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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
3. Journalism and the CIA: The Mighty Wurlitzer
Sat Nov 9, 2013, 07:08 PM
Nov 2013

More on the big shots at Corporate McPravda:



Journalism and the CIA: The Mighty Wurlitzer

by Daniel Brandt
From NameBase NewsLine, No. 17, April-June 1997

EXCERPT...

OSS veteran Frank Wisner ran most of the early peacetime covert operations as head of the Office of Policy Coordination. Although funded by the CIA, OPC wasn't integrated into the CIA's Directorate of Plans until 1952, under OSS veteran Allen Dulles. Both Wisner and Dulles were enthusiastic about covert operations. By mid-1953 the department was operating with 7,200 personnel and 74 percent of the CIA's total budget.

Wisner created the first "information superhighway." But this was the age of vacuum tubes, not computers, so he called it his "Mighty Wurlitzer." The CIA's global network funded the Italian elections in 1948, sent paramilitary teams into Albania, trained Nationalist Chinese on Taiwan, and pumped money into the Congress for Cultural Freedom, the National Student Association, and the Center for International Studies at MIT. Key leaders and labor unions in western Europe received subsidies, and Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty were launched. The Wurlitzer, an organ designed for film productions, could imitate sounds such as rain, thunder, or an auto horn. Wisner and Dulles were at the keyboard, directing history.

The ethos of the fight against fascism carried over into the fight against godless communism; for these warriors, the Cold War was still a war. OSS highbrows had already embraced psychological warfare as a new social science: propaganda, for example, was divided into "black" propaganda (stories that are unattributed, or attributed to nonexistent sources, or false stories attributed to a real source), "gray" propaganda (stories from the government where the source is attributed to others), and "white" propaganda (stories from the government where the source is acknowledged as such).[1]

After World War II, these psywar techniques continued. C.D. Jackson, a major figure in U.S. psywar efforts before and after the war, was simultaneously a top executive at Time-Life. Psywar was also used with success during the 1950s by Edward Lansdale, first in the Philippines and then in South Vietnam. In Guatemala, the Dulles brothers worked with their friends at United Fruit, in particular the "father of public relations," Edward Bernays, who for years had been lobbying the press on behalf of United. When CIA puppets finally took over in 1954, only applause was heard from the media, commencing forty years of CIA-approved horrors in that unlucky country.[2] Bernays' achievement apparently impressed Allen Dulles, who immediately began using U.S. public relations experts and front groups to promote the image of Ngo Dinh Diem as South Vietnam's savior.[3]

The combined forces of unaccountable covert operations and corporate public relations, each able to tap massive resources, are sufficient to make the concept of "democracy" obsolete. Fortunately for the rest of us, unchallenged power can lose perspective. With research and analysis -- the capacity to see and understand the world around them -- entrenched power must constantly anticipate and contain potential threats. But even as power seems more secure, this capacity can be blinded by hubris and isolation.

CONTINUED...

http://www.namebase.org/news17.html



Cover-ups bother me, too, Mika. "Top Secret" doesn't trump Democracy, and it certainly doesn't trump the Constitution.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I just posted this in a Venezuela thread Mika Nov 2013 #1
Journalism and the CIA: The Mighty Wurlitzer Octafish Nov 2013 #3
As always... THANK YOU Octafish!!! Cooley Hurd Nov 2013 #2
You are most welcome, Cooley Hurd! Octafish Nov 2013 #6
Smart man that Rex fella. Rex Nov 2013 #4
‘Phoney 201 (file)….all documents therein forged and backdated’ Octafish Nov 2013 #8
Back then, there was lots of tv coverage of the Committee findings. dixiegrrrrl Nov 2013 #5
And then, it was gone... Octafish Nov 2013 #14
"We Americans are the ultimate innocents...... dixiegrrrrl Nov 2013 #16
Fascinating reminder re: Congressional investigations leftstreet Nov 2013 #7
Church Committee was last time INTEL Services held to public scrutiny Octafish Nov 2013 #15
Very odd behavior for someone who's been hired by the CIA to kill Kennedy. Bolo Boffin Nov 2013 #17
Hard to conceive, but Idaho was a Democratic state back then IDemo Nov 2013 #9
Frank Church warned us about the Secret Government and then got the Treatment Octafish Nov 2013 #24
"That capability at any time could be turned around on the American people " sabrina 1 Nov 2013 #30
Bush represents the Dulles Brothers in the present Age. Octafish Nov 2013 #34
One good thing RobertEarl Nov 2013 #10
They don't like to take chances. Funny, that 80 Year Line of Dots... Octafish Nov 2013 #25
Thank you much, Octafish. Once again giving me so much material to read, my brain starts to reel! Mnemosyne Nov 2013 #11
Rex Bradford addressed LBJ-Hoover phone call about Mexico City... Octafish Nov 2013 #22
I just saw that, re Oswald in Mexico, for the first time this week. sabrina 1 Nov 2013 #31
Absolute Distraction. Octafish Nov 2013 #32
I agree. I can accept that Oswald was the shooter, but not that he acted alone. So I don't generally sabrina 1 Nov 2013 #33
^ Wilms Nov 2013 #12
Sunday kick. johnnyreb Nov 2013 #13
Monday kick robertpaulsen Nov 2013 #18
Sen Richard Schweiker chaired a subcommittee under the "Church Committee" MinM Nov 2013 #19
'The Warren Commission has collapsed like a House of Cards' -- Sen. Richard Schweiker Octafish Nov 2013 #20
Unbelievable! JackRiddler Nov 2013 #29
Thanks again Octafish. K&R + a couple of links relevant to this thread. bobthedrummer Nov 2013 #21
Recced. Thanks Octa. Nt. Mc Mike Nov 2013 #23
Great post. JimboBillyBubbaBob Nov 2013 #26
You are welcome, JimboBillyBubbaBob! Rex Bradford is a great guy! Octafish Nov 2013 #28
Kick for the masses. (eom) CanSocDem Nov 2013 #27
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