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3) Subject threatened to hold a press conference and would tell all.<br />

4) Subject made references to “bases” in Cuba and knew of the President’s plan to kill<br />

Castro.<br />

5) Subject made reference to her “diary of secrets” and what the newspapers would do<br />

with such disclosures.<br />

After her suicide (or murder, as some researchers believe), Lionel Grandison, the Los<br />

Angeles County Coroner sent a driver to Marilyn’s house to get an address book, so that<br />

Monroe’s relatives could be contacted. Her housekeeper, Eunice Murray, gave him the address<br />

book and a little red diary. Grandison was the last person to examine the diary and said that there<br />

were references to the Kennedys, as well as other people, such as Fidel Castro. It was locked in<br />

the office safe. The next day, when the safe was opened, the diary was gone, and never seen<br />

again. One of the bits of information that was purported to be in the diary, was that on the day of<br />

the Bay of Pigs invasion, President Kennedy was incapacitated because of excruciating pain in<br />

his back, and Bobby Kennedy was actually running the country. It was alleged that he made the<br />

decision not to provide air support.<br />

The invasion failed, because it was not able to launch the attack at the alternate site which<br />

had an airfield nearby and was more suitable for the unloading of troops and supplies, plus, there<br />

were nearby mountains to hide in. Besides the fact that the U.S. didn’t provide the needed air<br />

support, it wasn’t even a surprise attack, because the New York Times carried an article on<br />

January 10, 1961 with this headline: “U.S. Helps Train Anti-Castro Force At Secret Guatemalan<br />

Air-Ground Base,” thus, the complete communist domination of Cuba was insured.<br />

Russia, in May of 1962, realizing the potential of Cuba’s location, tried to build missile sites<br />

on the island, but the U.S., considering them to be a threat to our national security, threatened<br />

Russia with possible military action if they weren’t removed. After a blockade was imposed, the<br />

missiles were removed; however, the Soviets were still able to bolster the Cuban military by<br />

providing advisors, troops, aircraft, submarines, and military bases.<br />

There are some researchers who believe that there were never any missiles on the island. The<br />

objects identified as “missiles” in government photos were no larger than pencil dots, and it was<br />

impossible to concretely label them as ballistic missiles. It is believed that the incident was<br />

created by the Russians, and that empty crates were removed from Cuba, in exchange for an<br />

agreement by the United States to remove missiles from Russia’s borders, and for a guarantee<br />

that the U.S. would not support an anti-Castro invasion.<br />

According to The Nuclear Deception: Nikita Khrushchev and the Cuban Missile Crisis<br />

(Spook Books, 2002, an imprint of InteliBooks) by Servando González (who was a political<br />

officer in the Cuban Army at the time), the presence of missiles in Cuba was never proven. The<br />

CIA maintained that there were never nuclear warheads in Cuba, and American planes flying<br />

over “missile sites” and Soviet ships had never detected any radiation.<br />

In a 1996 article called “Fidel Castro: Supermole,” González said that Cuba had turned into<br />

an economic embarrassment. He wrote: “Cuba, which was intended to be a showcase of the<br />

Soviet model of development in America, was in fact quickly turning into a showcase of Soviet<br />

inefficiency, mainly due to the Cuban leader’s inability (and the) propagation of Fidel’s<br />

‘heretical’ ideas.” Because Castro was perceived as being “unpredictable, volatile,<br />

undisciplined,” he was being blamed for the Soviet’s failure in Cuba, and Khrushchev decided he<br />

had to cut his losses and withdraw from the country. However, leaving voluntarily would give<br />

the impression that they were admitting failure, so the scheme was hatched to get rid of Castro

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