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270 lines
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 10 Num. 20
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=======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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BEHIND THE OCTOBER 1995 AMTRAK DERAILMENT
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=========================================
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This excerpt, written by David Hoffman, was taken from Craig
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Robert's book, "The Medussa File: Crimes and Cover-Ups of the
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U.S. Government," published by Consolidated Press: 3171-A South
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129th East Ave, Suite 338, Tulsa, OK 74134, 1996.
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A 20-year Tulsa Police Officer (retired), and Vietnam Veteran,
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Roberts wrote "Walking Dead," and "Kill Zone: A Sniper Looks at
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Dealy Plaza."
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"The Medussa File" contains extensive sections about Oklahoma
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City, TWA 800, and other crimes. Roberts has collaborated with
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David Hoffman on the Oklahoma City bombing investigation.
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-+-
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On October 9, 1995, the nation witnessed its first attack on a
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passenger train, when Amtrak's "Sunset Limited" was derailed
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while enroute from Phoenix to San Diego. The derailment, caused
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by sabotage, resulted in over 100 injuries, including one death.
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The terrorists left behind a cryptic note, calling themselves the
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"Sons of the Gestapo." The mainstream press quickly jumped on
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this latest "terrorist" attack, coming as it did only six months
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after the Oklahoma City bombing. While no one, including
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law-enforcement officials, had ever heard of the "Sons of the
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Gestapo," the purveyors of deception immediately played it up as
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the obvious work of a "Right-wing" militia group.
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FBI officials were more cautious however, speculating that the
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attack may have been the result of a "disgruntled employee."
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Exhaustive searches through numerous data-bases revealed no group
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called "Sons of the Gestapo," and only someone with the technical
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knowledge necessary to disable a warning system on a railroad
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track would be capable of executing such a stunt.
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It may not have mattered however. In the aftermath of the
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Oklahoma City bombing, any such attack on American citizens would
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be excuse enough to push the Anti-Terrorism Bill through
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Congress. And the press and anti-militia activists such as the
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ADL and the SPLC were eager to jump on the militia connection.
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"Sons of the Gestapo," they asserted, could only be the pseudonym
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for a Right-wing hate-group.
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Yet law-enforcement officials had only an enigmatic message to
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guide them. The note left behind by the saboteurs railed against
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the BATF and FBI for their actions at Waco and Ruby Ridge, and
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stated, "This is not Nazi Germany."
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Why anyone would attack a passenger train to exact revenge on
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government officials for killing innocent civilians is beyond
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credulity. Yet, as in the Oklahoma City case, this was the
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message that the saboteurs and the government-controlled press
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wanted us to believe. America was filled with hateful Right-wing
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extremists who would do anything -- kill anyone, women, children,
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babies -- to pursue their violent anti-government course.
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As Attorney General Janet Reno announced in the Oklahoma City
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case, so the local U.S. Attorney, Janet Napolitano would declare:
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"We are going to pursue every bit of evidence and every lead very
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thoroughly until we find the person or persons who committed this
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crime."
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While the FBI swarmed through Maricopa County, interrogating
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local residents and harassing the few isolated "desert rats" who
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inhabited the surrounding countryside, a real investigation was
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being conducted by a lone Maricopa County Sheriff. With the
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assistance of Craig Roberts, a retired Tulsa police officer with
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military intelligence experience who worked on the Oklahoma City
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investigation, the Sheriff was able to uncover some amazing
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information.
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What they found was that other than rescue vehicles, there were
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no vehicle tracks entering or exiting the crash site. Moreover,
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the site itself was extremely remote, being near the summit of
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the rugged Gila Bend Mountains, which surrounded the site to the
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east, north, and west. It was there, along a sharp S-curve, that
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the perpetrators had pulled 29 spikes from the tracks, causing
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the fatal crash.
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Why had the perpetrators chosen such a remote location, Roberts
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wondered? Had they picked a more accessible spot, he reasoned,
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it would have surely lessened their chances of being caught, as
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all they would have had to do was drive to the nearest highway.
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In this case, the nearest road was Highway 8, 38 miles away,
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necessitating a difficult drive over rugged terrain, at the same
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time as law-enforcement officers would surely be on a heightened
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state of alert.
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What Roberts and his sheriff partner also discovered was that 90
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minutes away by air, in Pinal County, was a mysterious air-base
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known as Marana. The locked-down facility was owned by
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Evergreen, Inc., a government contractor reportedly involved in
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drug smuggling during the Iran-Contra period. The base, located
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off of Highway 10 between Phoenix and Tucson, was the site of
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strange night-time training maneuvers involving black and
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unmarked military-type helicopters. Passersby had also witnessed
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black-clad troops dropping into the desert en masse, using
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steerable black "Paracommander" parachutes.
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This began to raise some interesting possibilities. Had the
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perpetrators been dropped into the site by air, then picked up by
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chopper? Both Roberts and his colleague at the Sheriff's
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Department were experienced military pilots. They observed that
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it would have been easy for a helicopter to fly low through the
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mountain passes, avoiding radar, and insert and extract a team.
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As Roberts noted, "A full moon, wind out of the south at 8 knots,
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and a clear sky would be an ideal night for air operations."
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The possibilities of a covert paramilitary commando team being
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responsible for the attack raised more than a few eyebrows at the
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Maricopa County Sheriff's Department, until they began
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investigating a lead provided by a sympathetic FBI agent that
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several hikers had seen a small group of parachuters drop into
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the desert that night. They also discovered the following
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information:
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A VFR target squawking 1200 that left Tri-City airfield in
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Albuquerque on a southwest course, climbed to 10,500 feet, then,
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when it was exactly due east of the Amtrak site, turned due west
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and flew a course line that took it one mile south of the site.
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But just before arriving over the site, it dropped to 8,500 feet.
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After crossing the target zone, it turned on a southwesterly
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course towards California at 8,500 feet. Albuquerque contacted
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the Los Angeles Center which tracked the aircraft to a landing at
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Montgomery Field in San Diego. It crossed the valley south of
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the bridge at 1940 hours (7:40 p.m.)
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Since the winds that night were at 8 knots out of the south, a
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drop one mile from the target site would compensate for wind
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drift. Moreover, such a flight is not required to file a flight
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plan listing its passengers, and an aircraft flying out of
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Albuquerque, squawking on transponder 1200, wouldn't look
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particularly suspicious.
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When they checked with the refueler at Montgomery Field, the
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records indicated that the "N" number checked to a Beachcraft,
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registered to Raytheon. Raytheon owns E-systems. Like
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Evergreen, E-Systems, based in Greenville, Texas, is a covert
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government contractor, reportedly involved in drug-running, and
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reputed to have "wet-teams" (assassination teams). The director
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of E-Systems was former NSA Director and CIA Deputy Director
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Bobby Ray Inman.
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While it is possible a jump was made from the twin-engine
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Beechcraft, a plane commonly used for such purposes, it still
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left the problem of the team's extraction. With the radar track
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information, the Maricopa Sheriff then went to the Air Force at
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Yuma, who monitor the Aerostat radar drug balloons. The DEA
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balloons have "look-down" capability for detecting low-flying
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aircraft. The Master Sergeant at Yuma agreed to help out. A
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short time later he called back.
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"Sorry," he said. "We can't help you out."
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"What? Why?" asked Jack.
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"The plug's been pulled."
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"What does that mean?"
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The sergeant sounded very uncomfortable when he replied. "We
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really wanted to check this out, but all I can say is the
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balloons were down that night."
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"Why?" asked Jack.
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"Maintenance."
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"All of them?" asked Jack, incredulously.
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"Yes, sir." The sergeant sounded very nervous.
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"Why?"
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"All I can tell you is that they were ordered down for
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maintenance. It came from above my pay grade."
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One has to wonder what "above my pay grade" means. Why would all
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the balloons be ordered down for maintenance? Obviously, a
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cover-up was in progress.
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It was beginning to sound suspiciously like the hurried
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demolition of the Oklahoma Federal Building, to prevent any
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independent forensic analysis of the bomb site. Or the Secret
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Service removing President Kennedy's protective bubble from his
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limousine; failing to secure the windows and rooftops along the
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parade route; and changing the route at the last minute.
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Like the two foregoing examples, only the government -- or shadow
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elements within the government -- had the capability of pulling
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that off. No "lone nut" or criminal syndicate could order such
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last-minute changes, or orchestrate such a massive and
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well-executed cover-up. Moreover, no militia group could order
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all the radar balloons down on the night of the attack.
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As a Maricopa County resident stated to the Arizona Republic
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regarding the FBI's so-called militia theory, "Buddy, you can't
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get three people out here to get together on what kind of pickup
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to drive, and you think we're going to form a militia?"
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Obviously, no militia would benefit from such an attack. And
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what about the "Sons of the Gestapo?" As Roberts wrote: "As an
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old Southeast Asia hand (a marine sniper during Vietnam), I
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remember that one of the terms used by Phoenix Program assassins
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working under MACV-SOG (Military Advisory Command, Studies and
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Observations Group) was a twisted bar-room version of the last
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acronym. "Yeah," a drunk trooper would mention. "I'm SOG a son
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of the Gestapo."
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The Phoenix assassination program, as previously discussed, was
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organized by the CIA's William Colby, Ted Shackley, and fielded
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by General John Singlaub. Singlaub commanded Second Lieutenant
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Oliver North. Shackley, Singlaub, and North would go on to
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orchestrate the secret and illegal Iran-Contra operation,
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smuggling drugs into this country at such places as Mena,
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Arkansas and Marana. {1}.
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Interestingly, whenever Iran-Contra drug shipments came in for
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the California run, the drug balloons under "Operation
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Watchtower" were shut down. Could this be the same mechanism
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that shut them down the night of the attack?
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Apparently, the "Sons of the Gestapo" note left behind was a
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"false flag," a distraction designed to serve a political
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purpose. In this case, that purpose -- like the Oklahoma bombing
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which preceded it -- was to connect the Amtrak attack with the
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Patriot/Militia movement. Considering the reaction of the
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mainstream press, it appears they have largely succeeded.
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_____________________
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{1} In fact, Singlaub is known to control at least one airfield
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in Arizona.
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Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those
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of Conspiracy Nation, nor of its Editor in Chief.
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I encourage distribution of "Conspiracy Nation."
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Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
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Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
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pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9
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