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Kissinger, who later became Nixon’s Chief of Staff, controlled the vault where the tapes were<br />

kept, and secretly made copies of the transcripts available.<br />

Haig became Cyrus Vance’s (CFR member, Secretary of the Army, later Deputy Secretary of<br />

Defense under Robert McNamara, who was also a CFR member) assistant in 1962. After a short<br />

tour of duty in Vietnam in 1966, where he was decorated for bravery, he was made a full colonel<br />

in 1968. He transferred to West Point to assist Commandant Gen. Andrew Goodpaster (CFR) for<br />

two years, after which Goodpaster recommended Haig to Kissinger in 1969, and Haig was put on<br />

the National Security Council. In less than a year, he was promoted to general, and in two more<br />

years, to major-general. Although he had served only four months as a battalion commander, and<br />

one month as a brigade commander, in 1972 he was given four stars, and nominated for Army<br />

Vice Chief of Staff. It was said, that 183 other generals, who were more deserving, were passed<br />

over. Ford would later promote him to Supreme Allied Commander in Europe. He resigned in<br />

1979 because he was critical of Carter’s defense and foreign policies. He became the chief<br />

operating officer of United Technologies, only to return to government for 18 months as<br />

Reagan’s Secretary of State. Haig was a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.<br />

John Dean claimed that ‘Deep Throat,’ the man who leaked information to Bob Woodward<br />

of the Washington Post, was Alexander Haig. Haig denied it. Woodward had claimed that he<br />

didn’t meet Haig until 1973, however, it has since been revealed that prior to Woodward<br />

becoming a reporter, he was a lieutenant in the Navy, and as a special briefing officer, and had<br />

contact with Haig at the National Security Office in the White House. It now appears that Haig<br />

had a huge role in bringing Nixon down.<br />

So why did the Illuminati turn against Nixon? In addition to the previously mentioned<br />

economical changes, he infuriated Kissinger by bombing North Vietnam without consulting<br />

anyone. It was even rumored that Nixon was planning to get rid of Kissinger. However,<br />

Kissinger was the Illuminati’s man in the White House, and his job was to control Nixon, so he<br />

was the one running the show.<br />

Some very interesting information surfaced about Henry Kissinger. In 1961, Col. Gen.<br />

Michael Goleniewski, of Polish Intelligence (GZI), defected to the United States, bringing with<br />

him 5,000 pages of secret documents, 160 microfilms of secret reports, 800 pages of Russian<br />

intelligence reports, plus the names of hundreds of Soviet agents in American and Europe. State<br />

Department Security Officer, John Norpel, Jr., testified before the Senate Internal Security<br />

Subcommittee that the information provided by Goleniewski was never proven to be inaccurate,<br />

and Goleniewski was honored by the 88th Congress for his efforts.<br />

The documents indicated that after World War II, Russia established an ODRA spy ring in<br />

Poland to infiltrate British and American intelligence. The GZI, discovered that one communist<br />

agent, code-named ‘Bor,’ had worked with another agent, Ernst Bosenhard (a clerk at the U.S.<br />

Intelligence Headquarters in Oberammergau, Germany), who had been sending secret documents<br />

to Moscow. Bosenhard was convicted of espionage in 1951. ‘Bor’ returned to the United States,<br />

and was secretly working with the CIA, while teaching at Harvard University. ‘Bor’ was<br />

identified as Sgt. Henry Alfred Kissinger.<br />

Kissinger became a consultant on security matters during the Administrations of Eisenhower,<br />

Kennedy, and Johnson; and served as Nelson Rockefeller’s chief advisor on foreign affairs. In<br />

his book White House Years, he called Rockefeller, “the single most influential person in my<br />

life.” His book, Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy, in 1957, established him as the leading<br />

authority on U.S. strategic policy, and he was the one who initiated the Strategic Arms<br />

Limitation Talks (SALT). There should be little doubt where his allegiances are in regard to his

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