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    PARI S VOLUME XXVI LETTER 8 J ANUARY, 1984FOREIGNAFFAI RS LETTER uREPORTS

    WHY1984 FINDSUSWHEREWREHow di d the greatest nati on on earth get where i t i s? Was i t by what the great Dari uscal l ed the l aws of change, or the j eal ousy of the gods, whi ch was the name Dari usgave to decadence? Or was i t a fool i sh mel t i ng pot theory, used by al i ens to dupeus wth the ai d of a treasonabl e press? Whatever i t was, we are headed for troubl e andas 1984 begi ns i t behooves us to l ook back over the past Hstory, sai d Donysi us ofHal i carnassus, i s phi l osophy teachi ng by exampl e . The questi on i s Was ours aphi l osophy of the apatheti c or of evi l mn?WHEN DD THE DOWNWARD SLIDE COMMENCE Probabl y wth Roosevel t s recogni t i on of Sovi etRussi a, but Charl es E Bohl en, whomI met often duri ng hi s ambassadorshi p to France,provi des a vi vi d descri pt i on of i ts fi rst di sastrous downward di p I t was three P.Mon a beauti ful Sunday af ternoon i n Teheran, on November 28 1943 Roosevel t and Ameri cawere at the hei ght of thei r power as Roosevel t awai ted Stal i n i n the vi l l a on the Sovi etembassy compound, where Stal i n had i nstal l ed hi mfor the sake of securi ty (Read tokeep hi maway fromChurchi l l ) Harry Hopki ns and Averel l Harriman, the man whose handhas been i n every shoddy deal f romthe f i nancing of bankrupt bol shevi ks to the sel l -outi n Vi etnamand the nomnati on of J i mmy Carter, wai ted outsi de the door to work on thesi ck Presi dent Roosevel t was gri pped wth the obsessi on of the mental l y i l l as he unfol ded hi s pl ansto Stal i n at that f i rst meeti ng He was goi ng to l i berate the col oni es of the worl d,prepared for i ndependence or not, and bri ng themi nto the Uni ted Nati ons The French,whomhe hated, had been i n I ndo-Chi na a hundred years and the nati ves were worse offthan when they went there, Roosevel t decl ared, i gnori ng the i ntroducti on of securi ty,l aw courts, f reedomf romdi seases of the past and the fact that, gi ven ti m, col oni al -i smwoul d be repl aced by a Canada-Bri tai n type rel ati onshi p Af ter runni ng the Frenchout of I ndo-Chi na, Roosevel t tol d Stal i n he i ntended to l i berate I ndi a, where the bestsol uti on woul d be reformf romthe bottom somewhat on the Sovi et l i ne. (emphasi s ours)Stal i n repl i ed that reform f romthe bottomwoul d mean revol uti on and Roosevel t sai dqui te ri ght . Thus wheels were set i n moti on for som three ml l i on deaths i n I ndo-Chi na, pl us over f i f ty thousand Ameri cans sent to di e f i ghti ng themonster Ameri ca setup The massacre of over fi ve ml l i on peopl e i n prematurel y i ndependent I ndi a, asHndus, Si khs and Mosl em ki l l ed each other woul d fol l ow Ameri ca wl l never know thetruth of those years The 13-part PBS (Publ i c Broadcast i ng Service) tel evi si on seri esproduced by Stanl ey Karnow (who cal l ed Moscowtrai ned Ho chi Mnh a nati onal i st fi rstand a communi st second, though Ho s testamnt cal l ed for the communi zat i on of al lsoutheast Asi a) start ed on October 4 1983 I t was hard t o watch an ol der but no wserArchimedes Patt i put convi ct i on i n hi s voi ce as he tol d TV l i steners he coul d hardl ybel i eve hi s ears when Ho chi Mnh s const i tut i on was translated to himand he real i zedi t was model ed af ter ours Knowegeabl e TV l i steners had no way of tel l i ng spel l boundvi ewers that our OSS major, who stood at sal ute besi de Vo nguyen Gap the day the

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    J anuary, 1984 Page - 2I nternati onal e was pl ayed for Ho chi Mnh, was a fool , taken i n by cunni ng Asiati cs HSTORY RAN I TS COURSE and Ameri ca s fi rst post-war obj ecti ve was to stri p her al l i esof thei r col oni es whi l e they were weak and the col oni es far f romready Monarchieswere destroyed to make way for social i st republ i cs, wth the excepti on of J apan, whereDougl as MacArthur knew that the pi l l ar of stabi l i ty was the throne Then, overni ghtthe Ameri can press embarked on an orchestrated campaign for ci vi l i an control over thearmy I t was sensel ess because ci vi l i ans have always control l ed the army A nati onof sheep did not percei ve that i nsiders i n Wshington were ti ghteni ng thei r gri p to apoi nt where they woul d be abl e to impose tacti cal deci si ons on the battl ef i el d I twas the first step i n condi ti oni ng Ameri ca for no-wni smwars J ames Reston wrote i n the NEWYORK TIMES of J ul y 12 1968, two months af ter the V etnamTet of fensive whi ch, though an Ameri can vi ctory, was used to break the nati on s wl l tof i ght Things mght settl e down around here i f the Ameri can peopl e w l l onl y put l essemphasi s on wnni ng and l earn that i t i s at l east as important to be a good l oser .The i dea seem to be that i f we coul d onl y understand the gl ori es of defeat therewoul d be l ess f i ghti ng and therefore l ess vi ol ence Only the fact that Ameri can POWnever sawTHE NEWYORK TIMES can expl ai n why M Reston has not been sl apped i n publ i c There i s no gl ory i n defeat FromReston the bal l was passed to Cyrus Sulzberger whowrote i n the N Y TIMES of J anuary 1, 1971 There has been a steady, i f occasi onal l yi nterrupted, growth of the i dea that the onl y purpose of U S ml i tary preparati ons i sei ther deterrence of war or i f need be war i n which there i s no wnner ; that i s to saynei ther vi ctory nor defeat Every Presi dent since Truman has accepted the Wl soni ancredo of peace wthout vi ctory Ml i tary vi ctory, l i ke concepts of uncondi ti onalsurrender, has been recogni zed as obsol ete since Worl d War 11 We must structure ourpol i cies accordi ngl y .Obsolete by whom Not by Soviet Russi a Ten days after hi s advocacy of denyi ng vi ctoryto sol di ers who had fought to wn and gi vi ng the defeated time to get ready for anothertry M Sulzberger wrote that The West and above al l , the Uni ted States, must dependi ncreasi ngl y on i nventi ve geni us and decreasi ngl y on marti al wl l i ngness to defendi tsel f . (Read We must depend on i nventi ons, whi ch Russi ans proceed to steal , becauseone-worl ders and the N Y TIMES are destroying any wl l i ngness on the part of our youthto f i ght for anythi ng. On Apri l 6, 1973, Sul zberger whi tewashed those who were to i n-vade Afghani stan and shoot down Korea s ci vi l i an f l i ght 007 I deol ogi cal l y, the Uni tedStates has grown up in V etnamand now sees that communi smi s not a Mani chean evi l auto-mati cal l y to be opposed, he wrote i n a col umn that mght have been l i fted out of PRAVDATo date the best expressed refutati on of the no-wni smof Cyrus Sulzberger and hi s faml ypaper has come f romHarry G Summers, J r . , i n the Los Angeles Times of August 14 1983 M Summers wrote The l imted-war theori es that became popular i n Ameri ca af ter Worl dWar I I f l ew i n the face not onl y of Cl ausewtz and the consti tuti on but al so of commonsense i tsel f . Ameri cans are goi ng to ask Wat possessed a seemngl y i ntel l i gentnati on to permt a ti ghtl y-kni t group of ci vi l i ans i n Washi ngton to deny general s theri ght to wn vi ctory on the battl ef i el d? The answer i s One-worl di sm The sort of fadOswal d Spengl er warned agai nst i n Decl i ne of the West . A newworl d order i n whi chAmeri ca and Russi a woul d be merged under a supranati onal government so ponderous anddi stant that nei ther votes nor resi stance coul d prevent the most aggressi ve componentf romtyranni zing the whol e NOT ONE GROUP BUT MANY WERE SAPPING THE UNDERPINNNGS OF NATIONS Roosevelt dreamed ofa Uni ted Nati ons whi ch woul d take prematurel y l i berated col oni es and mother countri eswth l ost markets under i ts wngs The trend towards one-worl di smwoul d be i rreversi bl ebecause member nati ons woul d be stri pped of nati onal armes and l ef t wth onl y the super-government s pol i ce I f the rest of the worl d were pi nk, Russi a woul d no l onger beaf rai d, was Roosevel t s reasoni ng I t was al l a matter of conf i dence

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    J anuary, 1984 Page 3

    Wl ter Reuther envi saged a soci al i st worl d i n which l abor l eaders hoi sted to power byworkers' uni ons would be l oyal to hi m Protected by pol i ti ci ans dependent on uni onvotes, he sent hi s rootl ess rovi ng ambassadors i nto vol ati l e col oni es i n Afri ca andmother nati ons too dependent on Ameri ca to ki ck themout I gnorant troubl e-mkers webrought to Ameri ca t o be taught how to use a l abor uni on as a party, then defy a mothecountry that would be outl awed i f i t fi red on workers Down would com the mothercountry' s fl ag and the l abor l eader would cl aimthe ri ght to l ead the newnati on becahe had l ed the fi ght A perfect example was Habi b Bourgui ba' s trip to an AFL-C O conventi on i n San Franci sco i n 1952, to f i ght for democracy i n Tuni sia When Reuther anpressure fromAmeri ca got hi mseated, he deposed hi s Bey, made himel f l i feti me Presiof a one-party Tuni si a and had hi s onl y opponent - a boyhood fri end assassi nated i nroom53 of the Royal Hotel i n Frankfurt NowTuni sia i s i n ferment and worse i s yetcome when the wl y Bourguiba di es As an embryoni c parl i ament and pressure force for hi s l abor soci al i st worl d, Ruetherand a rovi ng troubl e-mker named I rvi ng Brown set up the I nternati onal Confederati onFree Trade Unions (ICFTU) i n Brussel s, whi ch, wth the uni ons of over a hundred nati ouni ted, coul d put fear in the hearts of governments Many have cal l ed soci al i smtheprep school of communi sm Whi ttaker Chambers cal l ed i t communi smwth the cl aws re-tracted . Reuther sawa soci al i st empi re composed of states governed by l abor uni onbosses and headed by a great organi zer at the top as l abor' s road to worl d power Accordi ngl y, Wshi ngton was pressured i nto appoi nti ng l abor attaches to forei gn capi -tal s and i n tim they became Wl ter Reuther' s ambassadors By J anuary 31 1964, Reuther' s mass-medi a propagandi st, V ctor R esel , was sel l i ng thgl obal uni on Reuther was sett i ng up in Frankfurt' s I nterconti nental Hotel TheRi esel col umn of November 26 1964, was headed Reuther extends power to Europe and tFar East . Wi ti ng l etters to the Afri can Trade Uni on Congress, tel l i ng Afri cans touni te for the destructi on of South Afri ca, and i nci ti ng forei gn revol ts i n whi ch uni oi zed workers were hi s foot sol di ers, Reuther' s power conti nued to growunti l a fatalai rpl ane crash put an end to hi s one-worl d l abor-i mperi al i smdreamTHAT I NTELLI GENCE SERV CE CHEFS SHOULDWORK FOR A ONE-WORLD ORDER i s hardest of al lto forgi ve or even bel i eve These shoul d have been the f i rst to real i ze the aimof onworl di smi s to destroy patri oti sm and wth the destructi on of patr i oti smgoes al lwl l i ngness to f i ght for country Overni ght, organi zati ons mushroomed across Ameri cato sel l the Uni ted Nati ons, which by September, 1983, compri sed 158 member states, thl atest wth l ess than 45,000 i nhabi tants but each wth a vote and every vi tal i ssueassured of a maj ori ty against ci vi l i zati on and the Wst Soviet Russi a effecti vel ydomnated U . N as was to be expected, but pai d 11% of i ts budget when i t sui ted her,whi l e the U S pai d 25% of the expenses of U . N and i ts 48 i nternati onal agenci es,though the Securi ty Counci l refused to di scuss Afghani stan, Cambodi a, V etnam Pol and,or even the mssacre of ci vi l i an passengers aboard South Korean f l i ght 007 i n 1983 I n 1949 General Wl l i amWl d B l l Donovan, who boasted that he had taken men i nto Oprecisel y because they were communi sts, was runni ng the AMERICANCOMMTTEE ON EUROPE,at 537 Fi fth Avenue, NewYork Our wartime I ntel l i gence chi ef was worki ng to tossAmeri can soverei gnty i nto a European pool At the sam address but wth another tel ephone number, was Owen J Roberts' ATLANTIC UNON COMMTTEE, pushing a book by ml l i oai re Wl l C ayton enti tl ed W must Trade Soverei gnty for Freedom What ki nd ofuni versi ti es produce such reasoni ng?What the i nsiders were prepari ng was a nucl eus of European nati ons whi ch woul d i ncreai ts capaci ty to boycott non-members i nto j oi ni ng as the number of members expanded was cal l ed a European Economc Communi ty unti l i ts l eaders admtted thei r goal waspol i ti cal To appear i nnocuous, i ts promoters cal l ed i t a Common Market, though i nreal i ty i t was a seed group for one-worl di sm I n ti me i t would have i ts own parl i amebut fi rst the ground had to be prepared I n September 1972, U S Ambassador to theCommon Market, M Robert Schaetzel (who spent four hours a day pl ayi ng tenni s) resi g

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    J anuary, 1984 Page -4-to come home and wite a book for the Counci l on ForeignRelations advocati ng Ameri canentry, after which the ever-expanding federati on would be cal l ed Atl anti c Communi tyI ncredi bl e as i t may seem Intel l i gence agents recrui ted and trained to protect thei rcountry became whi te ants in the woodwork Cord Meyer, J r the founder and fi rstpresi dent of the Uni ted World Federal i sts, not onl y had no trouble getting i nto CAbut was pushed upwards Here was a manwho had wi tten Anarchy threatens us in theunbridled growh of national i sm(one-worldi smfor patri oti sm and i nsi stence upon thesovereignty of nations, and our TomBradens in CA pi cked himto defend Ameri ca fromthe Soviet conspi racy Men who used patri oti smand sovereignty as words to sowrevoltin the coloni es of our al l i es worked to el imnate both at home Wth expansi oni st Rusal ready on themarch, Cord Meyer wote Preparedness i s the l oss of al l ci vi l l i bertand the i ron rule of ml i tary total i tari ani sm In aworld Roosevel t had doomed to afuture war, a manwhowas dest i ned to ri se to the top in CA was l aunching an attack odi sci pl i ne and out-doing North Dakota s Senator Gerald P Nye, who sentenced thousandsof Ameri can boys to death i n World War I I by delaying the draft, bl ocking shipbui ldingand preventi ng the forti fi cati on of i slands whi ch never should have been l ost By 1975 the idea of one-worl di smhad become absurd to any thinking man, but Cord Meyer,J r was appointed CA stati on chief i n London on the eve of the referendumwhichwasto decide whether Bri tainwould remain a country or become a province in the CommonMarket Anti -Common Marketeers fought nobly to keep Bri tain out but they were defeateby a 1,481,583 pounds sterl i ng warchest - 100,000pounds of i t unaccountable - thatsuddenly appeared i n the surrender-of-sovereignty camp Wth the referendumwon forthe one-worlders, M Meyer took hi s pension fromCA and reti red Hs mssionwasaccompl i shed Readers of A Man Cal led I ntrepi d, the story of Si r Wl l i amStephenson, Bri tain' s war-time Intel l i gence chief i n the Uni ted States, wl l read howthe bond which l edM Stephenson to marry hi s wfe was thei r common dedicati on to a Uni ted Europe governmentas a nucleus for a government of the world No one can study the phenomena of i ntel l i -gence agents working to merge the free world i n a supranati onal government which themaggressi ve would domnate wthout recogni zing the obvious A l of the agents named byPhi l i p Agee and hi s pro-Soviet backers were men regarded as on the ri ght I f Agee hasexposed no l eft i sts, he has not blown the covers of any CA one-worlders ei ther MORE OPENLY RESPONSIBLE THANANYOTHERMAN IN CA for set-backs of the West was ThomasBradenwho, though mental l y fi tted to be an ai sle superi ntendent i n a department store,hadmoved through OSS to become A lenDul l es assistant di rector of CA in 1951 UndeBraden i t became CA pol i cy to support onl y the non-communist l eft around the worl d,as though non-communist were synonymus wth anti -communist Wth every effort of thKGB aimed at destabi l i zing theWest, TomProden put al l of the resources of CA behindcommuni sts who said they were soci al i sts anr ? soci al i sts who, when the cards were down,j oined the communists In area after area the i nterests of Braden s non-communi stl eft and out-and-out-communismoverlap, but the treasonable farcewent on Bradengave I rving Brown 15,000 (a l ot of money in 1947) to hi re thugs i n Marsei l l es andorgani ze a l abor union cal led FORCE OUVRERE i n Pari s for the manipulati on of Frenchsoci al i sts Nowthey are i n power by grace of communist votes andwth communi stsholding four key mnistri es of the government, i ncl uding transport Monsi eur J acques de Launay, i n hi s book, LESGRANDESCONTREVERSES POLI TIQUES, wi testhat M Braden gave 2,800,000a year to the European Movement between 1947 and 1953,2,000,000a year of i t fromCAUNDER BRADEN EXTREME LEFT LABORAGTATORS enjoyed a free hand in France andAmeri cahas ever since been blamed OSS was di sbanded i n 1946 and in i ts place the ResearchandAnalysi s Branch of State Department continued to handle the intel l i gence work i nPari s Heading i ts Pari s offi ce, where the l ate Scott McLeod found 35 securi ty ri sks,

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    J anuary, 1984 Page - 5-

    was M J ay Lovestone, forj qer Secretary-General gf the Communi st Party-USA, UnderRoosevel t, M Lovestone, who had worked under at l east seven names, pl anted agents i nvi rtual l y every of f i ce havi ng to do wth forei gn af fai rs By 1960 he was the AFL-CIOrepresentati ve i n UN and wri ti ng l etters, of which I have exampl es, tel l i ng l eaders ofcommuni st nati ons i n Afri ca how to vote Such were the men who i n the post-war years exerci sed Ameri can l eadershi p wth norestrai ni ng hand, l east of al l f romThomas Braden I rvi ng Brown di spensed Marshal lPl an aid, which Ameri cans were l ed to bel i eve was a gi f t Actual l y European nati onswere made to pay for materi al recei ved wth pri nti ng press money, under the under-standi ng that Ameri ca woul d spend i t i n Europe and not exchange i t for hard currency The sol uti on was simpl e Averel l Harriman and Robert Murphy arranged for J ohn J McC oy, the U S Commssi oner to West Germany, to gi ve the accumulated bundl es ofEuropean bank notes to those campaigni ng for a European Government and thus, i ndi rectl y,Europe s prostrate nati ons pai d for the campai gn to undermne themel ves Thi s but skim the surf ace of how Europe and Ameri ca got where they are today Weare not menti oni ng the bi l l i ons l oaned to communi st nati ons and i nsol vent formercol oni es which woul d bankrupt the banks of the West i f they were to cal l i n thei rl oans, al l of whi ch were of as much use to theWest as when Nel son Rockefel l er l oanedThomas Braden the money to buy a newspaper,ON SEPTEMBER 15, 1983, THERE WAS A TVDEBATE BETWEEN THOMAS BRADEN AND MR SCOTT STANLEYon Patri ck Buchanan s program M Buchanan handl ed i t excel l entl y I t made me wonderi f there i s anythi ng to astrol ogy Chi angKai -shek s bi rthday was on October 31, mnei s November 1, and M Buchanan s i s November 2A video tape of that exchange shoul d be requi red study i n Wl l i amCasey s conferencehal l i n Langl ey Whenever M Stanl ey, the edi tor of Ameri can Opi ni on and Review ofthe News, had the advocate of usi ng sel f -styl ed non-communi st l efti sm as a forceto oppose communi smi n a corner, M Braden fel l back on the l ast resort of theconsci ousl y bankrupt has-been hi s age What do you knowabout soci al i sm i n Europe i n the l ate 40s and earl y 50s, hesneered? I was f i ghti ng communi smwhen you were i n knee bri tches . Braden neverfought communi smi n hi s l i f e He was advanci ng soci al i smand, as he admtted,f i nanci ng the communi st DAILY WORKERwth CIA money Because of men l i ke Braden andthe sum at thei r di sposal , Germany was undermned by a fel l owtravel er troi ka -Wl l y Brandt, Egon Bahr and Herbert Wehner What about France? French communi st l eader Georges Marchais announced over MoscowTVon J anuary 11, 1980 I n the event of war the number of voters does not matter Whatcounts i s the number of commandos abl e to take over the centers of energy el ectr i ci ty,tel ecommuni cati ons, transport .He al ready has the l atter AND ENGLAND? The London Dai l y Tel egraph stated i n December 1983 Ameri cans woul dbe surpri sed to knowhowmany members of the House of Commons hate Ameri ca .WLL AMERICA HERSELF BE UNITEDWHEN THE CRISIS COMES? She wl l not because thef l ash poi nt i s l i kel y to be the Mddl e East Ameri ca i s tryi ng not to al i enatethe moderate Arabs - Egypt, Saudi Arabi a and J ordan I srael s strategy i s to tryto dri ve a wedge between themand Ameri ca and appear as Ameri ca s onl y rel i abl e al l y,reported the London OBSERVER of December 11, 1983 and the fact remai ns that therehas never been a time when the Russi ans and Ameri cans have been so si mul taneousl ycommtted to thei r respecti ve Mddl e Eastern cl i ents, the same paper added

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    No one knows Ameri ca s publ i c opi ni on on the Mddl e East, because cri ti ci smhas beentreated as defamati on and ml l i ons of Ameri cans who wanted to wn a war i n Vi etnamfeel that they have been muzzl ed They were si l ent when the NewYork Times cal l edthemsuper-patri ots and i nci ted ri ots i n favor of Ho chi Mnh They say nothi ngnowbut a deep resentment exi sts Seymour Hersh and the Stern Famly Foundati on may have sti rred up the My Lai scandalbecause they had no i nterest i n V etnam but others threwmobs i n the streets becausewe were fi ghti ng communi smAs 1984 begi ns every l oyal Ameri can must ask What are the l atter goi ng to do whenthe enem Sovi et Russi a, and Cy Sul zberger has assured themthat communi smi s nol onger a Mani chian evi l automati cal l y to be opposed?

    To our subscri bers Address domesti c busi ness to H du B REPORTS, P 0 Box 786,St George, Utah 84770 Address forei gn correspondence to H l ai re du Berri er, 20Bl vd Pri ncesse Charl otte, Monte Carl o, Pri nci pal i ty of MONACOSubscri pti on rate 75 per year Extra copi es 1 . 00

    H l ai re du Berri er, CorrespondentLeda P Rutherford, Managing Edi tor

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    A FOREIGNAFFAIRS LETTER

    AMERICANEEDSMOREJEANGERARDSGeorge Owel l s 1984 i s on us andthe hal f of i t . Aglance at the,are f i ghti ng wars that have al readl ook l i ke mnor squabbl es, but mormostl y i n the Thi rdWrl d and theand pol i ti cal parti es are f i ghti ngmen l i ke Henry Ki ssinger to take pFuture hi stori ans wl l shake thei rCounci l had voted that M Smth speace and securi ty

    astute Engli shman has sai d George di dn t knowbe bears himout One fourth of the world s nati onsost over f i ve ml l i on l i ves Dstance may make thehan four ml l i on sol di ers are engaged i n battl e,dl e East In Zmbabwe tri bal wars are on the ri sech other because Bri tain and the Uni ted States sentr away fromI an Smth and gave i t to Robert Mugabeads over thei r motivati on The U.N Securi tyl l egal government posed a threat to i nternati onal

    Nowthe heat i s on to make SouthAfri ca go the way of Zmbabwe andCongressman Sol arz i spushing an admni strati ve amendment to prohib t the imports of Kruger Rands i nto theUni ted States Russi a, Cuba and East Germany are manning terrori st bases for the pur-pose of maki ng BackAfri ca red, but Congressman Sol arz wl l l et Ameri cans buy al l thegol d coi ns they want fromRussia and Red ChinaFi ve of thewars going on today arebetweennati ons, whi l e thi rty are revoluti onary ori nsurgency struggles Som are conti nual , as i n the case of I ran and I rak, others fl areup and subsi de, but any or al l of themcoul d get out of bounds I f l awand order aremaintai ned i n unstab e reg ons, the governments concernedare chargedwth viol ati nghuman ri ghts No regime canmaintai n a wde range of human ri ghts whi l e tryi ng to copewth the frustrati ons of guerri l l awar, assassinati ons, kidnappings and destructi on ofthe nati on s l i vel i hood I f these regimes are forced to fal l , as I an Smth s was i nRhodesi a, they wl l be replaced by muchworse El imnati ng poverty i s not the answerwhen provocati on, suppression, and comdemnation of the regime for viol ati ng human ri ghtsi s communisms ti m-tri ed tacti c MOSCOWCONDUCTEDSUBVERSIONANDBRUSHFIRES have unti l recentl y been the princi pal worl dthreat to peace Nowthe terrori sts of Shi a fundamental i smare being turned l oose onthe world The Ayatol l ah Khomei ny may be regarded as the commander-in-chief of a Hol yWar, not onl y against Z oni st J ews but against themoderate Arab states which are,notShi a Hs aimi s to occupy Mecca and i nstal l a Shi a cal i phate through subversi on InEurope hi s hi t men are preparing to assassi nate statesmenwhomhe considers hi s enemes Hs fanati cs are al ready i n acti on i n Lebanon andbefore the end of 1984 they wl l bei nfi l trati ng Ameri ca throughMexico, to el imnate Ameri cans accused of buying votes bysupporti ng Jews Armes andmssi l es are no defense against the Ayatol l ah s ki nd ofwar i n whi ch Saudi Arab a i s as much Ameri ca s al l y as France of warfare, suppl anti ng classi c armes

    Terrori smi s a newki nd

    Worse, i t i s Ameri ca s el ecti on year M DavidWatt wote i n the TIMES, of London, ofJanuary 6 1984, what no Ameri can wi ter dares suggest The approach of the pol l s

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    automati cal l y swngs U. S forei gn pol i cy behi nd I srael The J ewsh vote, and i nf l uencei n the medi a, are too strong to be trif l ed wth Thi s means no Ameri can moves i n theMddl e East duri ng the next ni ne months that woul d appear to damage I srael ' s i nterest On the other hand, no Ameri can Presi dent, and certai nl y no Ameri can congress i s goi ng,i f i t can possibl y be avoided, to countenance adventures that mght cause the death ofU. S sol di ers No U. S operati ons agai nst Syri a and therefore no overt operati onsagainst N caragua.Thi s l eaves the Lati n-Ameri can time-bomb hi ssi ng and a free hand for Moscow Forei gnMni ster Andrei Gromko i s reported to have been i nsul ti ng i n hi s f i ve-hour meeti ngwth Secretary of State Shul z i n Stockholm but there are no reports of a bl unt Getout of Afghani stan and qui t sowng revol uti ons i n Central Ameri ca fromM Shul z I N EUROPE THE YEAR PROMSES NOTHNG BETTER Amost three ml l i on uni oni zed Frenchmenare out of work and bl amng i t on the six ml l i on immgrants who want anythi ng but tol i ve and work i n the former col oni es whi ch l abor uni ons pressured the government i ntol i berati ng prematurely Thi s i s what Moscow ordered and the uni ons obeyed The resul thas been di sorder i n the unprepared col oni es, raci smi n France and destabi l i zati on i nboth I n the past twel ve months 22,600 f i rm have gone bankrupt i n France andmore aregoi ng dai l y Each Frenchman thrown out of a j ob bl ames i t on a Mosl emwho has by nowbecome French To escape bei ng cal l ed raci st, the social i st-communi st government hastri ed to buy i ts way out by offeri ng ti ckets and bonuses i f the Afri cans w l l go home Meanwhi l e, shop fl oors and Afri can nei ghborhoods have become battl ef i el ds, made worseas coal mnes, steel pl ants, shi pyards and automobi l e factori es col l apseON THE POLI TICAL LEVEL THE SI TUATION I S NO BETTER Voters deserve no more sympathy thanthe uni ons They knewFrancoi sMtterrand coul d not become Presi dent wthout communi stsupport, but they voted for himbecause they were ti red of Val ery Gscard d' Estai ng andJ acques Chi rac was an unknown Now they are whi ni ng because of the i nevi tabl e Former I nteri or Mni ster Mchel Poni atowski wrote i n FI GAROmagazi ne: Themaj ori tyof the country al ready regard the Mtterrand government as an arm of occupati on .Elsewhere the West i s i n equal di sarray Former Chancel l or Helmut Schmdt ori gi natedthe decisi on to i nstal l Crui se and Pershi ng I I mssi l es i n Europe When the Center forStrategi c and I nternati onal Studi es of Georgetown Uni versi ty, hel d i ts conference i nStockholmi n md-J anuary, Schmdt was the most vi ci ous i n hi s cri ti ci smof Ameri ca As for Engl and, M Edward Pearce wrote i n the DA LY TELEGRAPH of London, of December6 1983 : Nobody shoul d underestimate the extent to whi ch a l arge secti on of the Houseof Commons hates the Uni ted States A pri vate noti ce questi on yesterday on events i nthe Mddl e East brought forth an outburst of thi rd worl d chauvi ni smwhi ch coul d hardl yhave been bettered i n the parl i ament of Val etta (Mal ta) or Dar es Sal aamFor much of this we can thank the Carter Admni strati on and Ameri ca's two l eadi ng papers,the Washington Post and the NewYork Times The excel l ent Pari s weekl y, V L URSACTUELLES, of J anuary 23 1984, publ i shed an anal ysi s of the opi ni on of Ameri canj ournal i sts, f i ghti ng imparti al l y i n the servi ce of truth and ri ght, has changed i n themnd of the publ i c They are now regarded as arrogant i ndi vi dual s, stri pped of scrupl esand bound by none of the rul es of ethi cs Cyni cs are ready to i nvoke the ' right of i n-formati on' and ' l i berty of the press,' as outl i ned i n the fi rst amendment of the Consti -tuti on, to j usti fy the worst vi ol ati ons of decency and even of the l aw Beneath anunattracti ve photograph of Benj amn Bradl ee, edi tor-i n-chi ef of the Washington Post,the capti on A pi cture of the l eft and of unsavory methods .YET THERE ARE FRONTS ONWHCHTHE FREE WORLD HAS CAUSE TO REJOCE I N 1984 Four yearsafter the Russi an i nvasi on of Afghani stan an estimated 200,000 Russi ans are bei ng pi nned

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    February, 1984 Page - 3-down by some 100,000 Afghans who are recei vi ng none of the support fromthe Wst whi cthe Russi ans would be gi vi ng them i f they were revol uti onari es and Ki ng Mohammed ZahiShah were on the throne Short of medi ci nes, food, arm and most of the necessi t i es of l i fe, the Afghans rej ecthe sl ogan of decadence : Better redthan deadTHE OTHER ENCOURAGNGNEWS OF 1984, TODATE i s that Ameri ca has deci ded to act l i kegreat nati on and on December 28 1983, served noti ce on the Drector-General of theUni ted Nati ons Educati onal , Sci enti f i c and Cul tural Ogani zati on (UNESCO that enoughi s enough and the Uni ted States i s pul l i ng out To permt the reader to underst and the si gni fi cance of thi s move, a pi cture of theorgani zati on' s background shoul d be provi ded for reference When Presi dent Roosevel tmet Stal i n at Yal ta i n February 1945 the dying Presi dent had strength onl y to di scusswhat was of vi tal i nterest to himand wth the obst i nacy of a man neari ng hi s end, hewas convi nced that i f he gave Stal i n everythi ng he asked for, the unci vi l i zed Georgi awoul d trust the Wst, j oi n the Uni ted Nati ons that was Roosevel t ' s dream and al l woube peace thereafter On hi s return fromTeheran i n 1943 Roosevel t confi ded to hi sSecretary of Labor, Frances Perki ns : I l i ke him (Stal i n) and I thi nk he l i kes meGeneral Henry Hap Arnold, commander of the Ameri can A rforce, stated : I see nonoti ceabl e di fference between Stal i n' s i deol ogy and Roosevel t' s, and I bel i eve we maka great mstake i n taki ng Stal i n for a communi st Averel l Harriman, whomfacel esspeopl e i n the Uni ted States sti l l put i n posts where he can do a maxi mumof harmdecl ared Wrl d revol uti on does not i nterest Stal i nAgainst al l arguments, Roosevel t ' s repl y was that he had a hunch that Stal i n was al ri gand i n thi s cl imate the Uni ted Nati ons was born i n San Franci sco, between Apri l 25 anJ une 26 1945, under the gui di ng hand of A ger H ss Fi fty states formed the i nter-nati onal body that by 1983 had 158 members and was empl oyi ng over 44,000 permanent fut i onari es on tax-free sal ari es and wth unbel i evabl e percs to run i ts 48 sprawi ngagenci es whi ch operate wth the Uni ted States payi ng 25 of the budget On November 16 1945, forty- four of the starry-eyed del egati ons parti ci pati ng i n thi smonstrous farce met i n London and founded UNESCO as the UN body whi ch woul d work toestabl i sh a newworl d order that woul d be based on humani smand cul ture rather thanmateri al val ues A sugar-coated attack on capi tal i smfromthe start , UNESCOwoul ddi rect the educati onal , sci enti f i c and cul tural bodi es of the worl d For educati onread i ndoctri nati on Employees i n the sci ence fi el d woul d be i deal l y pl aced formli tary and i ndustri al espionage Cul ture? No better cover word could be found forpol i t i ci zi ng an agency by gushing over humani smand depl ori ng capi tal i sti c greedRussi a j umped aboard and proceeded to stack the secretari at, whi ch ate up 60 of UNESbudget i n sal ari es before pri nters, turni ng out a fl ood of papers extol l i ng the agenand Drector-General s pushi ng megal omani ac proj ects, got thei r hands i n I t was a botl ess pi t for money but that was the l east of the budget-payers'

    j usti fi ed compl aints Asi de fromthe parasi tes i t was carryi ng, the onl y ones to deri ve any benefi t fromUNESCOwere the boys i n KGBMOSCOWCOULDNOT HAVE ASKEDFOR A BETTER FRONT Ameri ca pai d 30 of the budget i n 1the year M Rene Maheu became Drector-General of UNESCOwhi ch then had 131 members Moscowhad 57 off i ci al s i n the secretari at and 15 i n the permanent Sovi et del egati onFromtime to time a Soviet spy qui etl y l eft France pri or to exposure but the fi rstseri ous bl ow to the comortabl y ensconced nest came i n October 1971 when a hi gh KGBoff i cer known as Oeg Li al i ne reported that 20 of Moscows 57 UNESCO functi onari eswere KGB off i cers

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    France expel l ed three of the top Russi an del egates i n February 1972, but did nothi ngto upset M Maheu' s pl ans to revol uti oni ze educati on and i ntroduce a systemi n whicheveryone woul d be equal because there would be no examnati ons, no grades and nodi pl omas On the surfaceeverythi ngwas calm but i ntel l i gence servi ces had been watchi ng theagency ever since Red China transferred money f romBerne, to f i nance the French studentrevol uti on of May 1968, when UNESCO brought Herbert Marcuse f romCal i forni a to attendJ ean-Paul Sartre' s revol uti onary counci l s i n the Sorbonne There was something moresuspi ci ous about the timng of Professor Marcuse' s expense-paid trip to Pari s, sincehe spent hi s evenings wth the Hanoi del egati on i n the Hotel Luteti a at a time whenHanoi was steppi ng up i ts of fensive f romi nsi de Ameri can uni versi ti es Communi st -acti vated Fri ends of UNESCO clubs began spreadi ng over France and i n thef al l of 1972, the Bri ti sh government convoked a secret I ntel l i gence meeti ng of Natochi efs to l ook i nto UNESCOOn December 19, 1972, a report was rel eased brandi ng UNESCO a Sovi et I ntel l i gence bodyenj oyi ng di pl omati c immuni ty The head of the Russi an del egati on at the time was Sergei Kudryavtsev, as AmbassadorExtraordi nary and Pl eni potenti ary What i ntri gued Bri ti sh I ntel was that the Russi ansshoul d send a man to comparati vel y unimportant UNESCOwho had headed Sovi et espi onagei n Canada, the U Great Bri tai n, Cuba and Cambodi a and who had di rected the teamwhich stol e Ameri ca' s atomc secrets after the war At the ti me M Maheu was succeeded by Amadou Fahtar MBow of Senegal , i n 1974, areport was ci rcul ati ng that for a number of years a UNESCO chauf feur had been chi efof the KGB i n Pari s The change of Drector-General s, i f anythi ng, i ncreased the pro-Moscowbi as i n UNESCOWestern representati ves knewwhat was goi ng on i n the ugl y bui l di ng at Pl ace Fontenoy,i n Pari s, but f i gured there was nothi ng they coul d do about i t UNESCOwas a post for ti red di pl omats or men far down the l i ne who deserved a pol i ti calpay-of f I nstead of protecti ng the West' s i nterests, and perhaps bei ng repudi ated fori t i t was better to avoi d rocki ng the boat The sal ari es were generous and tax-f ree, and no one was going to i nqui re too deepl yi nto the workings of an agency wth a hi gh-soundi ng name and al l the machi nery forpropagandi zi ng i tsel f , even though the Russi an acti ons were as wel l known and theconni vi ng of theDrector- -Genexal as devious as the subterranean corri dors beneath thearchi tectural monstrosi ty Besi des the cesspool was beyond sal vagi ng O the 47 Sovi et agents expel l ed f romFrance i n 1983, 12 were fromUNESCOThree were hi gh Russi an members of the secretari at, and when Mr N owwas unabl e towhi tewash them he kept themon the payrol l , regul arl y i ncreased thei r sal ari es andextended thei r contracts One of themwas a KGB off i cer named Kri vtsov, who showed up at an of f i ci al UNESCOconference i n Tashkent i n September 1983 as a translator, pai d by both UNESCO andRussi a Probabl y no other agency i n UN of fers the Sovi et bl oc such opportuni ti es for propaganda,di si nformati on, subversi on, recrui tment and espi onage as UNESCOunder the man f rom

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    Senegal who has created an empire by putti ng hi s own men i n the twel ve top posts i nhi s offi ce He has drawn themfromAl geri a, Red Chi na, France, Syri a, I ndonesi a,Swtzerl and, the Congo, the U.S. Zai re, Upper Vol ta, Yugosl avi a and Russi a The 1984-85 budget for UNESCO i s 433mll i on, but wl l run much hi gher 738,000has been set asi de for revol uti onary causes Si nce J une 30 1983, 187,000 of thefund earmarked for the study of mathemati cs, ci vi l engi neeri ng and cul tural f i lm hasgone to Yasser Arafat' s branch of the PLOPart of the 1983 funds provided by the Uni ted States went to f i nance a 3-day symposi umon the worl d' s debt to Karl Marx The immense sumprovided for pri nti ng and trans-l ati ng pays for the publ i cati on of I MPACT magazi ne, where the arti cl e on di sarmamentwas wi tten by a Russi anAnother UNESCO publ i cati on, LE COURRIER DE L' UNESCO recentl y publ i shed an attack onthe free market ecci tomy cl aimng that capi tal i sm i nstead of corrupti on and Swssbank accounts, i s responsi bl e for the Thi rd Worl d' s poverty Al l thi s would have gone on i ndefi ni tel y wth the free market economy nati ons payi ngmost of the bi l l s i f Presi dent Reagan had not appoi nted the bri l l i ant and attracti veJ ean Gerard as Ameri can ambassador to UNESCO Ameri cans woul d have been proud ofthe doubl e-page col or photograph whi ch FI GAROmagazi ne publ i shed of J ean i n her UNESCOoffi ce, hol di ng al oft the UNESCOposter announci ng the ceremony to honor Karl Marx' sdefense of human ri ghts .FORMONTHS OUR AMBASSADOR TOUNESCO had watched M MBow try to i ntroduce a newworl dsystemof i nformati on whi ch woul d permt governments to control news and bar al l butl i censed j ournal i sts wth UNESCO i denti f i cati on cards fromgetti ng i nto pri nt THE BLOWUP MAY BE SAID TO HAVE STARTED LAST JUNE when Ambassador Gerard and Assi stantSecretary of State Gregory Newal l l odged a complaint wth the Drector-General I nsteadof repl yi ng pol i tel y, M MBows deep-seated i nferi ori ty compl ex got the best of himand he tol d our two representati ves that they coul d not treat himl i ke anAmeri canbl ack who has no ri ghts .J ean and M Newal l turned thei r backs on himand wal ked out, and the noti ce ofAmeri can wthdrawal was the coup de grace MBowwas a broken man as he fumbled for words on J anuary 3 1984, whi l e tel l i ng hi s2,400-member staff what woul d happen to themi f they l eaked i nformati on about UNESCOto the outsi de worl dGone was the arrogance of the man who was born i n Dakar, Senegal , on March 30 1921,and knewonl y the Wol of l anguage as he tended hi s goats or worked the soi l wth hi sMosl emparents He l earned French i n an elementary school and got i nto an arts courseat the Sorbonne after the war, fi rst gai ni ng recogni ti on as presi dent of the radi calFederati on of B ack Afri can Students i n France Gori f i cati on of the so-cal l ed Thi rd Worl d brought himhi s opportuni ty to cl i mb upwardthrough the vari ous si necures of U.M unti l he took over the di rectorshi p of UNESCO i n1974 Once i n power he became overbeari ng and western delegates descri bed himasparanoi c, vai n, schemng and i ntol erant What most want above al l i s to boot himout Cl aimng that hi s l i f e was i n danger, he had a sumptuous penthouse bui l t on the twotop fl oors of UNESCO whi ch means that the i mmense bui l di ng has to be heated i n order

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    to keep M MBowwarm He pays no rent for thi s home, and though hi s hospi tal i tyal l owance i s pri ncel y, his entertainment bi l l s are put on UNESCOs account He has afl eet of six offi ci al cars, one often used by hi s wfe for tri ps to see her daughteri n Brussel s He spends a thi rd of the year travel i ng, and wth an entourage threetimes as l arge as that of the secretary-general of U.N Though host governments in-vari ably pay hi s bi l l s, he cl aim a subsi stence al lowanceOne of MBows greatest weaknesses i s his love of decorations and honorary degrees He nowhas 35 decorati ons, 42 honorary professorshi ps, three of which, along wth goldmedals, are fromthe red bl oc Though a fanati cal Mosl em he accuses others of raci smThe accountant i n charge of his books says no one wl l ever be able to understand themi f there i s a check up One of his worst abuses i s his use of special funds mrked forscholarships and travel grants Hs favori te vacati on spot i s Bul gari a, where he i s always the guest of the head ofstate A l thi s but skim the surface Adi pl omat recentl y observed In no otherpart of the U.N systemcould a di rector-general get away wth one-tenth of what MBowhas done.Through i t al l , i n his arrogance, he bel i eved himel f untouchable After the shock ofAmeri ca' s announcement of wthdrawal , he left abruptl y on January for Spainwthoutreplyi ng to the Ameri can noti ce Now the questi on i s howto get himout Though onl ya ful l conference of 161 member states can force himto resign, most delegates gi ve himsi x months at themst He may take the face-savi ng way and hand i n hi s resignationWhatever happens, UNESCO i s at the crossroads and the opinion of many who dare notexpress i t i s God bless Jean Gerard

    To our subscri bers Address domesti c busi ness to H du B REPORTS, P O Box 786,St George, Utah 84770 Address foreign correspondence to Hlai re du Berri er, 20Bvd PrincesseCharl otte, Monte Carl o, Pri ncipal i ty of MONACOSubscripti on rate 75 per year Extra copi es 1. 00

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    FOR IGNAFFARS L TT R

    The London Sunday OBSERVERS two corFebruary 2 the real i ty and future odoubtedl y fi res the rank and f i l e ani ts easy-goi ng cosmopol i tan ways andBy rank and fi l e the London weekl yof a Mosl emvi ctory over Lebanon s rLebanon s fal l means possi bl e Sovi etthe road to Saudi Arabi a

    R LIGOUSWTH TH SNOFRONTspondents i n Bei rut summed up i n a paragraph onLebanon The I rani an exampl e, they wote, un-has conj ured a vi sion of West Bei rut stri pped ofal l i ng under the vei l of fundamental i st I ran .eant I . ebanon s Mosl em, heady wth the thoughi ng Chri sti ans To Ameri ca and the West,xpansi on to the Persi an Gul f and i ts emrates, on

    To the aged fanati cs i n Teheran and Qom Bei rut was the fi rst step towards the Shi a con-quest of I sl amand on Thursday, February 2, they showed how they were goi ng to do i t M Nabi h Berri , the 43-year-ol d l eader of Lebanon s one ml l i on Shi i tes, i s cl ean-shaven, pro-French and has an ex-wfe wth Ameri can ci ti zenshi p He wears westerncl othes and i s by nature a moderate, but when he recei ved orders to tel l Shi i te sol di ersto refuse t o f i ght and demand that mni sters resi gn fromthe government of the Maroni teChri sti an, Amn Gemayel , he obeyed wthout a murmur Three mni sters, headed by Prime Mni ster Chafi c Wazzan, answered the cal l , and byMonday, February 6, the arm had di si ntegrated Some of the Shi a ml i t ia uni ts refusedt o fol l oworders and others j oi ned the ml i tant Shi a organi zati on Ama (Hope) whi ch i sf i ghti ng besi de the Druze forces l ed by Wal i d J umbl att, reputedl y a drug addi ct and sai dto be f i nanci ng hi s offensi ve through drug traffi c By Tuesday, February 6, West Bei rut was i n Shi a hands and the Presi dent, wth the l oyaluni ts he had l eft , control l ed the fewacres around hi s pal ace i n East Bei rut and a foot-hol d on the mountai n Ml i tary observers cal l ed what had happened the Shi i t i zat i onof the war i n the Mddl e East The obj ecti ve of the men sendi ng a constant streamoftapes and i ncendi ary propaganda out of I ran i s the Shi i t i zat i on of the Mosl emworl dand the conquest of Mecca for themel ves Whi l e moderate Arab rul ers began weedi ng Shi i tes out of thei r armes and ci vi l servi cesand l ooki ng for men to repl ace themi n thei r oi l i nstal l ati ons, Gemayal pl eaded for thewarri ng facti ons to accept hi s 28-poi nt proposal cal l i ng for the shari ng of power Inpl ai n Engl i sh, he was recogni zi ng the fact that the ol d Lebanon wth i ts strategi c posi -ti on where East and West meet on the Medi terranean was gone forever The country was upfor porti oni ng, i f not for a Syri an take-over The May 7 1982 agreement wth i ts manysecret cl auses whi ch George Shul tz had drawn up, cal l i ng for both Syri a and I srael towthdraw was a dead l etter, as i t always had been i n any case, since nei ther woul dwthdraw unl ess the other di d so fi rst ISRAEL UNFIED THE COUNTRY I N 1982 BY INVADNG I T but the i nvasi on backfi red, as anyreal i sti c Mddl e East special i st knew i t woul d The confl i ct that fol l owed sucked i n

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    March, 1984 Page 2the Ameri cans, Bri ti sh, French and I tal i ans i n a mul ti -nati onal peace-keepi ng forceand the si tuati on i s worse now than when I srael went i n to dri ve out the Sunni te YasserArafat and hi s Pal esti ni ans I t may be a shadow of thi ngs to come

    summed up the si tuati on i n the February 12 i ssue of the London OBSERVERLebanon had enj oyed a peri od of stabi l i ty when order was provided byWhen Lebanon fi rst expl oded i n ci vi l war i n 1958, accordi ng to Seal e,Nasser and the Ameri cans al l owed for a successful i nterventi on by thecomng to power of a Presi dent acceptabl e to Mosl em and Chri sti ans al i ke

    Patri ck Seal eby stati ng thatthe Egypti ans a deal betweenmari nes and theI srael s vi ctory i n 1967, Nasser s death i n 1970, and, even more, the peace whi ch tookEgypt out of the Arab equati on encouraged I srael to seek to impose i ts order I tsml i tary power seemed unchal l engabl e But I srael i s not Egypt and i ts f i rst bid tousurp Egypt s rol e, then to put Lebanon i n i ts pocket and see off Syri a was unreal i sti c TODAY, SYRA, WTH RUSSI A BEHND HER has become part of a ml i tary front against theWest I ran, where men l i ke the Carter occupants of the Oval Room State Department svi ci ousl y anti -Shah Henry Precht, and professors l i ke Norman Forer of the Uni versi ty ofKansas and Cynthi a Dwyer at Buffal o State Col l ege, cl eared the way for the Ayatol l ahKhomei ny, i n l aunchi ng a rel i gi ous war Where before, we had one enem, nowwe havetwo Shi i tes are bei ng fl own f romBei rut to Teheran for i ndoctri nati on and trai ni ng,then sent back to formnewbri gades known as Kuds, the name Khomei ny uses for J erusal emwhi ch wth I srael i col oni zati on of the West Bank wl l prevent the Mddl e East f romeverhaving peaceWhen the Presi dent of the I rani an parl i ament, Ayatol l ah Rafsanj ani , announced that theWest wl l soon be submerged i n an ocean of f i re and blood, what he was sayi ng was thatTeheran s ki l l er team woul d not confi ne themel ves to getti ng those on thei r hi t l i sti n France A fewdays after Rafsanj ani s declarati on, the Ayatol l ah Fadhal l al a hel d ameeti ng to di scuss howAmeri can shi ps crui sing off Bei rut mght be attacked Fadhal l al a i s credi ted wth mastermnding the October 22 attacks on the French andAmeri can barracks and he proposed that speedboats l oaded wth hexogene, the powerful ex-pl osive made by a mxture of TNT and dynamte, mght be used against shi ps Hs Syri anadvi sers tol d himi t was impossi bl e but there was another sol uti on At date of thi swi ti ng twel ve ul tra l i ght pl anes have been purchased froma f i rmi n West Germany throughthi rd part i es and the Syri ans are sai d to have another 125 on order The pl anes del i veredto date were brought to Lebanon i n two I ranai r Boei ng 747s and assembl ed at a new trai n-i ng camp where Shi i tes are bei ng trai ned for kamkaze mssi ons THE NUMBER ONE SHIT TARGET I N AMERCA i s Presi dent Reagan and the Whi te House Anothertarget on whi ch a pl anni ng board i s working day and ni ght i s Presi dent Reagan as he opensthe Oympi c games Such operati ons as these are handl ed by the Supreme Counci l of theI slamc Revol uti on, of which Ayatol l ah Montazeri i s Presi dent, and the organi zati on whi chwl l carry I ran s rel i gi ous war i nto the West i s the Movement de l a Tendance I sZaarri que,which pl ayed a rol e i n the ri ots i n Tuni s and Morocco when the pri ce of bread and othercommodi t i es was used as a pretext A recrui t i ng movement i s goi ng on in the Mosl emcountri es of North Afri ca whi l e a campaign i s under way to undermne the pol i ce and thearmy by ci rcul ati ng Ayatol l ah Khomei ny s threat that any Mosl emwho shoots at a Mosl embrother wl l be barred fromparadi se forever At present the mai n trai ni ng camps for Montazeri s vol unteers are at Arsal , north ofBaal bek, another j ust south of Rayyak, and a thi rd i n Syri a for securi ty reasons Thoseundergoing trai ni ng are not al l Arabs and I rani ans The numbers are constantl y changi ngbut i t i s known that members of the ETA Basque organi zati on, the I r ish I RA f i nanced byNorai d funds f romAmeri ca, French D rect Acti on revol uti onari es, South Ameri cans, Germans,J apanese and pro-Castroi tes f romthe Anti l l es are constantl y comng and goi ng

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    March, 1984 Page 3AFTER THE FRENCHAND I SRAELI A R RADS ONBAALBEK the Shi a sui ci de team were moved tonew bases i n the Bekaa Val l ey where i t i s i mpossi bl e to bomb themwthout hi tti ng the50,000 Syri ans around them That the Syri ans are there to stay i s attested to by thefact that they are spendi ng ml l i ons of dol l ars for constructi on of underground gal l eriarms depots, command posts and l i vi ng quarters comparabl e to the famous subterranean,i nstal l ed i n Lebanon before the I srael i i nvasi on ofwth i ts hundreds of natural caves l ends i tsel f tosteel -wal l ed complex which the OLPJ une 1982 The mountai nous regi onthi s sort of concealment These are the bases f romwhich sui ci de vol unteers wl l be di spatched on mssi ons thatbefore the end of 1984 wl l bri ng home to Ameri ca and the West a real i zati on of thecri me J immy Carter commtted when, as General Rabi i , commander-i n-chi ef of the I rani anai rforce, testi f i ed before hi s executi on, our President sent General Huyser to throwthe Ki ng out of the country l i ke a dead mouseFORAN IDEA HOWTHE DESTAB LI ZATION OF I RANWAS ENGNEERED i t i s i nteresti ng t o readthe account provi ded by former speci al servi ces of f i cer, Monsi eur Pi erre de Vi l l emarestPi erre was alarmed when he l earned that Presi dent Hafez el -Assad was expel l i ng theAyatol l ah Khomei ny f romI rak i n 1978 and that Presi dent Gscard d Estai ng had agreed totake him i n When de Vi l l emarest asked why the troubl e-maker was bei ng gi ven shel ter iFrance, he was tol d that the Shah had personal l y requested i t out of fear that i f Francrej ected himhe woul d go to one of the countri es i n the Soviet bl oc From then on deVi l l emarest never took hi s eyes of f the Ayatol l ah s movements and twenty-four hours aftthe ol d man moved i nto the vi l l a prepared for him i n the vi l l age of Neauphl e-l e-Chateau,Pi erre was there to ask for an i ntervi ewWhat astoni shed himmost as he l ooked the pl ace over wth the eye of an expert was thenumber of radi o antennas that had al ready been i nstal l ed He spent four hours tal ki ngto the Ayatol l ah through an i nterpreter and duri ng a pause asked i f he coul d wash hi shands He was shown a door down the hal l and, after maki ng sure that no one was watch-i ng him del i beratel y entered the door next to i t Fi ve I rani ans busy at wrel ess keysand tape records were thrown i nto a f renzy and rushed to push himout whi l e Pi erreattempted to apol ogi ze wth the expl anati on that he had taken the wong door Fromthen on he conducted himsel f wth extreme huml i ty and when i t was t i meto l eave hewas permtted to gather hi s papers and go wthout any troubl e The next day he went tothe proper of f i ci al s and tol d themwhat he had seen I t was clear that the ri ots breaki ng out i n towns and vi l l ages al l over I ran were not spontaneous ; they were bei ng tel e-commanded f romthe Neauphl e-l e-Chateau to gi ve the Ameri can Presi dent the i mpressi onthat a country was ri si ng i n protest agai nst suppressi on The effect i n I ran was to putmobs i n the streets si mul taneousl y i n so many towns and vi l l ages, the pol i ce and thearmy woul d never be abl e to cope wth al l of them I t was a concerted pl an to make I raungovernabl e Tomorrow i t may happen i n any country wth a si zabl e Shi a popul ati on,j ust as i t has happened i n Lebanon There was no way of enforci ng l awand order wthoui nfl i cti ng l osses which woul d make the man whoman Engl i sh wi ter descri bed as a J i mmyCarter gri nni ng wth l unati c i nnocence cry to hi gh heavenThe of f i ci al to whomPi erre reported gave a hopeless gesture and repl i ed What can wedo? We knowwhat i s goi ng on but we have orders f romthe Mni stry of the I nteri or tosee nothi ng The expl anati on was simpl e Though the Ayatol l ah was setti ng I ran af l amf romFrench soi l , the French government had recei ved word f romWashington that Presi denCarter was determned to toppl e the Shah, and thi s woul d make the Ayatol l ah Khomei ny thman wth whomFrance woul d have to deal THE MA N OBSTACLE I NTEHERAN WAS GENERAL GHOLAMALI OVEISSI , the governor of thecapi tal , who duri ng the revol ts i n the wnter of 1979 di d not hesi tate to f i re i nto thmob, which l ed J ohn Vi nocur to descri be himas t he butcher of Teheran i n the NewYorTimes of February 8 1984, despi te the massacres commtted by the fanati cs the moment

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    March, 1984 Page 4they came i nto power Whi l e General Robert Huyser, on President Carter s orders, was gi vi ng General Ghara-Baghi and M Bazargan the fal se promse that i f the army di d not move to support theShah, the l i ves of thei r off i cers woul d be spared, M Cyrus Vance announced on J anuary11 1979, that the Shah woul d be l eavi ng the country, before that decisi on was evenof f i ci al After Vance s announcement, the Shah had to go The duped General Ghara-Baghi got out but the general s under himwho had betrayed thei rEmperor were systemati cal l y ki l l ed and whi l e the rei gn of terror whi ch President Carterhad i gni ted was ragi ng i n Teheran, the Shah s former Chi ef of Staff , General Ghol amA iOvei ssi emerged as the l eader of the eventual I rani an Li berati on Army

    Wth hi s stati on sendi ng dai l y messages of hope and cal l s for vol unteers fromthel i berated ci ty of Chapour, on the I rani an si de of the Turki sh border, General Ovei ssihad to be si l enced, and the way i n which the Ayatol l ah Khoei ni va i n Teheran and theAyatol l ah Qom, l eader of the ki l l er commandos i n Bri tai n and France, handl ed i tshoul d be studi ed by every securi ty organi zati on i n the West I N J ANUARY 1984 GENERAL GHOLAMALI OVEISSI RETURNED TOPARI S froma secret mssi on tothe Uni ted States I n Ameri ca hi s every movement was fol l owed and reported to TeheranWhether the l eaks came frommen i n Ameri can agenci es or agents of the government i nTeheran wl l probabl y never be uncovered i n a nati on that permtted demonstrators to

    General Ovei ssi was l i vi ng wth hi s wfe and three chi l dren i n the 16th arrondi ssement,when i n l ate J anuary he recei ved a message that f i l led himwth j oy Hs mother andhi s ol der brother, Ghol amHussei n, were bei ng granted vi sas to l eave I ran On February2 the tel ephone rang I t was hi s mother cal l i ng fromTeheran to tel l himthe date andnumber of the Ai r France f l i ght That ni ght the general s happi ness knewno bounds What he di d not knowwas that the day hi s mother telephoned hima hi t teamsupervisedby the assi stant commander of SAVAMA, the secret pol i ce compared to which the Shah sSAVAK was humani tari an, arri ved i n Pari s French off i ci al s were suspi ci ous but i t wasi mpossi bl e to refuse entry to a SAVAMA general wth a di pl omati c passport The French servi ce di d the onl y thi ng i t coul d Al ready reports were comng i n that anoperati on against Ovei ssi was bei ng prepared, so anthat hi s mother and brother were bei ng used as bai tcondi ti on to l eave hi s apartment Both agreed thathave come through wthout bei ng tapped

    agent was sent to warn the generalfor a trap He was tol d under nohi s mother s phone cal l coul d l ot

    At fi rst, the general obeyed orders He sent hi s son to meet A r France f l i ght No 165at Roi ssy Ai rport on Sunday, February 5 at 3 P .M Sti l l fol l owng pol i ce orders, themother and son went to the son s apartment i n one of the ol d bui l di ngs on the rue deGrenel l e

    I n J une, 1980, when i t was obvious that the Shah had not l ong to l i ve, General Ovei ssiannounced that he was no l onger wai ti ng for i nstructi ons fromthe deathbed i n Cai ro He cal l ed for I rani an sol di ers to desert and j oi n himon the Turkish border and announc-ed I wl l recapture Teheran before the end of summer .

    wear masks i n thei r rampages against the Shah and hi sthe same Ameri cans who ri oted for Hanoi faml y They coul d have been

    Al l that i s known i s that someone wth contacts on the i nside i nformed Teheran thatGeneral Ovei ssi was about to get Ameri can support and the group i n Teheran pl anni ngforei gn assassinati ons moved Ovei ssi s name to the top of the l i st of 19 marked forexecuti on i n Pari s

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    March, 1984 Page 5

    French agents at the ai rport scanned faces, tryi ng to detect the I rani ans who woul d bescreeni ng passengers and trai l i ng the two refugees f romthe moment of thei r arri val The l ook-outs went undetected and the ki l l ers knew al l they had to do was wai t Thei r pati ence pai d off On Tuesday, February 7 General Ovei ssi coul d contai n himel fno l onger He had to tal k to the brother whomhe had not seen for f i ve years Ghol amHussei n went to the general s apartment and i n thei r j oy the two of themthrew cauti onto the wnds The general was ti red of bei ng cooped up in an apartment and af ter ahearty l uncheon they went out to stretch thei r l egs I t was wonderful to wal k down rue de Boul ai nvi l l i ers together, obl i vi ous to passers-byas they turned off on rue Boi s-l e-Vent, towards rue de Passy and i nto the trap whi chSAVAMA knew the general woul d never be abl e to resist They were shot down f rombehi nd,i n f ront of 31 rue de Passy, and the ki l l ers di sappeared among pedestri ans on thestreet The brother had enj oyed two days of l i berty but the general never got to seehi s mother Howmuch better i t woul d have been i f the Shah and hi s mal i gned SAVAK had sent team tosi l ence Sadegh Ghobzadeh i n Washi ngton and men l i ke Abol Hassan Bani Sadr i n Pari s whenthey were maki ng fool s of statesmen, professors and edi tors i n the West Thi s i s how the facel ess army whi ch wl l soon be carryi ng i ts war i nto Ameri ca operates I t cannot be cal l ed Ameri ca s second f ront, because i t has no f ront Let us consi deri t Ameri ca s second war, the terrori st one for whi ch President Carter, General Huyserand Cyrus Vance cleared the terrai nNow l et us get back to the Russi an f ront THE NATIONS WHCH SENT MULTI -NATIONAL FORCES TO LEBANONwant to get out, but the onl yway of getti ng out wthout l oss of f ace i s to get Uni ted Nati ons forces i nThere are 159 nati ons i n U N and Russi a can count on 101 of thei r votes, so thearri val of U. Ns B ue Berets woul d mean handi ng the Mddl e East to Moscowon apl atter Sti l l Russi a i s taki ng no chances She wl l veto any U N expedi ti on unl essU.S shi ps and forces pul l out and promse never to come back Li ke two hei rs about to battl e over an i nheri tance, Washi ngton and Moscowwatch Syri a ssi ck Presi dent Hafez el -Assad To avoi d the huml i ati on she suf fered i n Cai ro whenNasser di ed, Russi a i s backing Defense Mni ster Moustafa Tal as as Assad s successor Ameri ca pi ns her hopes on Assad s brother, R faat, head of the ml i tary securi ty organi -zati on, whomthe army cannot be counted on to support Over al l hangs a great unknownNOONE KNOWS [ T H T CONSTANTIN USTINOVICHCHERNENKOTHNKS He was born i n 1911 and i sal i ve today because he never expressed an opi ni on Everythi ng that has been wri ttenabout himi s based on specul ati on Andropov coul d never have entered the Kreminwthout the support of the army, and wthout that support, Chernenko woul d not be theretodayThe army i s no l onger a doci l e i nstrument i n the hands of a party l eader I t has becomemore than a partner Never i n the hi story of Sovi et Russi a has the army hel d such poweras i t hol ds at present wth an ol d man as a f ront I t took Uri Andropov ei ght months to make himel f Presi dent after he assumed l eadershi pof the party Many doubt that Chernenko has the power to get the Soviet Supreme tomake himPresi dent when i t convenes i n l ate March

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    March 1984 Page - 6-

    I n the meantime, V ce-Presi dent Kuznetsov f i l l s the off i ce Al l of Europe' s l eadi ng sovi etol ogi sts have observed that never have so many men i nuni formappeared i n publ i c off i ce as si nce a Soviet pursui t pl ane downed the SouthKorean Boei ng on September 1st Thi s suggests that Marshal Dmtri Usti nov, one ofthe most powerful f i gures i n the 12-man pol i tburo, may move i nto the presi dency As mni ster of Defense, head of the armed forces and presi dent of the hi ghl y secretDefence Counci l , Usti nov i s now second onl y to the Head of State i n the pol i tburo He control s the Russi an armament i ndustry whi ch consumes 14 of Russia' s gross nati onali ncome, agai nst the 6 appropri ated for defense i n Ameri ca, and i f Usti nov ri ses to thepresi dency hi s present pl ace wl l be f i l l ed by the hard-l i ner chi ef of staff , Nkol aiOgarkov, wth hi s ni ne rows of decorati ons, the man who ordered the shooti ng down ofKAL f l i ght 007, after almost two hours of del i berati ons over the airwaves Whatever TVpi vot men and newspaper col umni sts may say about Chernenko, the future bodesi l l for the worl d, threatened as i t i s by the ri si ng ml i tary i n Russi a, rel i gi ous warsi n the non-Shi a Mosl emstates and terrori st warfare wherever there are l eaders not tothe Ayatol l ah Khomeiny's l i ki ng Were i t not for the war wth I rak, I rani ans by thethousands woul d be f l ocki ng to j oi n the l i berati on army i n whi ch some younger off i cer,perhaps at col onel l evel , wl l eventual l y ri se to repl ace the martyred Ghol amAl iOvei ssi I rani ans are f i ghti ng for thei r country, not the Ayatol l ah Khomei ny, andthat war i s provi ng fatal to the l i berati on movements The ul timate tragedy may be that Russi a and the Ayatol l ah Khomei ny, al ready surroundedby Russi an advi sers, may forma uni on Moscow coul d not ask for better hi t team whoseacti ons she can di savow

    To our subscri bers Address domesti c busi ness to H du B REPORTS, P 0 Box 786,St George, Utah 84770 Address forei gn correspondence to H l ai re du Berri er, 20B vd Pri ncesse Charl o-te, Monte Carl o, Pri nci pal i ty of MONACOSubscri pt i on rate 75per year Extra copi es 1.00

    H l ai re du Berri er, CorrespondentLeda P Rutherford, Managi ng Edi tor

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    HOWHETERRAINWSLE REDFORTHENEWWORLDORDERAbook shoul d be wri tten i n thi s spri ng of 1984 as the worl d hovers on the bri nk of aconf l agrati on whi ch future hi stori ans wl l descri be as sui cidal A generati on agoci ti zens were safe i n thei r homes and on the streets because di sci pl i ne began wthi nfaml i es Dsci pl i ne s destructi on started at the top and moved downward wth monarchsthe fi rst targets Patri oti sm tradi ti on and respect for men, order and i nsti tuti onsfol l owed I t was not by accident that three empi res, six monarchi es and twenty-onepri nci pal i ti es and duchi es di sappeared f romthe worl d s face after Worl d Wr I Oswal dSpengl er, bri l l i ant as he was, fai l ed to see that the di scredi ti ng of al l thi ngs ol dwas the work of facel ess governments worki ng wthi n governments i n the West, when hewote Modern man rej ects everythi ng that reason cannot understand and destroys wthan epi grami nsti tuti ons reared by the i narti cul ate wsdomof the centuri es The book that i s yet to be wri tten woul d show that a smal l but wel l -organi zed group i nthe nati on regarded as the l eader of the f ree worl d did as much towards the destructi onof the ol d order as Moscowwth her i nvasi ons and i nci tement to revol uti ons The authorof such a book woul d tel l the story of the monarchi es that have been destroyed by theagents and professors of the nati on which pratt l es most l oudl y about the ri ghts of sel f -determnati on of peopl es, and how i n each case chaos and conf l i ct resul ted G NERAL DOUGLAS MacARTHUR I SCREDTEDWTHPRESERVINGTHE THRONE IN J APAN after Worl d WrI I and maki ng the condi ti ons for J apan s rapi d recovery possibl e Thi s was an excepti onand not unti l J une 1976 when off i ci al records were di sclosed di d we l earn that theJ apanese were tol d to reduce thei r Emperor to the rank of a simpl e ti tul ar head of stateor he woul d be forced to abdi cate Thus, against the wshes of the J apanese people,thei r Emperor was stri pped of the power which he used to stop the war, so that i n theevent of future conf l i cts he wl l never wel d such i nf l uence again YUGOSLAVIAWAS ONE OF THE FIRST COUNTRES INWHCH THE WEST BETRAYED ANALLY Fromhi sstronghol d i n upper Serbi a, General Dragul j ub-Draza Mhai l ovi ch i ssued hi s war cry Wth fai th i n God, for Ki ng and country J osep Broz Ti to bel i eved i n nei ther Godnor Ki ng Hs obj ecti ve was to survi ve the war and l et the Germans massacre theroyal i sts, so he exchanged pri soners and i nformati on wth the Germans Hs troops werepermtted to l eave areas where they were enci rcled and the Germans were f ree to concen-trate on the Bri ti sh unti l they no l onger needed Ti to Ml ton Katz, who i n l ate 1972gave Averel l Harriman and Paul Warnke the green l i ght for the advancement of J immCarter, was stati on chi ef i n Caserta, I tal y, for Ameri ca s Ofi ce of Strategi c Services,whi l e communi sts massacred themonarchi sts of Yugosl avia and I tal y wth Ameri can approvalyet Mhai l ovi ch bel i eved to the end that Ameri ca woul d never desert himand permt aml l i on l oyal Yugosl avs to be murdered (The ful l story i s tol d i n H du Reportof May 1980)Today a ni ne-hour bl ackout i s imposed i n Yugosl avia every three days to preserve energy

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    Apri l , 1984 Page - 2-and the country i s a ti cki ng t ime-bomb The nati onal debt i s so great, whole sectorsof such i ndustri es as st i l l exi st are due to cl ose unl ess Ameri can and other banks thrmore ml l i ons after the ml l i ons of dol l ars that are l ost GREECE WAS SAVED BUT ONLY FOR THE TIME BEING BY THE COLDWAR Anthony Cave Brown, ihi s bi ography of Wld B l l Donovan, wote of the hatred of OSS agents for the Greekmonarchy, whi ch shoul d have been none of thei r busi ness M Brown observed Oddly,sympathi es were not wth the ri ght or the forces tryi ng to mai ntai n order, but wth thel eft whi ch was maki ng ci vi l war on the l argest scal e OSS, from i ts base i n Cai ro,threw the weight of Ameri can support behind Greece' s communi sts, out of hatred of aki ng Now Andreas Papandreou, whomhi s mother saved frompri son by sendi ng himtoAmeri ca H du B Report, J ul y 1965), i s prime mni ster of Greece, the Ki ng i s gone,the communi sts are home fromexi l e and Greece' s days as an Ameri can al l y are numbered NOWHERE WAS AMERICAN PROCOMMUNST MEDDLINGMORE BLATANT AT THE TIME THAN I N I TALY Churchi l l tel l s i n hi s memoi rs of hi s four day struggl e to prevent Roosevei t fromthrowi ng out the Ki ng and l eavi ng I tal y wthout a government the moment Ki ng Vi ctor EmmanuelI I I qui t the Germans i n J ul y 1943 I t i s a chapter I tal i an monarchi sts shoul d use befoi t i s too l ate R Harri s Smth, the l efti st ex-research anal yst for C A, wote i n hi sbook on OSS One ci vi l i an l i beral who resi gned fromOSS after obj ecti ng, unsuccessfulto Washington' s support for the I tal i an monarchy, l ater ref l ected I shoul d have stayunder anyone, however i ncapabl e, made whatever promses were necessary about oaths t othe House of Savoy, and then used my i ngenui ty i n ci rcumventi ng both R Harri s Smthdoes not name thi s sel f- i mportant l i t t l e l eft i st who woul d decide whether I tal y shoul dhave a Ki ng or not, but i t was probabl y Donal d Downes, who i n North Afri ca made a prac-ti ce of l i berat i ng Spani sh communi sts i n hi s personal war agai nst General i ssi mo FrancoDownes had a pathol ogi cal hatred for the House of Savoy and the man he referred t o asthe ri di cul ous l i t t l e Ki ng Al l stops were pul l ed out i n OSS' dri ve to destroy I tal y' s throne Ameri can Ofi ce ofWar I nformati on sound trucks roamed I tal i an streets bl ari ng forth propaganda for I tal y'reds and using such term as themoronic l i t t l e Ki ng To make the ri ggi ng of thepl ebi sci te fool proof, a date was set before the I tal i an Army was demobi l i zed The armeforces were monarchi st and anti -communist , but as l ong as they were i n uni formtheycoul d not vote Thus I tal y l ost the pi l l ar whi ch, wth the Vati can, assured stabi l i tyNow the I tal i an Communi st Party i s the onl y sel f -supporti ng one i n Europe and has nottaken over the country onl y because Moscow has ordered i ts l eader not to Over f i f tyI tal i an governments have ri sen and fal l en si nce Worl d War I I , toppl ed by communi sts atwl l but never repl aced by them because a take-over of ungovernable and bankrupt I talwoul d l eave the communi sts hol di ng the bag and barred fromNATOs secrets THE PERSONAL HATRED OF AMERICANAGENTS AGAINST MONARCHS i s part of the phenomena of aprej udi ce that is beari ng bi tter frui t Whether thi s hatred was a product of our schooand l eft i st professors, or resul ted fromi ndoctri nati on i n the forces i s hard to say R Harri s Smth, i n OSS, THE SECRET HISTORY OF AMERICA' S FIRST INTELLIGENCE AGENCY,quotes Col onel Donovan as repl yi ng, when reproached for usi ng communists i n OSS Thati s why I hi red them A more damni ng i ndi ctment of the servi ce that shoul d have beenprotecti ng Ameri ca, may be found i n another R Harri s Smth paragraph The vi ctoryof the CI A l i beral facti on was the operati onal brai nchi l d of 32-year-ol d Thomas BradenAt Braden' s suggesti on and wth the support of Al l en Dul l es and Frank Wsener, the CIAbegan i ts covert support of the non-communi st pol i t i cal l eft around the worl d - tradeuni ons, pol i ti cal parti es and i nternati onal organi zati ons of students and j ournal i sts So our l eft i st j ournal i sts were used by CA And what pol i t i cal parti es di d Braden usi f non-communi st l eft i sm was a requi si te? Non- communi st i s not synonymous wth anti -communi st Our enemy was expansi oni st, subversi on-spreadi ng Russi a, yet, under Bradenour CIA was support i ng covertl y onl y parti es whose i nterests overl ap wth communi sms The onl y segment of the pol i t i cal spectrumwhi ch has no common i nterest wth communi smare to the ri ght of center and such part i es were excl uded

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    Arpi l 1984 Page -3-As for uni ons, they do not work for a country, they work for l abor bosses and they knowno boundari es Marx' s credo was Wrkers of the worl d, uni te The sl ogan of Ameri canl abor i s I nternati onal l abor sol i dari ty i s a trade uni on obl i gati on. What i s thedi f ference, save for the sugar coati ng, the l ul l i ng use of i nternati onal i nstead ofof the worl d? As for organi zati ons of immature students deformed by l ef ti st professothat i s howBri tai n got her KimPhi l by' s and al l the rest When men l i ke Braden l imtan i ntel l i gence servi ce to soci al i sts who are l i kel y t o become communists or communistswho say they are soci al i sts, men l i ke Phi l i p Agee are what they get, and thi s wasAmeri ca' s pl i ght Not onl y di d the sort of men whomThomas Braden accorded exclusi veri ghts to enter CIA toppl e l egi timate governments abroad, but i n the Watergate scandalwe saw how a l ef ti st newspaper coul d put over a coup d' Etat by press I n thi s case theWashi ngton Post and two shoddy j ournal i sts hounded a Presi dent f romof f i ce and gaveAmeri ca the worst Presi dent and congress the nati on has ever had The two gutter-sni pereporters became ml l i onai res by wri ti ng a book about the struggl e to force a Presi dentto turn over hi s personal tape-recorded notes, but no congressi onal commttee asked thej ournal i sts to di scl ose the nam of the mle who l eaked the secrets of government THE PRESI DENT WHO NEVER WOULD HAVE ATTAINEDOFFICE WTHOUT THE AID OF MEN SUCH AS THEABOVE sent General Robert Huyser to bri ng about the fal l of I ran' s Emperor Because HMaj esty Mohammed Reza Pahl avi hel d the mst fanati cal terrori sts i n the worl d i n check,Presi dent J imm Carter' s i deas of human ri ghts were vi ol ated As a resul t, I rani answere murdered by the thousands, Ameri cans di ed i n a stupi dl y-pl anned attempt to l i beratthei r embassy personnel and today I rani an chi l dren are pushed before sol di ers to cl earpath through mnef i el ds Assassi nati on team are f l own to capi tal s i n the West and

    hel d i n contempt for obeyi ng so assi duousl y the di shonorabl e orders of a fool The story of I ran i s onl y one of the mre sensati onal ones that shoul d be told in a booon howAmeri can l eft i sts have made and unmade regimes through acts whi ch ml l i ons ofhel pl ess peopl e are condemned to atone i n chai ns A CHAPTER I N SUCH A BOOK SHOULD BE DEVOTED TO THAI LAND and OSS' wartime f i nd , Pri diPanamong On J une 9 1946, the young K ng, Ananda Mahi dal , was f ound dead, shot by a22 r i f l e I t was undoubtedl y an attempt to destroy the age-ol d mnarchy, but Pri di ' sprotectors were too strong to permt an i nvesti gati on On November 8 1947, he madeanother attempt to sei ze power but was thwarted by Marshal Luang Pi bul Songrami n abl oodl ess coup, to the fury of those who were trying to i nstal l thei r man Hopes werenext pi nned on the J anuary 1948 el ecti ons, but i n spi te of the mney and power behi ndPri di , Marshal Pi bul Songramwas conf i rmed as Prime Mni ster on Apri l 8 and the netbegan to cl ose around Pri di Panamong as the murderer of hi s Ki ng Pri di was permttedto escape to Red Chi na and the matter was dropped for fear of causi ng embarrassment tothe nati on whose agents had been hi s supporters For years I met at Pari s cafes wthPri di ' s exi l ed brother but he woul d never di scuss the detai l s of that post -war pl ot IN EUROPE THE DRIVE WAS ON FOR TUNSIAN I NDEPENDENCE and I rvi ng Brown, Ameri ca' s rovi nambassador who had cal l ed himel f Norri s A Grambo when TomBraden was gi vi ng himmneyto organi ze a l abor uni on as a l ever on French pol i ti cs, was backi ng a former Mussol i nispy named Habi b Bourgui ba as the future l eader of Tuni si a Braden cal l ed himel f WarreG Haski ns when he was fundi ng a l abor uni on as a tool and Bourgui ba had been known asNo 13120 when he was tracki ng down Li byans for Mussol i ni ' s hi t team I n 1951 I rvi ngBrown and Wal ter Reuther took Bourgui ba to an AFL-CIO conventi on i n San Francisco toshow himthei r power and reach agreement on what he would do for themVi ctor R esel wrote of that vi si t i n hi s col umn of November 1 1962 : Way back i n 1951some AFL l eaders brought thi s chap over as though R esel di d not knowwho di d i t andwhy) He was a l onel y man weari ng a tarboosh, tal ki ng to those who woul d l i sten I

    seni l e ol d men i n TeheranAyatol l ah Khomei ny, a man pl ot the toppl i ng of Arab Ki ngs whose i deas di spl ease thea ml l i on times worse than the mderate Shah whomour Presi dewas about t o del i ver i nto the hands of hi s enemes, before he di ed Thi s i s what GenerHuyser brought about He cannot be court-marti al ed for f ol l owng orders, but he can be

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    Apri l , 1984 Page - 4-remember himsighi ng over a cup of tea about howwonderful i t woul d be i f hi s l and wereas peaceful and prosperous as your country Hs name was and i s Habi b Bourguiba - nowPresi dent of Tuni si a, a democrati c l and, a l and of f reedom What dri vel Bourguibahad al ready j oi ned the non-al i gned nati ons and i n J ul y 1957 he deposed hi s Bey, therebyendi ng a 250-year-ol d monarchy I n August 1961 he had sent hi s secretary to assassi nateSal ah Ben Youssef, his old f ri end and onl y ri val , i n room53 of the Royal Hotel i nFrankfurt For democracy, he gave Tuni si a a one-party system made hi mel f Presidentfor l i fe, and the ri ots of earl y 1983 are a taste of what i s to come when the corruptwfe of R esel ' s hero f i nds hersel f al one wth her favori tes MEANWHLE THE UBIQU TOUS I RVI NGBROWN al i as Norri s A Grambo, was groomng a cof fee-house pol i ti ci an named Mehdi Ben Barka to use a l abor uni on as a party and depose theKi ng of Morocco, so he coul d forma republ i c under himel f LI FE magazi ne of February3 1958, gushed over Brown as having travel l ed more than a ml l i on mles to buttressthe f ree l abor movement, i n a f i ght agai nst communi sm Brown and Braden never foughtcommuni smi n thei r l i ves ; they advanced soci al i sm whi ch Whi ttaker Chambers cal l edcommuni smwth the cl aws retracted, and Mehdi Ben Barka was the l ef ti st they had de-ci ded to put over Morocco Fortunatel y for the worl d, Ben Barka was ki dnapped on aPari s street and assassi nated on October 29 1965, as he was prepari ng to l eave forCuba to take over the l eadershi p of a terrori st organi zati on coveri ng Europe, NorthAfri ca and the Ameri cas Now l et us turn to Asia BEHNDA TWOCOLUMNREPORT BY DENNS BLOODWORTH I N THE LONDON OBSERVER OF FEBRUARY 221959 l i es a story whi ch i tsel f woul d f i l l a book The French and Chi nese embassieswarned Pri nce NorodomSihanouk that a pl ot was afoot to depose himand i nstal l a di s-credi ted di pl omat as Presi dent of a Vi etnamtype Republ i c Movi ng swftl y, the pri nce' ssecuri ty servi ces ki l l ed Dop Cchuan, the ml i tary l eader, before he coul d move andsei zed a pl ane carryi ng 400 pounds of gol d for bri bi ng the army Ameri can wrel essequipment, Vi etnamese operators and i nstructi on papers i nvol vi ng the C A were sei zed i nthe haul whi l e key pl otters confessed everythi ng to save themel ves When the Frenchi ntel l i gence of f i cer whom the U S I nformati on Of i ce had taken on as a transl atortol d hi s Ameri can empl oyer what had happened, a l ook of horror passed over the youngAmeri can' s face He l eaned back i n hi s chai r and excl aimed to hi s assi stant al l i sl ost To Si hanouk' s credi t, he di d not l et rancor turn hi magai nst Ameri ca He tol dChester Bowes i n 1966 that he woul d not obj ect to the U. S engaging i n hot pursui t i nunpopulated areas of Cambodi a Bowes, i n hi s book PROMSES TO KEEP, admts that hedecei ved the Pentagon and l et our sol di ers conti nue t o be sl aughtered He knew thePentagon wanted to wpe out the sanctuari es i n Cambodi a but the State Department di d notwant Cambodi a saved, so Bowes sai d nothi ng about Si hanouk' s message and the ki l l i ngswth impuni ty went onTHE STORY OF LAOS SUPPORTS EVERYTH NG THAT EXPONENTS OF THE CONSPI RACY THEORY have beensayi ng Averel l Harriman, who has been Ameri ca' s evi l geni us f romthe day he bai l ed outLeni n' s bol shevi ks to the sel l -out i n V etnam worked for years to get the communi stpri nce, Souphanovong, i nto the government of Laos Souphanovong was fi l l ed wth hatredbecause he was a hal f brother of the other pri nces, born of a servant gi rl i n thePal ace, and for himAmeri ca' s facel ess government betrayed Pri nce Boun Oum the anti -communi st who was born Ki ng of Champassak and got hi s warri or' s trai ni ng i n the Forei gnLegi on Duri ng the Laos negoti ati ons i n Geneva i n 1961, a l owgrade-forei gn servi ceof f i cer named Wl l i amH Sul l i van became Harriman' s favori te To push hi mupward,Harri man cut the 126-man del egati on down to a thi rd and reduced the ml i tary secti onto an obedi ent col onel and a sergeant Sti l l of f i ci al s who wanted to save Laos stoodi n hi s way, so Harri man asked State Department to make Sul l i van hi s deputy Staterepl i ed that a cl ass three forei gn servi ce of f i cer coul d not be pushed ahead of cl assone and class two men Thi s was no probl em to daunt Harriman Those who were hi gherthan Sul l i van he promptl y sent home and Laos was gentl y pushed down the drai n The Ki ng was proud to the end He went wth head hi gh to the commni st re-educati on

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    camp, where l i s reported to have di ed, though hi s death has never been conf i rmed Pri nce Mangkra Souvannaphouma who tel l s the tragi c story i n h s L AGONE DU LAOS, i si n Pari s, contempl ati ng establ i shment of a regency for the Ki ng s youngest son aroundwhoma resi stance force mght ral l y I t was not by coi nci dence that Wl l i amSul l i van took part i n the Pari s peace negoti a-ti ons whi ch were i ntended to preserve V etnam for what Ki ssi nger cal l ed a decenti nterval Nor was i t coi nci dence that i t was Wl l i amSul l i van whomPresi dent Cartersent t o Teheran to tel l the Shah to go I n hi s enthusi asmM Sul l i van reported thatthe Ayatol l ah Khomei ny was Ghandi - l i ke The story coul d go on and onMANY EUROPEAN SPECIALI STS INARAB AFFAIRS ARE CONVNCED THAT THE SEIZURE OF POWER_I NLIBYA by the madman, Muammar Qaddafi , was not by Qaddafi s i ni ti ati ve They reportthat certai n i ntel l i gence off i cers at the two bases whi ch Ki ng I dri s granted Ameri cathought they had a f i nd i n the young desert-born sol di er they were groomng to re-pl ace the Ki ng There i s no evi dence to support a formal charge that the man who wasto become i nternati onal terrori sms banker was an Ameri can creati on, but the suppl ant-i ng of Ki ng Idri s by a psychopathi c threat to worl d peace fol l ows an al l too faml i arpattern, gi ven the sort of agents recrui ted by the Braden doctri ne and the presenceof two ai rforce bases i n Libya Again, the speci al i sts who advance the above chargeemphasi ze that i n no case have the Ameri can peopl e been aware of the destructi ons ofpi l l ars of stabi l i ty carri ed out by a facel ess and wel l -organi zed group wthi n thei rgovernment OF ALL THE HGH HANDEDMEDDLING IN THE AFFAIRS OF ANOTHER COUNTRY, the most di sgracefulwas probabl y the deposi ng of H s Majesty Bao Dai , and the attempt to j usti fy i t bydeni grati ng H s Maj esty i n the eyes of the Ameri can peopl e An act onl y surpassed bythe fomenti ng of the war i n I ndochi na i n the fi rst pl aceTHE WAR I N I NDOCHNA WAS IGNTED the day OSS l efti sts got a V etnamese communi st out ofa Chi nese pr-son by changi ng hi s name fromNguyen Ai Quoc to Ho ch Mnh I n February1945, hal f a year before the war i n Asi a ended, OSS Major Paul Hel l i wel l gave theMoscowtrai ned revol uti onary some arm and 20,000 rounds of ammuni ti on whi ch were usedto ki l l the French resi stance f i ghters who were servi ng as eyes and ears for GeneralC ai re Chennaul t Ameri cans have been tol d that Ho ch Mnh helped i n the f i ght agai nsthe J apanese The truth i s i f Ho s reds had ever i nconveni enced the J apanese, Monsi euGeorges Gauti er, the secretary-general of the government of I ndochi na, woul d have beenhel d responsi bl e but he has been powerl ess to puncture the Ameri can myth J apanese col onel requested an audi ence wth H s Majesty Bao Dai i n the spri ng of 1945and tol d the Emperor Your Maj esty, the Ameri cans are armng and trai ni ng an army for

    the communi sts i n Tonkin They have not bothered us and our orders are not to touchthem but I amworri ed They are goi ng to make troubl e for Your Majesty and i f yougi ve the word, we wl l wpe themout now whi l e we canAfter ref l ecti ng a moment the Emperor repl i ed No, I cannot ask you to ki l l my subj eceven though they are my enemes Thi s i s somethi ng I must take care of mysel f Al readI ambei ng cal l ed a puppet of the French I do not want to be cal l ed a puppet of theJ apanese I t was one of the greatest errors the Emperor ever made Not onl y di d i t cost some 55,000 Ameri can boys thei r l i ves but ml l i ons of Asiati cswent to thei r death i n massacres, re-educati on camps and rotti ng boats After the French had been run out and V etnambecame Ameri ca s showcase for democracy,onl y a bi got or a one-worl der desi ri ng to weaken and huml i ate Ameri ca woul d have tri ed

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    to put a sectari an Cathol i c faml y over Buddhi st V etnam Yet thi s i s what happenedand a l obby organi zed by CA and run by an economst named Leo Cherne, who knewnothi ngabout Asi a but was advi si ng Ameri cans to i nvest i n V etnam and Cherne's f ri end, J osephButti nger, who hel d that we should have supported Ho chi Mnh i n the fi rst pl ace, tri edto rui n any Ameri can who warned that we were maki ng a mstake Wth the Ameri can-sel ected Cathol i c prime mni ster i n pl ace, C A' s Colonel EdwardLansdal e and a group of Mchi gan State Uni versi ty l eft i sts l ed by one Wesl ey Fi shelset about ri ggi ng the pl ebi sci te which was to depose the Emperor and turn the unwantedprime mni ster i nto a Presi dent A f i nal hatchet-j ob on Hs Maj esty appeared i nCOLLI ERS magazi ne of September 30 1955, wri tten by Davi d Schoenbrun, of ColumbiaBroadcast i ng System a month before the bl atantl y di shonest voti ng on October 23 I n1967 Ho chi Mnh gave Schoenbrun and hi s wfe a f ree tri p t o Hanoi , after whi chSchoenbrun returned to subvert students at Ameri can uni versi t i es and wri te a book i nwhi ch he admtted that Ho chi Mnh had been hi s fri end si nce 1946 One day, when the shameful chapter of Ameri can hi story was over, H s Maj esty remarkedto me I f your country had gi ven me a thousandth of the sum i t spent to depose me, Icoul d have won that war . A st atement which Col onel N chol as Thorne, the Ameri canMari ne Corps l anguage speci al i st, readi l y conf i rmedI l ook back on the years since Maj or Krause and MajorJ apanese pri son camp near Peking and the vignettes ofrecal l Maj or Archimedes Patt i and Robert Knapp taki ngand passi ng himon i nto C A wth a Bangkok press cardto Spai n to undermne General i ssi mo Franco, l est wthcome back to Madri d At such t imes the pi cture of Al phonso XI I I , standi ng proudl y and erect as he faced thedel egati on fromMadri d i n the Hotel Meuri ce i n Pari s, i n the Spri ng of 1931, alwayscomes to mnd You ask me to abdi cate, he tol d them but abdi cate I cannot, for Iamnot onl y the Ki ng of Spai n, I amthe Ki ng of al l the Spani ards, and I not onl y havemy own rei gn, but that of those of my house who have gone before me, for whi ch I mustsomeday gi ve a ri gorous acco