The CIA as the tool of international business

Article about the CIA University to teach the next generation of elite globalist scumbags:


    For four years From The Wilderness has been teaching that the CIA�s primary role, it�s raison d�etre, was to serve the interests of Wall Street and the major banks. In our recent three-country lecture tour, our documentation of the close links between CIA and Wall Street has taken many by surprise. Thirty years ago Professor Peter Dale Scott of Berkeley disclosed that six out of the first seven Deputy Directors of Intelligence (CIA�s number two position) had gone directly from Wall Street into service at the Agency. Since September 11th, FTW�s disclosure that the CIA�s current Executive Director, A.B. �Buzzy� Krongard is a former investment banker has caused deeper rumbles. The firm he once headed, AlexBrown/Deutschebank, has been connected to insider trading on United Air Lines stock just before the September 11th attacks. The NYSE�s current Executive Vice President for Enforcement, David Doherty, is a retired CIA General Counsel.

    This new curriculum, as reported by Reuters correspondent T. Zakaria in a May 16 story and by the newsletter of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO) dated June 24, 2002, absolutely and clearly establishes the priorities of the agency. Understanding this relationship helps people to rethink their paradigms when trying to understand the real role of secret intelligence operations in today�s world. As described recently by FTW friend Dr. Faiz Khan, M.D. � �A paradigm is what you think about something before you think about it.�

    Since the U.S.-led conquest of Afghanistan was completed last November, a fresh opium crop has been planted that has currently put between 3,000 and 4,500 metric tons of opium back on the market after being harvested last month. That equates to an estimated $150 and $200 billion in liquid cash revenues that will enter the world�s banking system and financial markets, mostly in the U.S. In January of 2000 the Taliban destroyed some 96% of the country�s opium crop; an act of economic warfare that took an estimated $200 billion out of the world�s banking system. …

    Regarding the drug trade, FTW has been focused for years on the fact that the control of the cash generated by the international drug trade has been one of the CIA�s primary concerns. This was the subject of a lecture given by this writer at the University of Southern California at the invitation of Professor David Andrus in December of 2000 entitled, �Wall Street�s War for Drug Money.� (A video of that lecture is available at www.copvcia.com).

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