Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Alternative > Conspirancy JFK > Re: CIA, Nixon,...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 2 of 4 Topic 22972 of 25040
Post > Topic >>

Re: CIA, Nixon, Watergate, JFK Assassination

by YoHarvey <baileynme@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 15, 2008 at 02:29 PM

On May 15, 1:29=A0pm, curtjester1 <curtjest...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Without Johnson and Kennedy, former Vice-President Richard NIxon
> finally managed to become the 37th President of the United States,
> with no serious opposition. =A0After taking office Nixon discussed the
> Warren Re****t with aides H.R. Haldeman and Charles Colson and said,
> "It was the greatest hoax that has ever been perpetuated."
>
> The new Preident soon created a "dirty tricks" department to harass
> politcal opponents that included CIA veterans E. Howard Hunt, Frank
> Fiorini Sturgis, Bernard Barker, James McCord, G. Gordon Liddy, and
> many anti-Castro Cubans from Miami. =A0Their job was to create
> situations and fabricate do***ents to embarrass and humiliate those
> who opposed Nixon and his policies. =A0Their targets were the most
> pominent democratic leaders of the late 1960's and included Senator
> Edward Kennedy, and Presidentail hopefuls Edmund Muskie and George
> McGovern.
>
> By early 1970 the war in Vietnam continued to divide the country and
> haunted Nixon as it had President Johnson before him. =A0In Febrary
> National Security advisor Henry Kissinger began secret one-on-one
> meetings with North Vietnamese negotiator Le Duc Tho outside of Paris,
> and by the end of the year the Nixon administration ordered large
> numbers of troops were withdrawn from combat. =A0As increasing numbers
> of troops were withdrawn and peace negotiations with the North
> Vietnamese dragged on, Nixon began to pursue detente with both
> communist China and the Soviet Union. =A0He was eager to end the war in
> Vietnam and win back the sup****t of the public before the election in
> the fall of 1972. =A0But like Presidents Kennedy and Johnson before him,
> Nixon earned the animosity of the military industrial establishment as
> he tried to end their war in Vietnam.
>
> As Nixon and his political machine geared up to run for a second term,
> the Committee to RE-Elect the President was formed. =A0Known as "CREEP"
> the committeee was comprised mostly of CIA agents and was funded by
> the Mullen Company, a notorious CIA front. =A0On June 17, 1972 members
> of CREEP, including Frank Sturgis, Bernard L. Barker, Virgllio R.
> Gonzales, Eugenio R. Martinez, and James W. McCord, broke into the
> Democratic National Headquarters at the Watergate apartment-office
> complex in Wa****ngton. =A0These people had access to the most
> sophisticated electronic and burglary tools in the world, yet they
> used an ordinary piece of tape to keep the latch on the door unlocked.
>
> A security guard, Frank Wills, noticed the tape and called the
> Wa****ngton, D.C. police. =A0When the police arrived at 2:30 A.M. and the
> men were arrested, and had in their possession a walkie-talkie, 40
> rolls of unexposed film, two 35 mm cameras, lock picks, pencil-sized
> teargas guns, and bugging devices. =A0Their tools made it appear that
> they though they were going to "bug" the Democratic National
> headquarters, but most political analysts agree that their efforts
> were unnecessary. =A0President Nixon was so far ahead of his opponents
> in the polls that to most political observers the "Watergate break-in"
> didn't make any sense.
>
> In jail the veteran intelligence agents said nothing, but the police
> found E. Howard Hunt's telephone number on one of the men. =A0The
> following day the police learned that one of the men worked for the
> Committee to Re-Elect the President, which soon led investigators to
> the White House. =A0The FBI soon began an investigation.
>
> (According to E. Howard Hunt, the burglars were trying to learn what
> information the Democrats had concerning President Kennedy's
> assassination. =A0Frank Sturgis(Fiorini) said, "The reason we
> burglarized the Watergate was because Nixon was interested in stopping
> news leaking related to the photos of *our role* in the assassination
> of President John F. Kennedy." =A0OUR ROLE IN THE ASSASSINATION OF
> PRESIDENT KENNEDY??? =A0Hunt and Sturgis' accusations made it appear as
> though Nixon was involved in the assassination of President Kennedy,
> which would have destroyed his political career.)
>
> Less than a week after the break-in, and long before the Watergate
> burglary made national headlines, Nixon and his Chief of Staff, H.R.
> Halderman, discussed how to stop the FBI investigation. =A0Nixon told
> Haldeman to ask CIA Director Richard Helms to pressure FBI Director L.
> Patrick Gray into curtailing the FBI's investigation. =A0Helms refused,
> perhaps because he may have been part of the plot to destroy Nixon
> politically.
>
> Two months later veteran CIA agent E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy
> were arrested as co-conspirators and indictments were issued on
> September 15, 1972. =A0Within a month it became clear that all of the
> men involved in the Watergate break-in were linked to the CIA and to
> the Committee to Re-Elect the President (CREEP).
>
> (Hunt, while in jail, attempted to blackmail the President by
> threatening to expose many of Nixon's "secrets." =A0White House Chief of
> Staff John Ehlichman responded by ordering FBI Director L. Patrick
> Gray to remove the contents of Hunt's safe and "deep six" them. =A0On
> December 8, 1972 Hunt's wife, former CIA agent Dorothy Wetzel Hunt,
> was carrying a large amount of cash and was killed when United
> Airlines flight #553 crashed prior to landing at Chicago's Midway
> Air****t. =A0Her death ended Hunt's threats to reveal Nixon's "dirty
> secrets."
>
> After CIA Director Richard Helms refused Nixon's requests to pressure
> the FBI into curtailing their investigation, Nixon fired him on
> February 2, 1973. =A0Five days later, on February 7, 1973, the Senate
> Watergate Committee was formed as public interest in the affair grew.
> (Helms was replaced by 53-old William Colby, a lawyer and OSS veteran
> from WWII.)
>
> After firing the Director of the CIA President Nixon's days in the
> White House were numbered, just as Kennedy's days were numbered after
> he fired CIA Director Allen Dulles. =A0Six weeks after Helms was fired
> his close friend James McCord, who had worked for the CIA in the
> Security Research Staff, wrote a letter to Watergate Special
> Prosecutor Judge John Sirica and said that he and other defendants had
> been under pressure by the White House to remain silent about the
> Watergate break-in.
>
> From March 25-29 McCord testified before the committee and named
> Nixon's former Attorney General, John Mitchell, as their "overall
> boss" and said that John Dean and Jeb Magruder were also involved. =A0He
> also claimed that E. Howard Hunt had promised him an executive
> (Presidential) pardon if he would plead guilty. =A0CIA -asset James
> McCord's revelations were the beginning of the end for Nixon's term as
> President.
>
> On June 25 White House counsel John Dean testified before the
> committee and further inplicated the President. =A0He said that Nixon
> proposed to raise $1,000,000 to pay the Watergate burglars for their
> silence. =A0He also told the committee that for the past 4 years the
> Nixon White House had used the powers of the Presidency to attack
> political enemies by harassing those who disagreed with his policies.
> Dean's testimony was sup****ted by Donald Segretti who also told the
> committee about Nixon's "dirty tricks."
>
> While Nixon continued to deny any knowledge of involvement in the
> Watergate affair one of his aides, Alexander Butterfield, told the
> Watergate committee on July 13 that Nixon had secretly recorded all
> conversations to and from the Oval Office. =A0On July 17, 1973 the
> Senate Committee requested that President Nixon turn over the secretly
> recorded White House Tapes. =A0Nixon, who feared exposing the contents
> of the tapes, refused and soon an 18-minute segment in one of the
> reels was erased. =A0One of the recorded conversations, in which the
> President was talking with H.R.Haldeman, shows that Nixon was very
> concerned that E. Howard Hunt's involvement in the "Bay of Pigs Thing"
> would be exposed:
>
> "....Hunt, you will-that will uncover a lot of things. =A0You open that
> scab there's a hell of a lot of things and that we just feel that it
> would be very detrimental to have this thing go any further....This
> involves these Cubans, Hunt, and a lot of hanky-panky...the problem is
> that this will open up the whole, the whole Bay of Pigs thing...Just
> say....very bad to have this fellow Hunt, ah, he knows too damned
> much, if he was involved....If it gets out that this is all involved,
> the Cuba thing, it would be a fiasco. =A0It would make the CIA look bad,
> it's going to make Hunt look bad, and it's going to blow the whole
> *Bay of Pigs thing* which we think would be unfortunate-both for the
> CIA and the country....."
>
> (According to Haldeman, Nixon always used code words when talking
> about President Kennedy's assassination. =A0Haldeman wrote in his book,
> "The Ends of Power," that whenever Nixon referred to the "Bay of Pigs
> thing," he was referring to President Kennedy's assassination. =A0If
> Haldeman is correct, then during their conversation President Nixon
> was very concerned that E. Howard Hunt would expose the CIA's
> involvement in the assassination of President Kennedy.)
>
> (During the same conversation Nixon also referred to the
> "Cubans." =A0(Felix Rodriguez, Bernard Barker, Eugenio Martinez, etc.)
> and the "Texans" (George H.W. Bush, Robert Mosbacher, and James
> Baker.).
>
> Amid the political turmoil of Watergate Nixon's Vice President, Spiro
> T. Agnew, resigned on October 10 after pleading "nolo contendere" (no
> contest) to charges of tax evasion. =A0Two days later, On October 12,
> 1973, Nixon nominated Gerald Ford as the new Vice-President a man
> described by Newsweek as the CIA's "best friend in Congress."
>
> As members of Nixon's staff continued to implicte him in the Watergate
> affair he continued to deny any involvement and on November 17, 1973
> told the nation in a nationally televised speech, "I'm not a crook."
>
> On April 30, 1974 the Nixon White House released more than 1200 pages
> of edited transcripts to the House Judiciary Committee, but refused to
> release the tapes. =A0The Committee then sought help from the Supreme
> Court who, on July 24, ruled unanimously that President Nixon had to
> turn over the tape recordings of 64 White House conversations,
> rejecting the President's claims of executive privilege.
>
> In late July 1974 the House Judiciary Committee recommended that
> President Nixon be impeached on three charges: 1) Obstruction of
> justice, 2) Abuse of Presidential power, 3) trying to impede the
> impeachment process by defying committee subpoenas. =A0These charges
> stemmed mainly from Nixon's refusual to turn over the secret White
> House tapes to the Watergate Committee. =A0We know that on one of the
> tapes Nixon discussed E. Howard Hunt's involvement in the "Bay of Pigs
> Thing" and we know that an 18-minute segement on one of the tapes was
> erased. =A0We also know that fter Congress heard some of these
> recordings they went into secret session, and only *12 hours* of more
> than 4000 hours of recordings were ever released to the public.
>
> On August 7, 1974 oilman, CIA agent, and Republican National Committee
> chairman George Herbert Walker Bush publicly called for the President
> Nixon's resignation. =A0The following day (August 8) Nixon resigned and
> former Warren Commission member Gerald Ford (the CIA's best friend in
> Congress) became the 38th President. =A0A month later, on September 6,
> the new President granted Nixon "a full, free and absolute
> pardon....for all offenses against the United States which he .....
> has committed or may have committed or taken part of while
> President." =A0President Ford protected the secretly recorded (White
> House) tapes and soon nominated New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller
> as Vice-President.
>
> The public learned from nationally televised Watergate hearings about
> Nixon's abuse of Presidential power, and also learned that former CIA
> operatives were involved. =A0As public attention began to focus on CIA
> involvement in Watergate, and their abuse of power, some members of
> congress suggested the Agency should be dissolved. =A0President Ford
> quickly interceded on the CIA's behalf and established the
> "Rockefeller Commission" to conduct yet another investigation. =A0He
> appointed former Warren Commission counsel David Belin and other like-
> minded individuals to investigate the alleged CIA abuses, *which
> virtually guaranteed a political "whitewash."
>
> Incidentals. =A0Nelson Rockefeller was the brain-child of the CIA agency
> after WW!!. =A0Bernard Barker was identified as the 'SA' who was
> brandi****ng a badge on the Grassy Knoll by Dallas Sheriff Weitzman,
> right after the final headshot that killed President John F. Kennedy.
> CREEP, how apt a name for Nixon's committee and the folks behind the
> dirty tricks of the CIA and the murderers of John F. Kennedy.
>
> CJ

zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
 




 4 Posts in Topic:
CIA, Nixon, Watergate, JFK Assassination
curtjester1 <curtjeste  2008-05-15 10:29:48 
Re: CIA, Nixon, Watergate, JFK Assassination
YoHarvey <baileynme@[E  2008-05-15 14:29:14 
Re: CIA, Nixon, Watergate, JFK Assassination
"tomnln" <to  2008-05-15 17:51:50 
Re: CIA, Nixon, Watergate, JFK Assassination
curtjester1 <curtjeste  2008-05-15 16:56:26 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan12V112 Fri Oct 10 12:22:09 CDT 2008.