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G. Edward Griffin - The Fearful Master - PDF Archive

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7. Department of State Bulletin (December 11, 1956), p. 926.<br />

8. "Soviet Jet Units Defeated in Korea by U.S. Flyers Air Chief Discloses," New York<br />

Times (September 19, 1953), sec. 1, p. 1.<br />

9. As quoted by Manly, pp. 82-83.<br />

10. As quoted by Alice Widener, Congressional Digest (Washington, D.C., August-<br />

September 1960), p. 217.<br />

11. U.S. News and World Report (December 15, 1950), pp. 11-12.<br />

12. Speech by Anthony T. Bouscaren before the Congress of Freedom, Veterans War<br />

Memorial Auditorium (San Francisco, April 1955).<br />

13. Charles A. Willoughby and John Chamberlain, MacArthur, 1941-1951 (New York,<br />

McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1954), pp. 401-402.<br />

14. American Historical Documents, p. 406.<br />

15. Soviet Political Agreements and Results, SISS publication (1959), p. XI.<br />

16. Lie, p. 359.<br />

17. Manly, pp. 67-68.<br />

18. <strong>The</strong> Truth about Soviet Involvement in the Korean War, Department of Defense press<br />

release #465-54 (May 15, 1954). Also, "U.S. Reveals Russ Ordered Attack on Korea," Los<br />

Angeles Examiner (May 16, 1954), sec. 1, pt. A, p. 2.<br />

19. Congressman James B. Utt, Congressional Record (January 15, 1962). On March 21,<br />

1960, the State Department issued a formal statement which said: "<strong>The</strong> United Nations<br />

Military Staff Committee had nothing whatsoever to do with the Korean War and it did not<br />

receive any classified military information on this subject. Nor was the Military Staff<br />

Committee involved in any way with the direction of the forces in Korea. . . . <strong>The</strong> United<br />

States did submit periodic reports to the United Nations on the conduct of the fighting in<br />

Korea, but these reports contained no classified information and were limited to a factual<br />

chronicle of events."<br />

Incredible as it may seem, the State Department was asking the American people to<br />

believe that the UN had absolutely nothing to do with either planning, directing or<br />

influencing its own war in Korea! However, General George Marshall admitted that the<br />

"hot pursuit" policy of the United States of allowing our pilots to pursue attacking enemy<br />

aircraft back into their own territory had been abandoned because this policy failed to<br />

receive support in the UN. Secretary of State Dean Acheson further revealed: "<strong>The</strong>re have<br />

been resolutions of the General Assembly which make clear the course that the General<br />

Assembly thinks wise; and the United States is endeavoring to follow the course which<br />

has tremendous international support and is not contemplating taking unilateral steps of its<br />

own."<br />

It is clear that while the United States was theoretically responsible for the military<br />

direction of the "unified command" in Korea, in reality we were going along with whatever

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