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The CIA, UFOs, MJ-12, JFK & James
Jesus Angleton
As the CIA's Counterintelligence Chief, James Jesus Angleton
had access to the Agency's most closely guarded secrets, including MJ-12 files
on UFOs.
© 2000 by Timothy S. Cooper
PO Box 1206
Big Bear Lake, CA 92315
USA
Telephone: +1 (909) 878 5929
James Jesus Angleton was born on December 9, 1917 in Boise, Idaho, to NCR
businessman/OSS Colonel James Hugh Angleton and Mexican-born Carmen Mercedes
Moreno. Upon graduation from Yale in 1941, Angleton moved to Harvard Law School
where he met his future wife, Cicely d'Autremont, of Duluth, Minnesota. Inducted
into the US Army on March 19, 1943, Angleton was recruited into the Office of
Strategic Services (OSS) in August through the efforts of Angleton's father
and Norman Pearson, his old English professor from Yale who at that time was
head of the OSS Counterintelligence division in London.1
OSS COUNTERINTELLIGENCE OPERATIONS DURING WW II
James Jesus Angleton was assigned the Rome desk after Italy's capitulation
to the Allies, and was made an OSS Lieutenant who ran counterintelligence (CI)
activities in such countries as Austria, Germany, Spain and Switzerland as well
as the Mediterranean area. As part of OSS operations in the European theatre,
Angleton mastered the arts of "black" propaganda and "playback" - that is, the
method of reading the effectiveness of one's own disinformation on the enemy.
In 1944, he was given charge of the OSS Special Counterintelligence Unit Z,
made up of US and British agents, and was the youngest member of X-2 and the
only American member allowed access to the top-secret British ULTRA code-breaking
intelligence.
After the war, Angleton was promoted to Captain and was awarded the Legion
of Merit from the US Army which cited him for successfully apprehending over
a thousand enemy intelligence agents. He was also decorated by the Italian Government
and was awarded the Order of the Crown of Italy, the Order of Malta/Cross of
Malta and the Italian War Cross for Merit.
In October 1945, President Truman dissolved the OSS and had all research
and analysis units moved to the State Department and operational units to the
War Department, and redesignated it as the Strategic Services Unit (SSU). Angleton
stayed on in the SSU in Rome and became the vital station chief in charge of
the 2677 Regiment, which made Angleton the senior US intelligence officer in
Italy until the SSU became the Central Intelligence Group (CIG) in 1946, forerunner
of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).2
THE MAKING OF JAMES ANGLETON AS A MASTER SPY HUNTER
Angleton's war experience in counterintelligence operations had affected
him to the extent that he became absorbed into the "hall of mirrors" world of
intelligence and refused to leave the service, despite much insistence and disappointment
from his father. James would pour over the many CI files he had amassed while
in Italy and was forever changed by the intrigue and the possibilities of a
career in the CIG.
In the summer of 1947, Angleton returned to the United States to live in
Tucson, Arizona, to be with his wife and family, but his love for the service
was overpowering. On December 30, 1947, he was hired by the CIA as a senior
aide to the Director of the Office of Special Operations (OSO).3 It was during
this period that Army G-2 and other intelligence agencies were trying to crack
the Soviet Venona code, used by espionage agents operating in the United States
to send back sensitive information regarding the Manhattan Project based at
Los Alamos, New Mexico. It is possible that Angleton was on special assignment
prior to officially reporting to the OSO, which had the responsibility of running
counterespionage operations.4 Angleton's primary mission in the OSO included
overseeing a classified component that operated espionage and counterespionage
activities abroad, and reading all sensitive material coming across his desk
and passing it to OSO operators in countries where the CIA had interests. In
1949, he moved up the chain of command within the OSO and held a GS-15 position.
Angleton developed the philosophy, "If you control counterintelligence,
you control the intelligence service". He quickly realised the significance
of the B-29 detection of Joe-1, the Soviet's first atomic weapon detonation
in August 1949, and knew that the technology acquired by the Soviets was not
home-grown but the product of espionage. He immediately set out to discover
who the moles were who passed on America's most guarded secret to Moscow. As
with all covert actions, counterintelligence operated without specific mention
in the National Security Act of 1947, so Angleton set out to acquire information
on the most guarded secret of all.
ANGLETON AS CHIEF OF COUNTERINTELLIGENCE
Aside from the theft of atomic secrets, the most guarded secret within the
CIA was the scientific and technical information regarding new weapons developments,
including the planned use of a new generation of thermonuclear weapons and high-altitude
reconnaissance platforms for spying on countries hostile to US strategic interests.
One of the technical secrets was the study and transfer of advanced electronics
gleaned from US Air Force studies of unconventional aircraft and missile research
carried on at several Atomic Energy Commission facilities and proving grounds.
The FBI and the CIA were aware of Soviet espionage rings operating in the
United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. The main task of these rings was
to provide any and all technical and scientific information on advanced technologies
which would give an advantage to the Soviet Union in the event of another world
war breaking out.
By 1949, military intelligence authorities had classified the "flying saucer"
phenomenon as Top Secret, and the Army Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC) had
passed on information that the Soviets could have developed saucer-shaped aerial
weapons, capable of delivering atomic bombs or dissipating radioactive materials
over NATO countries, as a stopgap measure to make up for the nonexistent nuclear
weapons arsenal. In early 1947, the nonexistent nuclear arsenal in the United
States was a closely guarded secret as well; and no doubt this fact set in motion
the nuclear arms race, which terrified Angleton. The OSO was probably aware
of Soviet knowledge of the bomb gap existing within both superpowers. Moreover,
the flying saucer invasion of the United States - reports of which crossed Angleton's
desk - put a scare into
Angleton's psyche which is reflected in a credo he shared with other OSO staff
members: "You who believe or half believe, I can say this now, that I do believe
in the spirit of Christ and the life everlasting, and in this turbulent social
system which struggles sometimes blindly to preserve the right to freedom and
expression of spirit. In the name of Jesus Christ, I leave you."
After General Walter B. Smith was appointed Director, Central Intelligence
(DCI), Angleton continued on with OSO Staff A (foreign intelligence operations)
inside the CIA's clandestine division. In 1951, he was assigned the all-important
Israeli desk, which he held under tight control for 20 years because it was
a vital source of Soviet information in the Middle East. As more and more UFO5
sighting reports made their way to CIA headquarters, unevaluated reports were
forwarded to Counterintelligence when the locations were identified as coming
from Soviet Bloc countries. During this period, Angleton established good links
with FBI contacts who were equally concerned with protecting vital atomic research
facilities, and no doubt he read many domestic reports as they came across his
desk in the "L" Building across from the Lincoln Memorial.
When Smith was coaxed away from his power base as DCI, Allen Dulles - Angleton's
friend from OSS days - became the new Director. In late 1954, he promoted Angleton
to the position of Deputy Director and Chief of Counterintelligence, with direct
access to Dulles and all foreign UFO intelligence from the Intelligence Advisory
Committee (IAC) which had been established to look into national security implications
involving the UFO phenomenon.6 In order to cement Angleton's counterintelligence
charter, Dulles commissioned General James H. Doolittle to conduct an outside
survey of CIA counterintelligence operations. Doolittle concluded that the CIA
was losing ground to the KGB, and recommended that more stringent and ruthless
measures be taken against Soviet penetration. Dulles endorsed the Doolittle
Report
by ordering a more powerful tool to stop and interdict the moles within the
CIA, and he personally chose Angleton to head the CI Staff. Perhaps this is
why foreign and domestic UFO sighting reports diminished in number shortly afterwards.
During Dulles's tenure as DCI from 1953 to 1961 (the longest in CIA history),
Angleton enjoyed a privileged position not shared by other directors. This was
despite the fact that Angleton reported to the Deputy Director of Operations
(DDO), and on many occasions bugged the phones and residences of various high-ranking
US Government officials and foreign dignitaries with Dulles's approval and over
the objection of the DDO. If the situation called for it, Angleton could go
around proper channels to acquire personal data on anyone within the CIA and
other agencies, which was clearly outside the CIA charter and violated FBI jurisdiction.
As the new head of CI, Angleton had to organise a staff, write the rules
and oversee all clandestine operations aimed at the Soviet Intelligence Service
military and security organs, the GRU and KGB.7 The CI Staff was primarily tasked
with preventing penetrations at home and abroad and protecting CIA operations
through careful research and analysis of all incoming intelligence reports.
By keeping the most vital and sensitive files to himself, Angleton became a
storehouse of secrets, which helped him consolidate his power base. Officially,
Angleton was allowed access to everyone's personnel, operational and communications
files within the CIA, and he reviewed all proposed and active operations and
approved the recruitment of agent assets. This did not engender trust or cooperation,
but Angleton did not concern himself or his staff with such intrusions. One
of Angleton's former Chief of Operations, "Scotty" Miller, described the environment
in which CI Staff operated as that of a "watchdog" snooping around, sniffing
out Soviet deception and manipulation.
ANGLETON AND THE MJ-12 DIRECTIVE
Among the controversial documents leaked to the public in the last 20 years
regarding state secrets and the UFO phenomenon, are the CIA's unacknowledged
Majestic Twelve/MJ-12 files which disclose the most guarded of all classified
subjects: extraterrestrial life-forms and their technologies.8
In order to secure this knowledge and prevent foreign countries from learning
this vital secret and getting an edge on the United States, President Harry
S. Truman signed a directive that basically said that no one (including a chief
executive) was to be in possession of or disclose the finding without a "need
to know" clearance which was above Top Secret.9
The directive was secretly implemented without the knowledge or consent
of Congress and was concealed by the wording of the National Security Act of
1947, which prohibits the disclosure of classified matters without presidential
approval and prior agreement by the Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence
Agency, as amended in later versions of the National Security Act.
Knowledge of the finding was limited to only a select few within the government's
intelligence and scientific communities. As long as the secret remained unresolved,
there would be no official acknowledgement. The only official study program,
Project Blue Book, was taken over by the CIA in 1953 as a public experiment
and used as a debunking tool to discount the xtraterrestrial reality, and possibly
to quash any attempts by the KGB and GRU to glean any technological or defence
secrets from the study.
Like the Manhattan Project group, Majestic Twelve or MJ-12 (as used in some
leaked documents) was a joint government/military/private-sector undertaking
that encompassed every facet of national security functions. The CIA was the
premier intelligence agency tasked with maintaining the first line of defence
of the United States during the 55-year Cold War between the capitalist West
and the communist East. When Angleton assumed his throne as Chief of Counterintelligence,
no doubt Truman's directive was a most inviting instrument, allowing him to
carry on his mole-hunting career within the CIA against the KGB and GRU.
Majestic Twelve enjoyed greater protection than did the hydrogen bomb program
of the early 1950s. With that, the Soviets were driven to penetrate not only
the secrets of the H-bomb program itself, but the ultimate prize that lay scattered
throughout the US Government's maximum security research facilities located
in the southwestern and eastern United States.
The shocking truth of the Soviet atomic weapons espionage program, Enormous,
dealt a tremendous blow to US and British security when it was learned that
British diplomats operating within the US State Department, as well as US Army
technicians at Los Alamos National Laboratories, had not only supplied blueprints
and materials for the atomic bomb to their KGB handlers in New York, but had
stolen the proposed plans for the hydrogen bomb as well. Security officials
were left guessing as at what else the Soviet spies had stolen from under their
noses.10
As far as we know, there was no successful penetration by KGB or GRU agents
into the CIA's UFO
program - in large part, due to the disgraceful and unlawful actions taken by
Angleton's CI Staff. After the
fallout from the Burgess-MacLean-Philby defections and the execution of the
Rosenbergs, Angleton
tightened security and dedicated himself to safeguarding whatever secrets still
eluded the Soviets. Thus he
embarked on a vicious mole-hunt that would almost paralyse the CIA until his
departure in 1974.
During the time of the Eisenhower administration (1953&endash;1960),
the CIA was at its apex in covert operations, piling up one success after another
where cores of Soviet moles were detected and sent home to Moscow. However,
comments from the White House were nil when it came to the UFO problem, although
Eisenhower's supposed meeting with extraterrestrials in 1954 was given some
publicity. While it was largely discounted by the Press, some did try to connect
Eisenhower's heart attack with the meeting. The national media were downplaying
the UFO sightings in the US and abroad as part of a Cold War hysteria that accompanied
the "duck and cover" scare that seemed to grip the country. No real problems
popped up until the 1960 presidential elections when Democratic candidate Senator
John F. Kennedy accused the Republican incumbent President Eisenhower of allowing
a "missile gap" to exist, and charged
that the United States was getting too close to the Soviet Union through détente.
Soon after Kennedy became President, he began to needle the CIA for information
on UFOs,11 which was unnerving at the outset to Allen Dulles after he was burned
over the failed Bay of Pigs invasion of Castro's communist-enslaved Cuba in
April 1961. The once cordial relationship that had existed fell apart, and Dulles
knew his time as DCI was short - as evidenced in his 1961 draft directive to
MJ-12.12 He knew that the explicit instructions contained in the September 24,
1947 Truman directive - prohibiting the DCI from making disclosures to a chief
executive who obviously did not have a "need to know" clearance - would compromise
the CIA, but also that the lengthy and costly UFO program, deemed so necessary
to national security by all involved, simply could not be jeopardised for anyone
- not even the President of the United States.
Knowing the character of Allen Dulles and James Angleton, I can only speculate
as to what kind of response Kennedy got. The DCI Top Secret/ MJ-12 document
leaves no doubt that Dulles was not going to cooperate with Kennedy's request
of June 28, 1961, which he forwarded to Angleton for consideration and feedback.
Majestic Twelve/MJ-12 included spin-off projects that were obviously equally
sensitive activities of the CIA, such as Parasite, Parhelion, Enviro, Psyop,
Green, Spike and House Cleaning. Other sensitive and covert programs could be
affected as well, such as MK-ULTRA, Artichoke and Domestic, which all appear
to have been operational projects associated with Majestic Twelve. The full
implications of the above are not clear at present, but it is obvious that the
other projects were held in readiness for some kind of mass indoctrination and
deception undertaking in a national crisis.
The
CIA, UFOs, MJ-12, JFK & James Jesus Angleton-2
Date: Tuesday, 19 September 2000, 6:24 p.m.
As the CIA's Counterintelligence Chief,
James Jesus Angleton had access to the Agency's most closely guarded secrets,
including MJ-12 files on UFOs.
MARILYN MONROE AND MURDER,
INC.
The pressure put on the CIA by Kennedy was reaching
a flashpoint of wills; and with the Noresenko affair13 driving Angleton to
obsession, a UFO leak crisis brought new strains on Angleton. He learned that
Hollywood screen star Marilyn Monroe's phone onversation with a New York art
dealer14 - in which she discussed Kennedy's secret visit to an undisclosed
military base to see alien artifacts, and her disdain over her soured relationships
with President Kennedy and his brother, the United States Attorney General
- had been recorded by CIA domestic electronic surveillance experts. Since
1955, Monroe had been under surveillance by the CIA, and the FBI had maintained
a security dossier on her because of her marriage to a well-known American
writer suspected of having communist affiliations, and her trip to Russia
and the Press coverage she received while she was there.15
The wire-tap report also mentions nationally recognised
New York syndicated reporter Dorothy Kilgallen as having conversations with
Monroe regarding the Roswell UFO crash of 1947 and President Kennedy's politically
motivated NASA Apollo Moon program. Dorothy Kilgallen made headlines in 1955
when she disclosed a private conversation with a British Cabinet official
who told her that UFOs are real and that the US and British authorities consider
the matter as of the highest importance.
The significance of the wire-tap has to do with
the fact that Monroe was murdered the following day in her Brentwood condo.
According to Milo Speriglio, internationally recognised private investigator
and director of the Nick Harris Detective Agency, Monroe was the victim of
a national security management hit by the CIA and the Mob.16 The suggestion
that somehow the CIA was involved in a domestic murder of an merican citizen
is not too far-fetched when considering the past abuses coming from Angleton's
CI program with its "absolute security at any cost" philosophy. Whether Angleton
authorised the hit is not known, but the modus operandi of the way her body
was found and moved around, the fashion in which the autopsy records were
changed to reflect suicide, and the theft of her secret red diary one day
after her autopsy, all have similarities to the methods used by Angleton's
covert CIA Counterintelligence operators.
JFK AND THE CIA'S UFO FILES
The final straw for Angleton came when President
Kennedy fired off a Top Secret memorandum to him,17 outlining a previous discussion
concerning a classification review of all CIA UFO files that could affect
national security. It was dated November 12, 1963 - just 10 days before he
would be gunned down in the streets of Dallas, Texas.
Kennedy informed Angleton that he was setting things
in motion to share sensitive CIA UFO intelligence data with the Russians through
the director of NASA, James Webb.18 This request was made on the same day
he requested Webb19 to begin Kennedy's peace overture to the Russians via
joint space exploration. Webb, being a board member of the intelligence community,19
most likely interpreted Kennedy's program to mean the sharing of classified
UFO data, which was forbidden under the current
directive.
In Kennedy's Top Secret memorandum,20 he outlined
for Angleton the specific items he wished to have disclosed to Webb, such
as "[to] have the high-threat cases reviewed with the purpose of identification
of bona fide as opposed to the classified CIA and USAF sources", and "that
we make a clear distinction between the known and unknowns in the event the
Soviets try to mistake our extended cooperation as a cover for intelligence-gathering
of their defense and space programs". Finally, Kennedy wanted Angleton to
"arrange a program of data-sharing with NASA mission directors in their defensive
responsibilities".
This was unprecedented and was totally unacceptable
to Angleton and the CIA. Here, Kennedy was requesting the Central Intelligence
Agency - the agency he swore he would "break into a thousand pieces" - just
to hand over the most guarded secret ever! This memo was passed on to William
Colby, who indicated to someone in Angleton's staff in a handwritten note,
"Response from Colby: Angleton has MJ directive".21 The note is dated November
20, 1963 - just two days before Kennedy's assassination.
It seems that Kennedy's request was bounced to and
from Angleton's desk; either consensus was being sought, or the buck was being
passed back to Angleton. In any case, it was a hot potato that Angleton had
to deal with. It is also significant that NSAM No. 271 was the last to come
from Kennedy's desk, just before he left Washington for Dallas. Whatever the
real significance, it was buried somewhere within the CIA, and Angleton spent
many a day trying to figure out who ordered Kennedy's execution.
Was Angleton set up, or did he unintentionally supply
the needed ingredient for the murder of the century? In either case, the secret
remained safe.
NSA SPECIAL ACTIVITIES
One of the few former CIA officers to speak publicly
on the Kennedy assassination and the UFO secret is Victor Marchetti, who at
one time was Assistant to the Deputy for Plans and Operations under DCI William
Colby. In a rare interview with Second Look magazine in 1979, Marchetti -
author of the sensational book, Cult of Intelligence, which was vetted and
censored by the CIA prior to publication (the only book to include the redacted
portions within the text) - made some interesting observations regarding the
CIA's UFO intelligence-gathering program and why the subject is not open for
discussion.
Retired Air Force intelligence officer Robert Collins
produced for his website an insightful foreword to an extract from the Marchetti
interview, in which he quotes Marchetti as saying: "My theory is that we have,
indeed, been contacted - perhaps even visited - by extraterrestrial beings,
and that the US Government, in collusion with other national powers of the
Earth, is determined to keep this information from the general
public."
Marchetti alluded to "rumors" at the highest levels
within the CIA that the NSA has information as well, and that this must be
kept away from public viewing.
We know now that the National Security Agency does
have sensitive COMINT files, which for reasons of national security it cannot
disclose. One of these NSA files that Marchetti speaks of might be the NSA
intercept of Kennedy's phone conversation with Khrushchev on November 12,
1963, in which Kennedy spoke of a "situation that affects both our countries
and the world" and "a problem that we share in common".
It is believed that the UFO problem became a national
security issue when President Truman authorised the covert establishment of
the National Security Agency, whose primary responsibility bordered on "special
activities" - perhaps as outlined in an alleged Intelligence Estimate prepared
by national security officials on September 30, 1947, in which one of the
concerns stated that "what we are up against is controlled by intelligent
operators" and that "these objects are real and not illusionary".
It is not surprising that, in 1968, an NSA employee
drafted a significant analysis of the intelligence community's ambivalence
towards the UFO camouflage and warned of dire consequences unless the defence
establishment woke up and recognised the danger these phenomena pose in the
nuclear age.
On a final note, the legend of James Jesus Angleton
and his "wilderness of mirrors", as he often referred to his daunting task
of protecting vital state secrets, faded into obscurity on May 11, 1987. But
the secret that went with him re-emerged almost precisely the day he died.
Perhaps Jim was not the real bad guy in the counterintelligence
game. Maybe he was its victim.
Endnotes:
1. September 25, 1943 OSS memo, released through the FOIA in September 1989.
2. US Senate Select Committee to Study Government
Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, Final Report, Book VI,
April 23, 1976, pp. 154-55.
3. JJA personal records. Angleton took a seven-month
leave of absence to remain in Tucson, Arizona, for unspecified reasons, not
substantiated by the need to be with his wife and family - as is believed
by other writers regarding Angleton's absence from CIA's Washington headquarters
during May through December 1947. See Tom Mangold, Cold Warrior James Jesus
Angleton: the CIA's Master Spy Catcher, Touchstone Books, Simon & Schuster,
1991, p. 361.
4. On December 12, 1947, the National Security Council
(NSC) adopted measures to counter the espionage and counterespionage threat,
as specified in NSCID 1, later amended in NSCID 5, that authorised the Director
of Central Intelligence to "conduct all organized Federal espionage and counterespionage
operations". According to CIA historian Arthur B. Darling, atomic weapons
research
became an overriding issue, and coordination with the Office of Scientific
Research and Development with the AEC was through CIA consultant Dr H.P. Robertson,
through General Vandenberg's directive containing an agreement between Dr
Vannevar Bush which facilitated the transfer of Manhattan Engineering District
files to the Director of Central Intelligence for proper collection of foreign
atomic energy research. Secret OSO activities in this area were not allowed
to fall into administrative control of the AEC nor FBI, as Vandenberg thought
they should remain within CIA intelligence operations.
See Arthur B. Darling's The Central Intelligence
Agency: An Instrument of Government to 1950, Penn State Press, 1990, pp. 197-239.
5. The term "UFO", as defined by Air Force intelligence
directives, is used here to reflect unconventional aircraft and missiles,
not interplanetary spacecraft.
6. CIA FOIA response letter, dated March 26, 1976,
to a July 14, 1975 FOIA request made by Ground Saucer Watch of Phoenix, Arizona,
in which it stated that the NSC tasked the CIA with a requirement to determine
the actual UFO threat. The CIA responded through the Office of Scientific
Intelligence by creating the Intelligence Advisory Committee to study the
threat aspects. Military members of the IAC fought vigorously to maintain
participation in areas relating to AEC intelligence collection. The Joint
Chiefs of Staff, represented by General Todd (who is mentioned in an FBI memo
regarding Joint Staff Council ignorance of flying saucer data in 1947), were
at odds with the CIA about duplication of efforts by the Military Intelligence
Division in producing UFO intelligence data for the IAC. See Arthur B. Darling,
ibid., pp. 349-356.
7. The KGB, the Committee for State Security, was
a non-military arm of the Soviet Intelligence Service. The GRU was the military
arm. The KGB received its title in 1954. When mentioning the Russian Intelligence
Service, KGB and GRU are referenced generically to include both organisations.
8. This remarkable fact is substantiated in the
mistakenly downgraded Top Secret Canadian Department of Transport intra-departmental
correspondence, dated 21 November 1950, from Wilbert B. Smith to Dr Robert
I. Sarbacher, an American physicist and science consultant in the US Defense
Department's Research and Development Board and a member of the Guidance and
Control Panel. Smith acknowledged that UFO studies were "considered by the
United States authorities to be of tremendous significance" and that the "matter
is the most classified subject in the United States Government, rating higher
than the H-bomb".
9. September 24, 1947 Top Secret/MAJIC/ Eyes Only Project White Hot Preliminary
Estimate in Five Parts (unacknowledged by the US Government). See Robert M.
Wood, PhD, and Ryan S. Wood, The Majestic Documents, Wood & Wood Enterprises,
1998, pp. 43-81.
10. November 25, 1955 Top Secret memorandum from
Rear Admiral Edwin T. Layton, Deputy Director for Intelligence, The Joint
Staff, to the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, ref. JCS 1712/5. This report
deals with the Burgess-MacLean defection, after it was learned that sensitive
weapons research information had been sent to Moscow through diplomatic means
and after the CIA was informed of the defection. Angleton was devastated to
learn that Kim Philby, a longstanding friend of British intelligence, was
part of the spy ring.
11. Unacknowledged June 28, 1961 Top Secret National Security Memorandum from
President John F. Kennedy to The Director [Dulles], Central Intelligence Agency,
Subject: Review of MJ-12 Intelligence Operations as they relate to Cold War
Psychological Warfare Plans. It is a one-line request that reads: "I would
like a brief summary from you at your earliest convenience."
12. Unacknowledged CIA Top Secret/ MJ-12 Counterintelligence
carbon copy of draft directive from Director of Central Intelligence to MJ-12
members 1 to 7, with eight tabs on government watermark
onion skin paper, circa 1961.
13. Yuriy Ivanovich Norsenko was a Soviet KGB officer who defected in 1962.
Angleton had him detained and tortured for three years, believing the warning
given by another KGB defector, Anatoliy Mikaylovich Golitsyn, that Norsenko
was ordered to defect and act as a disinformation plant to spread misleading
information to the CIA regarding Soviet capabilities and intentions. Later
CIA analysis suggested that it was Golitsyn, not Norsenko, who was the real
mole planted within the CIA. Angleton was convinced that Golitsyn was a bona
fide defector and he used Golitsyn's information, but the CI
mole-hunt virtually destroyed the CIA's covert operations for some time.
14. Top Secret CIA wire-tap report, dated August
3, 1962, of discussion between Marilyn Monroe and Howard Rothberg, with references
to Project 40, Moon Dust, the 5412 Committee and MJ-12. The report was given
to Angleton and has his signature at the bottom right-hand portion of the
document, establishing that CI was aware of Monroe's desire to blackmail the
Kennedys over their indiscretions during a sexual affair with her prior to
August.
15. FBI file No. 105-40018-1, formerly classified
Secret. CIA is copied on an August 19, 1955 FBI document from Mr Dennis A.
Flinn, Director, Office of Security, Department of State. A copy was sent
to Director, Central Intelligence Agency, for the attention of Deputy Director,
Plans, and was marked Secret. It was declassified on November 11, 1978, but
the subject matter was redacted.
16. See Adela Gregory and Milo Speriglio, Crypt
33: The Saga of Marilyn Monroe &endash; The Final Word, Birch Lane Press,
1993.
17. This would be amazing, since no one in government
knew that James Angleton worked for the CIA, much less of his existence, since
there were few pictures of Angleton and very few within the Agency knew who
he was and what he did. It is also interesting that until his appearance before
the Church Committee in 1975, the public did not know about Angleton or his
CIA Counterintelligence position. His identity had been kept secret for 20
years.
18. National Security Action Memorandum No. 271, dated November 12, 1963,
to The Administrator, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Subject:
Cooperation with the USSR on Outer Space Matters. President Kennedy instructs
James Webb as Administrator of NASA to "...assume personally the initiative
and central responsibility within the Government for the development of a
program of substantive cooperation with the Soviet Union in the field of outer
space, including the development of specific technical proposals. I assume
that you will work closely with the Department of State and other agencies
as appropriate." Kennedy had requested an interim report on NASA's progress
in this adventure by December 15, 1963. Of course, after Kennedy was killed,
this program was never acted upon.
19. It should be pointed out here that James E.
Webb served on President Truman's Psychological Warfare Strategy Board and
assisted in revising NSC 10/2 for the Office of Policy Coordination (Covert
Operations) in 1948 for the CIA and the Joint Chiefs of Staff for emergency
plans in case of war. He also was the author of the Webb Staff Study that
worked out cooperation between the military and the CIA concerning IAC intelligence-sharing
of foreign atomic research with the AEC, which allowed the DCI
prerogatives in the dissemination to key executive officials. Webb considered
the DCI slot after Rear Admiral Hillenkoetter left office in 1950.
20. Top Secret Kennedy memorandum to the Director [of Counter Intelligence],
Subject: Classification review of all UFO intelligence files affecting National
Security, dated November 12, 1963.
About the Author:
Timothy S. Cooper is an independent researcher and writer who has worked in
security and investigation fields for 15 years. A Vietnam veteran, he began
researching military UFO intelligence operations in 1988 and has collected
extensive CIA and NSA files. He has also acquired the largest collection of
MJ-12 documents and privately owned, original Project Blue Book files in the
USA.
http://www.nexusmagazine.com/
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