The Real Agenda
by
Richard Cummings
by Richard Cummings
"We
are grateful to the Washington Post, the New York Times,
Time Magazine, and other great publications whose directors
have attended our meetings and respected their promises of discretion
for almost forty years. It would have been impossible for us to
develop our plan for the world if we had been subject to the bright
lights of publicity during those years. But, the work is now much
more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government.
The supranational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world
bankers is surely preferable to the national autodetermination
practiced in past centuries."
~ David Rockefeller, founder of the Trilateral Commission, in an
address to a meeting of the Trilateral Commission, in June 1991
Somehow,
I knew it all along. But I got my personal whiff of world empire
after my article on Haile Sellassie and the coming Ethiopian revolution
appeared on the Op Ed page of the New York Times in 1974. I had
been a visiting professor at the Haile Sellassie I University in
Addis Ababa and had witnessed the student unrest that ultimately
culminated in the overthrow of the monarchy. A number of publishers
contacted me, including George Braziller and Putnam, through its
editor in chief, Ned Chase (father of Chevy) asking me to submit
book proposals. I wrote the proposal and gave it to my agent, John
Schaffner.
Braziller
came to my house, where he sipped ice tea and waxed euphoric about
the proposal. Ned Chase took me to lunch at Billy’s and told me
I was the "most exciting writer" of my generation and
that he was going to get me a five book contract.
Then,
it all went cold. After weeks of silence, Schaffner phoned to tell
me that a terrified Braziller tore into his office, threw the proposal
on his desk, and fled. Ned Chase then reported that he had lost
the proposal and was searching for it. Needless to say, he never
found it. Months later, he phoned my agent to tell him he was withdrawing
his offer to me.
Ethiopia
was in the throes of a Marxist revolution, an event that threatened
to tip the balance of power with the Soviet Union. Directly across
the Red Sea from Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia was the home to a major
American air force base and MAP installation. It was common knowledge
that U.S. air force jets had flown to Saudi Arabia to put down an
attempted coup by Saudi air force officers who sought to overthrow
the House of Saud and replace it with a Marxist regime. Had this
happened, the Russians would have been in control of the world’s
largest oil reserves, virtually check mating the Americans.
What
I did not know, but which I found out many years later through a
routine news report on public radio and small articles in the press,
was that the CIA had informed the American publishers that it did
not want anything published on the subject of Ethiopia. It was easy
for the Agency to do it, since Robie Macauley, a top literary editor
at Harcourt, Brace, was, while he functioned in his literary capacity,
the head of the CIA Africa desk. I know he was, because he told
me so not long before he died. He explicitly said to me that his
literary career was his cover. When his obituary appeared in the
New York Times, it listed his accomplishments in the literary field,
but failed to mention in his real career with the CIA. I rang up
the author of the obituary and said, "You left out Robie’s
career with the CIA." There was a long pause. Then he said,
"We can’t put everything into an obituary."
From
failing to report that it knew about the impending Bay of Pigs invasion,
to not mentioning Robie Macauley’s CIA career, the Times went along
with Agency policy, complicit in the Rockefeller agenda of global
domination that culminated in the creation of the Trilateral Commission.
The Agency’s tentacles, on behalf of this agenda, reached far and
deep, including, in violation of the legislation that created it,
domestic snooping and the trashing of American publications that
opposed this agenda. Barney Rosset, who ran both Grove Press and
Evergreen Review, which had been vocal in its opposition to the
war in Vietnam, asked me to examine his CIA file to help him understand
what it meant. I told him. When the editors of Grove went on strike
and ruined Grove, they were part of a plot instigated by Jay Lovestone,
the head of the international office of the AFL-CIA, to bring down
Grove. Lovestone was at all times a CIA operative reporting to his
CIA case officer, James Jesus Angleton. Angleton was the boss of
E. Howard Hunt, who was Buckley’s boss at CIA. Not long ater Grove
published The
Pied Piper, my biography of Allard Lowenstein, which revealed
Lowenstein’s CIA connection, a furious Frank Carlucci, who had served
as Deputy Director of the CIA and was close to Lowenstein, had denounced
Rosset, who was summarily thrown out as publisher of Grove by its
new owners, Ann Getty and Lord Weidenfeld.
I
was exposed to the perfidious undercover operations without realizing
it. Part of a group of writers and artists in the Hamptons, I would
celebrate Christmas at the home of Swedish artist, Hans Hokanson
at his home and studio in Northwest Woods in East Hampton. Invariably,
the novelist and nature writer, Peter Matthiessen was one of the
guests. On the Christmas after I had returned from a year teaching
in Barbados, (I was in Barbados when I had written the Times Op
Ed piece), I was sitting in a corner of Hokanson’s living room,
from which vantage point I could see Matthiessen glaring at me from
across the room, his eyes as malignant as those of a poisonous snake.
Hokanson’s
wife, Barbara, who had been standing next to Matthiessen, came towards
me. She said that Peter wanted me to know something. She said, "Peter
wants you to know that you should feel lucky that he doesn’t let
you close to him, because he could really hurt you." She turned
and left me bemused. Some years later, the Times revealed in a story
that Matthiessen had been in the CIA. This was clever of it a subtle
enactment of what Rolland Barthes called "the inoculation principle,"
whereby power reveals a bit of the truth to conceal a bigger lie.
The bigger lie, I was to learn even later, was that the Paris Review,
which Matthiessen allegedly founded and which was ostensibly funded
by Prince Sadruddin Aga Kahn, was his cover and that the money all
came from the CIA. His ex-wife Patsy told me everything, as did
his closest friend, John Sherry as well as Jamie Linville, the managing
editor of the Paris Review. Linville told me that Matthiessen was
"haunted by the CIA," and Sherry said he was "tormented,"
but not enough to come clean directly by himself.
I
still wonder how Peter thought he could "hurt me." After
all, CIA intelligence officers are bureaucrats of the state. Was
he going to do something awful to me in the name of the state, when
I was not a criminal and had done nothing illegal? Matthiessen,
like William Buckley, the founder the National Review, were,
like many in the CIA of that generation, recruited out of Yale,
part of the elite corps of intellectuals who were going to run the
world along with David Rockefeller. Their goal was a super-state,
in which the economy and the culture would be run for the benefit
of a handful of the self-appointed chosen.
It
is no accident that this has culminated in the American occupation
of Iraq, with the plans for world domination set out yet again,
after it was derailed by the debacle of Vietnam, in the Project
for a New American Century. With George W. Bush, of Yale and Skull
and Bones, at the head of the project, the dream lives on. Except
it is not a dream. It is a nightmare that turned America into a
kind of police state. And it has exploded.
October
20, 2003
Richard
Cummings [send
him mail] taught international law at the Haile Selassie
I University and before that, was Attorney-Advisor with the Office
of General Counsel of the Near East South Asia region of U.S.A.I.D,
where he was responsible for the legal work pertaining to the aid
program in Israel, Jordan, Pakistan and Afghanistan. He is the author
of a new novel, The
Immortalists, as well as
The Pied Piper Allard K. Lowenstein and the Liberal Dream,
and the comedy, Soccer Moms From Hell. He
holds a Ph.D. in Social and Political Sciences from Cambridge University
and is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers.
He is writing a new book, The
Road To Baghdad The Money Trail Behind The War In Iraq.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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Cummings Archives
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