to neither confirm nor deny a
|
|
person's employment. The other George Bush was tracked down by
|
|
reporters and said that although he did work for the CIA at the time,
|
|
he was never involved in that sort of work. The interesting point
|
|
is that the CIA did not bother to contact the other George Bush and
|
|
inform him that reporters might soon be calling. Other evidence
|
|
surfaced that showed the George Bush mentioned in the document was
|
|
actually George H. W. Bush and had the same address as the famous
|
|
George Bush.</p>
|
|
<p>Another Bush connection involved George de Mohrenschildt, a rich
|
|
Russian oil man who lived in Texas when Lee Harvey Oswald settled
|
|
there after his trip to the Soviet Union. De Mohrenschildt was a
|
|
long-time CIA agent and quite possibly served as a CIA control officer
|
|
for Oswald. The Warren Commission described him and his wife as being
|
|
the two people friendliest to Oswald at the time of the assassination.
|
|
De Mohrenschildt's son-in-law told the Warren Commission that if any-one had helped with the assassination it was most likely de Mohren-schildt. De Mohrenschildt was also the man who moved Oswald to
|
|
Dallas.</p>
|
|
<p>Shortly before the House Select Committee on Assassinations started
|
|
meeting in the late 1970's a new doctor appeared in de Mohrenschildt's
|
|
town. De Mohrenschildt started seeing him and quickly became mentally
|
|
unstable. His wife convinced him to stop seeing the doctor. The
|
|
doctor then moved away and left a false forwarding address. The very
|
|
day the Committee tried to contact de Mohrenschildt about testifying,
|
|
he was found dead of a gun shot wound. His personal address book was
|
|
found and it contained the entry "Bush, George H. W. (Poppy) 1412 W.
|
|
Ohio also Zapata Petroleum Midland." Bush's full name is George
|
|
Herbert Walker Bush which matches the initials given and his earlier
|
|
oil company was named Zapata Petroleum Corp. Why was his name in de
|
|
Mohrenschildt's book? Is "Poppy" his CIA code name?</p>
|
|
<p>It is known that in the early 1960's de Mohrenschildt made frequent
|
|
trips to Houston, which was the location of Bush's home. He told
|
|
friends he was visiting the Brown brothers, who were close friends
|
|
and financial supporters of Lyndon Johnson. CIA documents reveal
|
|
that during the planning phase of Operation Zapata, de Mohrenschildt
|
|
made frequent trips to Mexico and Panama and gave reports to the CIA.
|
|
His son-in-law told the Warren Commission that he believed de Mohren-schildt was spying for the planned Cuban invasion.</p>
|
|
<p> A QUESTION OF CHARACTER</p>
|
|
<p>When Bush was picked to be director of the CIA in 1976, he testified
|
|
to Congress that he had never worked for the CIA before. Of course,
|
|
it did not make much sense to appoint a director who had no such back-ground but Congress approved him anyway. Now it would seem that Bush
|
|
committed perjury in his congressional testimony.</p>
|
|
<p>George Bush was apparently high enough in the CIA to help plan the
|
|
Bay of Pigs invasion. It would probably be safe to assume that he
|
|
even named the operation and its two ships. Considering the hatred
|
|
that the CIA felt toward Kennedy over their failed mission and Bush's
|
|
involvement in that same mission, it would be quite interesting to
|
|
know what Bush's feelings toward John F. Kennedy really were and what
|
|
his full role in the assassination investigation was.</p>
|
|
<p>Further information on the George Bush connection may be obtained from
|
|
Mark Lane's "Plausible Denial" (Thunder's Mouth Press) and James "Bo"
|
|
Gritz's "Called To Serve." Lane's book is an excellent accounting of
|
|
the CIA's involvement (especially E. Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis).
|
|
Gritz (a 1992 presidential candidate) tells about many of the CIA's
|
|
questionable ventures and also about his trips to Laos to attempt
|
|
rescues of American POWs who are still held by Vietnam.</p>
|
|
</div>
|