Agree with your summary. This tragedy marks the beginning of the
NWO's control in the USA. I have had many phone visits with
authors, a secret service employee driving the work car four
feet behind the JFK limo in Dealey Plaza on 11-22-1963, and
other individuals who had a part in the events on 11-22-1963.
The persons and or government agencies I surmise who had major
parts in the murder were the Hunts, Rockefellers(mainly directed
by David), LBJohnson, RMNixon, GHWBush, JEHoover, and rogue
elements in the Secret Service, CIA, FBI, Mafia, and the
Pentagon.
In looking over the members of the Warren Commission, it is a
Who's Who of the key factions involved in the planning,
execution and damage control of the assassination. Allen
Dulles(CIA) and Gen. Charles Cabell(brother of the Mayor of
Dallas-Earle Cabell) were fired by JFK after the failed Bay of
Pigs fiasco in April of 1961 which took place after the
inauguration of JFK as President of the USA in January 1961.
Kennedy was kept out of the loop prior to the invasion of the
Bay of Pigs and he became aware that these same elements in his
government had begun to sabotage his administration's dealings
on the matter of foreign policy with Cuba and the USSR. It was
no surprise that Senator Gerald Ford was the " Mole " for Hoover
at the FBI during the Warren Commission investigations. Ford had
been an FBI agent under Hoover prior to entering politics.
Both Ford and then a prominent Asst. District Attorney in
Philadelphia, Arlen Specter, who was an Asst. Counsel on the
Commission, were the two people who created the illusion of the
" magic bullet ", leading to the infamous " single-bullet theory
" outcome in their investigations for the Warren Commission. At
the time Specter was appointed to the Commission, he was a
successful prosecuting attorney in Philadelphia and had been
highly recommended by Ford for the appointment to the
Commission.
Chief Justice Warren had been a Republican Party's candidate in
the 1952 presidential election and lost out to Dwight D.
Eisenhower, who won and became the President. As a reward for
his loyalty, President Eisenhower appointed him to the post of
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Both Warren and Ford had
personally interviewed Jack Ruby in his jail cell in Dallas
where Ruby asked them both that he be moved to the D.C. federal
jail jurisdiction for his security and protection in permeating
a situation for his disclosures as to all the powerful people
involved, but that never happened. Ruby remained in that cell
overlooking Dealey Plaza until his death from cancer.
Below are the many articles found on the internet under the
websites:
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/JFKwarrenR.htm,
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAmccloyJ.htm, and
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/JFKmurchison.htm,
" John J. McCloy had been the Chairman of the Chase Manhattan
Bank for the Rockefellers prior to his appointment to the
Commission and on the appointment date he was the acting
Chairman for the Ford Foundation, also now owned by the
Rockefellers as well. He also continued to work for the Milbank,
Tweed, Hadley & McCloy law firm owned by the Rockefellers and
therefore became involved in lobbying for the gas and oil
industry. It was Eisenhower who first introduced McCloy to Clint
Murchison, who later became the owner of the Dallas Cowboys
professional football team in 1959. Shortly thereafter to this
introduction, the Chase Manhattan Bank began to provide
Murchison along with Sid Richardson and Robert R. Young
low-interest loans. In 1954 McCloy worked closely with all three
men in order to take control of the New York Central Railroad
Co.. These activities caused great concern and the Interstate
Commerce Commission(ICC) eventually held hearings about what was
described as " highly improper " behavior. The takeover was a
disaster and Young committed suicide and NY Central eventually
went bankrupt.
In 1950 Dwight D. Eisenhower had purchased a small farm for
$24,000. According to Drew Pearson and Jack Anderson (The Case
Against Congress), several oil millionaires, including W. Alton
Jones, B. B. Byers and George E. Allen, began acquiring
neighboring land for Eisenhower. Jonathan Kwitny (Endless
Enemies) has argued that over the next few years Eisenhower's
land became worth over $1 million: "Most of the difference
represented the gifts of Texas oil executives connected to
Rockefeller oil interests. The oilmen acquired surrounding land
for Eisenhower under dummy names, filled it with livestock and
big, modern barns, paid for extensive renovations to the
Eisenhower house, and even wrote out checks to pay the hired
help."
In 1950 McCloy began receiving communications from people in
Germany calling on him to release Nazis from prison. This
pressure came from senior figures in the new West German
government. Two figures they were especially concerned about
were German industrialists, Alfried Krupp and Friedrich Flick,
who had both been convicted of serious war crimes at Nuremberg.
Alfried Krupp and his father Gustav Krupp ran Friedrich Krupp
AG, Germany's largest armaments company. Krupp and his father
were initially hostile to the Nazi Party. However, in 1930 they
were persuaded by Hjalmar Schacht that Adolf Hitler would
destroy the trade unions and the political left in Germany.
Schacht also pointed out that a Hitler government would
considerably increase expenditure on armaments. In 1933 Krupp
joined the Schutzstaffel (SS).
During the Second World War Krupp ensured that a continuous
supply of his firm's tanks, munitions and armaments reached the
German Army. He was also responsible for moving factories from
occupied countries back to Germany where they were rebuilt by
the Krupp company.
Krupp also built factories in German occupied countries and used
the labour of over 100,000 inmates of concentration camps. This
included a fuse factory inside Auschwitz. Inmates were also
moved to Silesia to build a howitzer factory. It is estimated
that around 70,000 of those working for Krupp died as a result
of the methods employed by the guards of the camps.
In 1943 Adolf Hitler appointed Alfried Krupp as Minister of the
War Economy. Later that year the SS gave him permission to
employ 45,000 Russian civilians as forced labour in his steel
factories as well as 120,000 prisoners of war in his coalmines.
Arrested by the Canadian Army in 1945 Alfried Krupp was tried as
a war criminal at Nuremberg. He was accused of plundering
occupied territories and being responsible for the barbaric
treatment of prisoners of war and concentration camp inmates.
Documents showed that Krupp initiated the request for slave
labour and signed detailed contracts with the SS, giving them
responsibility for inflicting punishment on the workers.
Krupp was eventually found guilty of being a major war criminal
and sentenced to twelve years in prison and had all his wealth
and property confiscated. Convicted and imprisoned with him were
nine members of the Friedrich Krupp AG board of directors.
However, Gustav Krupp, the former head of the company, was
considered too old to stand trial and was released from custody.
By 1950 the United States was involved in fighting the Cold War.
In June of that year, North Korean troops invaded South Korea.
It was believed that German steel was needed for armaments for
the Korean War and in October, McCloy lifted the 11 million ton
limitation on German steel production. McCloy also began
pardoning German industrialists who had been convicted at
Nuremberg. This included Fritz Ter Meer, the senior executive of
I. G. Farben, the company that produced Zyklon B poison for the
gas chambers. He was also Hitler's Commissioner of for Armament
and War Production for the chemical industry during the war.
McCloy was also concerned about the increasing power of the
left-wing, anti-rearmament, Social Democratic Party (SDP). The
popularity of the conservative government led by Konrad Adenauer
was in decline and a public opinion poll in 1950 showed it only
had 24% of the vote, while support for the SDP had risen to 40%.
On 5th December, 1950, Adenauer wrote McCloy a letter urging
clemency for Krupp. Hermann Abs, one of Hitler's personal
bankers, who surprisingly was never tried as a war criminal at
Nuremberg, also began campaigning for the release of German
industrialists in prison.
In January, 1951, McCloy announced that Alfried Krupp and eight
members of his board of directors who had been convicted with
him, were to be released. His property, valued at around 45
million, and his numerous companies were also restored to him.
Others that McCloy decided to free included Friedrich Flick, one
of the main financial supporters of Adolf Hitler and the
National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP). During the
Second World War Flick became extremely wealthy by using 48,000
slave labourers from SS concentration camps in his various
industrial enterprises. It is estimated that 80 per cent of
these workers died as a result of the way they were treated
during the war. His property was restored to him and like Krupp
became one of the richest men in Germany.
McCloy's decision was very controversial. Eleanor Roosevelt
wrote to McCloy to ask: "Why are we freeing so many Nazis? The
Washington Post published a Herb Block cartoon depicting a
smiling McCloy opening Krupp's cell door, while in the
background Joseph Stalin is shown taking a photograph of the
event. Telford Taylor, who took part in the prosecution of the
Nazi war criminals wrote: "Wittingly or not, Mr. McCloy has
dealt a blow to the principles of international law and concepts
of humanity for which we fought the war."
Rumours began circulating that McCloy had been bribed by the
Krupp's American lawyer, Earl J. Carroll. According to one
magazine: "The terms of Carroll's employment were simple. He was
to get Krupp out of prison and get his property restored. The
fee was to be 5 per cent of everything he could recover. Carroll
got Krupp out and his fortune returned, receiving for his
five-year job a fee of, roughly, $25 million."
McCloy rejected these claims and told the journalist, William
Manchester: "There's not a goddamn word of truth in the charge
that Krupp's release was inspired by the outbreak of the Korean
War. No lawyer told me what to do, and it wasn't political. It
was a matter of my conscience."
After leaving Germany in 1953 McCloy became chairman of the
Chase Manhattan Bank (1953-60) and the Ford Foundation
(1958-65). He also continued to work for Milbank, Tweed, Hadley
& McCloy. The company was owned by the Rockefeller family and
therefore McCloy became involved in lobbying for the gas and oil
industry.
McCloy remained close to Dwight D. Eisenhower and according to
Kai Bird (The Chairman: John J. McCloy: The Making of the
American Establishment): "On at least one occasion, in February
1954, he (McCloy) used a Chase National Bank plane to ferry
himself and the rest of Ike's gang down from New York in order
to keep a golf date with the president at the Augusta National
range."
In 1956 there was an attempt to end all federal price control
over natural gas. Sam Rayburn played an important role in
getting it through the House of Representatives. This is not
surprising as according to John Connally, he alone had been
responsible for a million and a half dollars of lobbying.
Paul Douglas and William Langer led the fight against the bill.
Their campaigned was helped by a speech by Francis Case of South
Dakota. Up until this time Case had been a supporter of the
bill. However, he announced that he had been offered a $25,000
bribe by the Superior Oil Company to guarantee his vote. As a
man of principal, he thought he should announce this fact to the
Senate.
Lyndon B. Johnson responded by claiming that Case had himself
come under pressure to make this statement by people who wanted
to retain federal price controls. Johnson argued: “In all my
twenty-five years in Washington I have never seen a campaign of
intimidation equal to the campaign put on by the opponents of
this bill.” Johnson pushed on with the bill and it was
eventually passed by 53 votes to 38. However, three days later,
Dwight D. Eisenhower, vetoed the bill on grounds of immoral
lobbying. Eisenhower confided in his diary that this had been
“the most flagrant kind of lobbying that has been brought to my
attention”. He added that there was a “great stench around the
passing of this bill” and the people involved were “so arrogant
and so much in defiance of acceptable standards of propriety as
to risk creating doubt among the American people concerning the
integrity of governmental processes”.
The decision by Dwight D. Eisenhower to veto this bill angered
the oil industry. Once again Sid Richardson and Clint Murchison
began negotiations with Eisenhower. In June, 1957, Eisenhower
agreed to appoint their man, Robert B. Anderson, as his
Secretary of the Treasury. According to Robert Sherrill in his
book, The Accidental President: "A few weeks later Anderson was
appointed to a cabinet committee to "study" the oil import
situation; out of this study came the present-day program which
benefits the major oil companies, the international oil giants
primarily, by about one billion dollars a year."
According to Jonathan Kwitny (Endless Enemies) from 1955 to
1963, Richardson, Murchison, and Rockefeller interests (arranged
by John McCloy) and the International Basic Economy Corporation
(100% owned by the Rockefeller family) gave "away a $900,000
slice of their Texas-Louisiana oil property" to Robert B.
Anderson, Eisenhower's Secretary of the Treasury.
Lyndon B. Johnson discussed the possibility of appointing John
McCloy to the Warren Commission in a telephone conversation with
Abe Fortas on 29th November, 1963. When Johnson mentioned his
name Fortas replied: “I think that’d be great. He’s a wonderful
man and a very dear friend of mine. I’m devoted to him.”
McCloy was an early opponent of the Lee Harvey Oswald as the
lone-gunman theory. At the Warren Commission meeting on 16th
December, 1963, Allen Dulles gave out copies of a ten-year old
book that looked at the seven previous attempts on the lives of
various presidents. The author argued that presidential
assassins typically are misfits and loners. Dulles told his
colleagues, “…you’ll find a pattern running through here that I
think we’ll find in this present case.” McCloy replied: “The
Lincoln assassination was a plot”.
McCloy also told his wife he was having difficulty with the
lone-gunman theory. He also informed her that he thought Oswald
was having a relationship with the intelligence services before
the assassination. McCloy commented that he thought it was
“pretty suspicious” that Oswald had found it so easy to obtain
an exit visa from the Soviet Union for his Russian wife, Marina
Oswald. McCloy told his wife that he had heard “a very realistic
rumor” that Oswald was not a genuine defector and that he was
sent to the Soviet Union by the CIA.
McCloy was also concerned about the workings on the Warren
Commission. They met only twice in December, 1963. The third
meeting did not take place until the third week of January. John
McCone reported to Lyndon B. Johnson on 9th January that McCloy
had complained the previous day about this lack of urgency.
McCloy told McCone that he feared the “trails of evidence will
be lost” and that they have been interviewing witnesses soon
after the assassination. In fact, the commission did not get the
chance to question witnesses until nearly six months after the
event.
McCloy became concerned about the nature of Kennedy’s wounds. At
one meeting he said: “Let’s find out about these wounds, it is
just as confusing now as could be. It left my mind muddy as to
what really did happen… Why did the FBI report come out with
something which isn’t consistent with the autopsy.” At this
stage McCloy suspected that at least two men fired at John F.
Kennedy. He said he wanted to visit Dealey Plaza “to see if it
is humanly possible for him (Kennedy) to have been hit in the
front.”
It also emerged that McCloy was highly critical of the FBI
report on