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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
13. Exactly. Poppy, Dulles and that Big Oil line believe Power is not the People's business.
Mon Feb 15, 2016, 10:29 AM
Feb 2016

Old news to you, Hydra, a shocker to Mr. and Mrs. America:



A NEW BIOGRAPHY TRACES THE PATHOLOGY OF ALLEN DULLES AND HIS APPALLING CABAL

Jon Schwarz
The Intercept, Nov. 2 2015, 1:24 p.m.

EXCERPT...

In February 2002, Saudi Prince Turki Al Faisal, head of Saudi intelligence from 1977 until September 1, 2001, traveled to Washington, D.C.

While there, Turki, who’d graduated from Georgetown University in the same class as Bill Clinton, delivered a speech at his alma mater that included an unexpected history lesson:

In 1976, after the Watergate matters took place here, your intelligence community was literally tied up by Congress. It could not do anything. It could not send spies, it could not write reports, and it could not pay money. In order to compensate for that, a group of countries got together in the hope of fighting communism and established what was called the Safari Club. The Safari Club included France, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, and Iran … so, the Kingdom, with these countries, helped in some way, I believe, to keep the world safe when the United States was not able to do that. That, I think, is a secret that many of you don’t know.

Turki was not telling the whole truth. He was right that his Georgetown audience likely had never heard any of this before, but the Safari Club had been known across the Middle East for decades. After the Iranian revolution the new government gave Mohamed Hassanein Heikal, one of the most prominent journalists in the Arab world, permission to examine the Shah’s archives. There Heikal discovered the actual formal, written agreement between the members of the Safari Club, and wrote about it in a 1982 book called Iran: The Untold Story.

And the Safari Club was not simply the creation of the countries Turki mentioned — Americans were involved as well. It’s true the U.S. executive branch was somewhat hamstrung during the period between the post-Watergate investigations of the intelligence world and the end of the Carter administration. But the powerful individual Americans who felt themselves “literally tied up” by Congress — that is, unfairly restrained by the most democratic branch of the U.S. government — certainly did not consider the decisions of Congress to be the final word.

Whatever its funding sources, the evidence suggests the Safari Club was largely the initiative of these powerful Americans. According to Heikal, its real origin was when Henry Kissinger, then secretary of state, “talked a number of rich Arab oil countries into bankrolling operations against growing communist influence on their doorstep” in Africa. Alexandre de Marenches, a right-wing aristocrat who headed France’s version of the CIA, eagerly formalized the project and assumed operational leadership. But, Heikal writes, “The United States directed the whole operation,” and “giant U.S. and European corporations with vital interests in Africa” leant a hand. As John K. Cooley, the Christian Science Monitor’s longtime Mideast correspondent, put it, the setup strongly appealed to the U.S. executive branch: “Get others to do what you want done, while avoiding the onus or blame if the operation fails.”

This all seems like something Americans would like to know, especially since de Marenches may have extended his covert operations to the 1980 U.S. presidential election. In 1992, de Marenches’ biographer testified in a congressional investigation that the French spy told him that he had helped arrange an October 1980 meeting in Paris between William Casey, Ronald Reagan’s 1980 campaign manager, and the new Islamic Republic of Iran. The goal of such a meeting, of course, would have been to persuade Iran to keep its American hostages until after the next month’s election, thus denying Carter any last-minute, politically potent triumph.

De Marenches and the Safari Club certainly had a clear motive to oust Carter: They blamed him for allowing one of their charter members, the Shah, to fall from power. But whether de Marenches’ claims were true or not, we do know that history unfolded exactly as he and the Safari Club would have wished. The hostages weren’t released until Reagan was inaugurated, Reagan appointed Casey director of the CIA, and from that point forward America’s intelligence “community” was back in business.

CONTINUED...

https://theintercept.com/2015/11/02/the-deepest-state-the-safari-club-allen-dulles-and-the-devils-chessboard/



IMO, every library in the USA should have several copies of Talbot's books on the shelves. The truth they contain would fill a lot of heads with Democracy.

Thank you for grokking, Hydra.

Recommendations

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The Festering Corruption In US Government Is Legion - Thank You For Sharing These Insights cantbeserious Feb 2016 #1
DU helps preserve the record... Octafish Feb 2016 #12
I've come to believe that Poppy Bush was one of the major architects of the continuing disaster Hydra Feb 2016 #2
Exactly. Poppy, Dulles and that Big Oil line believe Power is not the People's business. Octafish Feb 2016 #13
But what about meetings with Gorbachev? awoke_in_2003 Feb 2016 #3
I wonder if Gorbachev was in much better shape. He was jwirr Feb 2016 #6
Gorby wanted to get rid of Star Wars and avoid Nuclear War. Octafish Feb 2016 #14
I always appreciate your posts, Octafish gilpo Feb 2016 #4
The Secrete Service did not do their job yesterday protecting Sanders in Denver. SoLeftIAmRight Feb 2016 #7
The Aspens Octafish Feb 2016 #15
Exactly correct, Octa gilpo Feb 2016 #18
This goes a long way in explaining the reason we have such jwirr Feb 2016 #5
The Origins of the Overclass Octafish Feb 2016 #16
Many of us are old enough to have lived through that and jwirr Feb 2016 #17
An excellent and extremely informative post as aways, I have often thought you should write Dragonfli Feb 2016 #8
That's a great idea. Nt Duppers Feb 2016 #10
Reagan was in no condition to run Iran/Contra/ Ichingcarpenter Feb 2016 #9
Which is why we don't need any more fugging malaise Feb 2016 #11
There is no doubt in my mind that Poppy had Reagan shot Reter Feb 2016 #19
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Poppy Bush set the table ...»Reply #13