Kissinger, Rockefeller, Ford (Photo: Wikimedia) |
Pundits taking a walk down
political memory lane may recall the rapturous attention which Henry Kissinger
commanded as he scaled the ranks from Harvard professor to the second most
powerful man in Washington, but few will recall the revelations from the 1970s
disclosing Kissinger as a Communist agent going back to World War 2. We will
help you reminisce.
It may seem fantastical that a
man respected as much as Kissinger would turn out to be a Soviet spy, but if
you understand the linkage between the Rockefellers, USSR, and the United
States, it is not so bizarre. We have credible sources documenting Kissinger’s
involvement with espionage with the USSR starting with his career in the US
Army counter intelligence unit after the war.
Kissinger was drafted into the
Army in 1943 where he was later assigned to the 970th Counter Intelligence
Detachment where he ruled a German town after the cease fire in 1945, earning
the princely salary of 10,000 USD per year. To put that income into
perspective, the median male annual income in 1950, which had risen
substantially due to rampant post-war inflation, was only 2570 USD. His reign ended in April 1946 when he was transferred as an instructor to the
European Command Intelligence School.
Around that time, Kissinger was
recruited by Soviet intelligence agents as a double agent through a spy ring
known as ODRA whose purpose was to penetrate British and American military
intelligence. Eventually one of the chiefs of the Polish GZI, corresponding to
the KGB, Colonel Michael Goleniewski, defected to the USA with a large cache of
documents, including a 1500 page report on the activities of the ODRA which
contained a list of spies and their code names.
One of the names was that of
American Ernst Bosenhard who was assigned to US Intelligence Headquarters in Oberammergau,
Germany where he was arrested in 1951 and subsequently convicted of espionage
and the conveyance of large quantities of official documents to the USSR.
Bosenhard was an ODRA colleague of Kissinger’s.
Goleniewski defected in 1961 when
Kissinger was a professor at Harvard and in the employ of the Council on
Foreign Relations, commonly known as CFR. Goleniewski’s ODRA documents also
included the name of Sgt Henry A Kissinger, code named Bor, whom they noted in
1954 had returned to the USA to work at Harvard and was collaborating with the CIA.
While foreign intelligence
agencies, especially those of the British, used the information to identify and
prosecute traitors, the United States did not do so. In any event, the United
States Congress passed a law making Goleniewski a US citizen for his services.
Goleniewski suffered a bit of
credibility loss when he declared himself Aleksei Nicholaevich Romanoff, the
son of the Czar Nicholas II, who was thought to have been murdered with the
royal household in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution. However, CIA Chief
of Research and Analysis Herman E. Kimsey swore in an affidavit dated June 3,
1965, and based on numerous and varied authentication tests, that Goleniewski’s
claim was truthful. Goleniewski’s credibility was also affirmed by John
Norpel, Jr., who had served with FBI and State Department Security, before
Senate hearings on the subject.
There is more to the story.
Charlotte Iserbyt reports that she invited Dr Igor Glagolev, an advisor to the
Politburo and Soviet arms negotiators prior to his defection, to debate Paul
Warnke, chief SALT negotiator under Jimmy Carter, on the merits of SALT II. Dr
Glagolev told Iserbyt that he had attended many meetings at the Kremlin where
both Nelson Rockefeller and/or Henry Kissinger were present. That explosive
disclosure will be developed in another blog posting.
Finally, to cement the case of Kissinger's espionage, all of which was endorsed by Nelson Rockefeller, we note that President Nixon personally intervened to waive Kissinger's background check which required of all persons entering White House service. The reason is simple - both Nixon and Kissinger knew of Goleniewski's damning revelations. Kissinger is the only appointee known to receive a special presidential waiver in this first term.
Finally, to cement the case of Kissinger's espionage, all of which was endorsed by Nelson Rockefeller, we note that President Nixon personally intervened to waive Kissinger's background check which required of all persons entering White House service. The reason is simple - both Nixon and Kissinger knew of Goleniewski's damning revelations. Kissinger is the only appointee known to receive a special presidential waiver in this first term.
Thus to answer our essay’s title,
the evidence is overwhelming and conclusive that Henry Kissinger was a Soviet
spy and to this day spies for an even more powerful government, the House of
Rockefeller.
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_income_in_the_United_States
Gary
Allen, Kissinger The Secret Side Of The Secretary Of State , 1976, http://www.whale.to/b/allen_b2.html#THE_MAN_BEHIND_THE_MYTH__
Charlotte Iserbyt, 2002, Kissinger Out Of The Closet, http://rense.com/general32/kissde1.htm
Charlotte Iserbyt, 2002, Kissinger Out Of The Closet, http://rense.com/general32/kissde1.htm
Copyright 2013 Tony Bonn. All rights reserved.
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