Sunday, May 9, 2021

Rethinking Nixon in Dallas

Quite some time ago, we speculated on Nixon's presence in Dallas as complicity in the murder of  President Kennedy on November 22, 1963 in Dallas' Dealey Plaza. New evidence and analysis has forced us to discard the theory we presented in favor of a new one placing Nixon in more favorable light.

In our past Chronicle, we suggested that Nixon, a protégé of David and Nelson Rockefeller, was in Dallas on a mission specifically related to the operation of the assassination - perhaps as a bagman or signal that the operation was green - approved.

While there may be some truth to the latter - and it would be without Nixon's cognizance - new analysis prompts us to believe that his handlers placed him in Dallas to show him the power of the Deep State, and to provide a basis for blackmailing or destroying him should he grow too big for his future presidential britches.

As Watergate flames enveloped the Nixon White House, the Rockefellers banged the drums of the Imperial Presidency, showing that Nixon had overstepped his authorization from the Deep State, and thus needed to be cut down to size.

However, the Oval Office tapes, often used to incriminate the president, actually vindicate him on this matter. As we all know, his aide H R Haldeman later wrote about his cryptic conversations with Nixon regarding Bay of Pigs, and assignments his boss gave him regarding DCI Richard Helms.

When Haldeman told Helms that the White House did not want to open the scab of Bay of Pigs, Helms went totally ballistic because he realized that Nixon was attempting to blackmail him over the Kennedy murder in which CIA was a leading partner in crime. In that outburst, Helms let the cat out of the bag.

Nixon is heard musing about the extent of the agency's involvement, hinting that CIA had more to do with the Big Event in Dallas than the public knew. The president seemed genuinely perplexed about the crime, harboring suspicions about the fantasy Warren Commission Report. And certainly Nixon, a veteran of Operation 40 and other CIA black jobs, was not so naïve to suppose that the spook agency was clueless. Our interpretation of Nixon's words suggest that he was getting warm, but yet had not connected the dots.

Since that Chronicle, we have also learned quite a bit more about the assassination, and its lead instigator and planner. Again the tapes come to Nixon's defense insofar as he was not a participant in the crime, and he certainly had no foreknowledge.

The murder of President Kennedy was ordered and led by International Jewry. This thesis Michael Collins Piper makes clear in his book Final Judgment. The tapes also show that Nixon was either ambivalent or antipathetic toward the Jews. Yes he had the exceptionally ambitious, sycophantic, yet totally sinister Henry Kissinger on his staff, along with an army of other Jews in his administration. But he made explicit comments about the "god-damned Jews" and other deservedly unfavorable remarks.

Consequently, we conclude that Nixon could have been used by the Jews, and framed in such a way so as to cast doubt on his innocence in Dallas, but they would never have welcomed him into their bosom as a co-conspirator.

It is now inconceivable to us that Nixon had foreknowledge of the assassination. Although he had good sense to leave Dallas before the shooting, he was brought to Dallas, as were so many other luminaries, to witness the shock and awe of the Jewish Deep State, and to provide a means, via circumstantial evidence, of suggesting his complicity in the crime on November 22. Nixon unwittingly saved himself from that smear by beating CIA to the punch when he challenged Helms with the evidence.

Reference
Michael Collins Piper, Final Judgment, America First Books, 6th Edition, 2d printing, 2005, source(Microsoft Word - Final_Judgment_x_Build_20 (wikispooks.com), accessed 5/7/2021)

Copyright 2021 Tony Bonn. All rights reserved.

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