Authors: Oliver Stone,L. Fletcher Prouty
Leonard C. Lewin,
Report From Iron Mountain
(New York: Dial Press, 1967). This book is not to be misunderstood. It is a novel; but its content is so close to the reality of those years that many readers insist that the “report” must be true. I have discussed this fully with the author. He assures me that the book is a novel and that he intended it to read that way in order to emphasize its serious content.
A recent euphemism for guerrilla warfare or counter insurgency operations.
Walter B. Wriston,
Risk and Other Four-Letter Words
(New York: Harper & Row, 1986).
Philip P. Weiner,
The Dictionary of the History of Ideas
(New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, New York, 1973).
As defined in my 1973 book
The Secret Team
, Secret Intelligence Operations are “clandestine operations carried out to get deep-secret intelligence data.”
Sen. Leverett Saltonstall (R-Massa.).
In what was a very accurate on-the-scene account of the murder of the President, an experienced Reuters correspondent wrote, “Three bursts of gunfire, apparently from automatic weapons, were heard.” This first news report by a seasoned combat journalist shows that those in and around Dealey Plaza heard numerous shots -- more than the three bullets reported by the Secret Service, the FBI, and the Warren Commission.
Permitting the vice president to ride in the same procession with the President violated one hundred years of Secret Service policy. Why did this occur on that momentous day? Who directed these changes in standard procedures, and why?
As described in earlier chapters, this normally entails a series of orchestrated events that elevate a person, such as those mentioned, to a position where he is regarded as an extremely popular hero.
Less developed countries, or LDCs, is a term much used for these small, underdeveloped nations in the banking community.
This novel was published in 1967. Today it might have included the Strategic Defense Initiative “Star Wars” project as another boondoggle.
R. Buckminster Fuller,
Critical Path
(New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1981).
A military term referring to the number of years of effective use of an item of military hardware before it is replaced by a newer or updated model. The life of type of most items normally averages between ten and twenty years.
On several occasions in 1964, I spent a few hours alone with President Fernando Belaunde Terry of Peru discussing the subject of border patrol. Peru controls the entry and exit of almost 100 percent of its goods through the port of Callao, adjacent to Lima, and a special “free port” in the remote region east of the Andes, at Iquitos on the upper Amazon River.
Belaunde wanted to establish a network of border surveillance by the use of small, capable aircraft, the Helio Aircraft Corporation’s “Courier,” which had been designed by members of the MIT aeronautical engineering staff and purchased by the hundred by the CIA. This small plane could land, STOL (short takeoff and landing) fashion, on unprepared airstrips and even on mountainsides.
Belaunde told me that in conjunction with that type of modern border patrol he had repeatedly refused foreign aid projects for road-building because “all they would accomplish would be to facilitate the movement of the indigenous natives from their ancient communities to the jammed barriadas of Lima.”
With entry into Peru limited, for the most part, to these two ports and their airfields, it was possible for the government to control all import and export business to benefit the Belaunde governmental team, which included certain old and rich families with traditional and banking power.
Fuller,
Critical Path
.
Theodore Shanin, “Peasants and Peasant Societies,” in John Berger, “Historical Afterword,”
Pig Earth
(New York: Pantheon Books, 1979).
Senator Gravel wrote these words in August 1971 for the introduction to
The
Pentagon Papers
(Boston: Beacon Press Books, 1971). They were timely and applicable then. The reader cannot help but note that they are equally timely and applicable to the more recent Iranian “hostages for arms” controversy and even to Desert Storm.
“New Frontier” was the domestic and foreign policy program of President Kennedy’s administration. It is taken from a slogan used by Kennedy in his acceptance speech in 1960. Edward C. Smith and Arnold C. Zurcher,
Dictionary of American Politics
(New York: Barnes & Noble, 1968).
Special Judge Advocate John A. Bingham,
The Trial of the Conspirators
(Washington, D.C., 1865), cited in
The Pope and the New Apocalypse
(S. D. Mumford, 1986).
From his excellent book
Sub Rosa: The CIA and the Uses of Intelligence
(New York: Times Books, 1978). This is a good source of “inside the family” information about certain aspects of the intervention in Vietnam and of the role played by the various participants.
Previous CIA station chief, Saigon.
At the time General Taylor issued these instructions to General Westmoreland, I was serving with the Joint Staff as chief of the Office of Special Operations in SACSA. I attended meetings at which General Taylor presided and was well aware of his brilliance and experience. His remarks to General Westmoreland cannot be taken lightly. For my work with the Joint Staff, I was awarded, by General Taylor, one of the first Joint Chiefs of Staff Commendation Medals ever issued.
During the summer of 1944, I had been ordered to fly from Cairo via Tehran over the Caspian Sea and then across southern Russian into the Ukraine to a point just west of Poltava. I saw firsthand the indescribable destruction of such cities as Rostov, and how the once-fertile Ukraine had been laid bare. Only the firebombed Tokyo had suffered more damage.
Abrams, Gen. Creighton W.
Acheson, Dean
Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA)
Afghanistan
Africa, outlook for
Agent Orange
Agnelli, Giovanni
Agriculture
Agrovilles
Ahn Lac Air Base
Air America
Air Re-supply and Communications
Allen, George V.
Ambrose, Dr. Stephen E.
American Airlines
American Legion
American Medical Association
Ammunition, coup role of
Anloa Valley
Anson, Robert Sam
Antarctica
Apollo program
Arzu, Roberto Alejo
Ash, Roy L.
Assassination, CIA policy oncommon techniques in; and FDR. See
also
Kennedy (John) assassinationAssassination manuals
Associated Press
Atomic bomb, development ofand Japan.
See also
Hydrogen bomb; Nuclear weaponsAuchincloss, Ken
Aurell, George
Baldwin, Hansen W.
Ball, George
Bao Dai
Bankers
Bannister, Guy
Barber, James David
Barrientos Ortano, Gen. René
Bay of Pigs operationexecution offailure analyzed Kennedy reaction to planning of
Bell Helicopter
Bingham, John A.
Bishop, Jim
Bissell, Richard
Black budgets
Blackburn, Alfred W.
“Block” system
Bodin, Jean
Boeing Aircraft Company
Boggs, Hale
Bolivia, coup in
Bombing, impact of
Book of the Film, The
(Stone)Boston Globe
Bow and arrow
British Broadcasting Company
Brown, Clarence
Buddhists
Budgets, defenseand Eisenhower administrationmilitaryand Third Worldof Vietnam War
Bundy, Bill
Bundy, McGeorgeand Bay of Pigsand NSAM’s
Burke, Adm. Arleigh A.
Bush administration
Cabell, Gen. Charles
Cabell, Earle
Cairo conference
California Standard Oil Company
Cambodia
Camelot
Cameron, Allan W.
Camp Peary
Cam Ranh Bay
Can Loa
Caravelle Group
Carr, Waggoner
Casey, William
Castro, Fidel
See also
Bay of Pigs operationCatholics, relocation of
. See
also
Tonkinese refugeesCentral Intelligence Agency.
See
CIACentral Intelligence Group (CIG)
Chiang Kai-shekand Tehran conference
Chiang Kai-shek, Madame
Chicago
Daily NewsChile
China, and Tehran conference
Chineseand Vietnam war
See also
Tonkinese refugeesChristchurch
StarChurchill, Winston and iron curtain
CIA, and assassinationsand Bay of Pigsand Bolivian coup and businesscombat activity ofcontrol of and covert operationscreation ofCuban-exile program ofand Diemand Dien Bien Phuand economic warfare economics division of and franchise holders and French-Indochina War funding ofgrowth ofand helicoptersinternational reputation ofJohnson changes in and Korean airliner incidentand Kennedy Vietnam policyand Laos laws governingand McCone appointmentand military-politics relationship and paramilitary forcesand Pentagon Papersand Phoenix Programpolitical immunity of and project sizereason for roles ofand Nazis and NSAM’s and Saigon Military Mission and secrecyand Special Forcesand U-2 incident and Vietnam-war Americanization
See also individual names and subjects
; Vietnam warCINCPAC
Citizens’ Retraining Camps
Civil Affairs and Military Government
Civil Air Transport (CAT), and helicopters and Tonkinese refugees
Civil Guard
Clifford, Clark
Cline, Ray
Cochin China
Colby, William
Cold War, cost ofand enemiesinitial planning ofand NSAM’s origins of purposes of
Colson, Charles
Combat Development Test Center (CDTC)
Communications, and national sovereignty
Communism, as enemy. See
also
Cold WarConein, Lucien
C–123 cargo plane
Congress, U.S., and Southeast Asia Resolution
Congressional Record
Conspiraciesproving of
Cooper, Sen. John Sherman
Cornwell-Thompson Company
Corporate socialism
Counsel to the President
(Clifford)Counterinsurgency
Coups d’etat, CIA methods inand franchise holders
Covert operations
CRAF (Civil Reserve Air Fleet)
Craig, Walter E.
Critical Path
(Fuller)Cronkite, Walter
Crusade for Peace
Cuban exilesSee
also
Bay of Pigs operationCuban Missile Crisis
Cuban Study Group
Curry, Cecil B.
Dalai Lama
Dallas Police Department
Darwin, Charles
Dayan, Gen. Moshe
Debates
Decker, Gen. George
Declaration of Independence (Vietnam)
“Deep Water,”
Defense Departmentand CIA
Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)
Defoliation, impact ofinitial use of
Democracy in America
(de Tocqueville)Democratic Republic of Vietnam.
See
North VietnamDenning, Lord
Desert Storm.
See
Gulf Warde Silvo, Peer
de Tocqueville, Alexis
de Varona, Manuel Antonio
Diem, Ngo Dinh. See Ngo Dinh Diem
Dien Bien Phu
Domino theory
Don, Tran Van
Dornberger, Walter
Douglas, James
Douglas, William O.
Dulles, Allen and Bay of Pigs and Cuban Strategy Groupdismissal of influence ofand Nazisand U–2 incidentand Warren Commission
Dulles, John Fosterand Dien Bien Phuinfluence ofand Korean Waron Tonkinese refugeeson Vietnam
Duong Van “Big” Minh
East India Company
Edward Lansdale
(Curry), 6566Egypt
Eglin Air Force Base
Eisenhower, Dwight D. CIA policy of Cuban policy ofand Khrushchevon Laosand national sovereigntyand nuclear weapons on Tonkinese refugeesand U–2 incidenton Vietnam war
Elections, 1960in South Vietnam
Ellsberg, Daniel
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Enemy, defining ofidentification of role of
Energy crisis, and power elite
English Language Center (DOP)
Erskine, Gen. Graves B.
Everest, Gen. Frank
Extended Arms for Brotherhood
Fair Play for Cuba Committee
Family Story, The
(Lord Denning)FBI, and Kennedy assassination
Felt, Adm. Harry
First National Bank of Boston
First to Fight
(Krulak)Fishel, Wesley
Fitzgerald, Desmond
“Five Fingers” System
5412/2 Committee
Ford, Gerald R.and Kennedy assassination
Foreign aid
Foreign Relations of the United States
, 1952—1954Foreign Relations of the United States
, 1961—63Forrestal, Michael
Fort Bragg
Fort Gordon
Fort Gulick
Fort Worth, Texas
Franchises, and Third World
France, and Vietnam
Fritz, Will
Fuller, R. Buckminster
Galbraith, John Kennedy
Garrison, Jim
Gates, Thomas
Gehlen, Gen. Reinhart
Gehler, Reinhard
Gelb, Leslie H.
Geneva Accords (1954)
Geneva Agreements (1954) and French–Indochina War
Genocide
Giles, Benjamin
Gilpatric, Roswell
Godel, Bill
Goldberg, Arthur
Goldwater, Sen. Barry
Grassy knoll
Gravel, Sen. Mike
Great Britain, and Vietnam
Green Berets
See also
Special forcesGreene, Gen. Wallace M.
Groden, Bob
Gromyko, Andrei
Grumman Aircraft Company
Guatemala
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
Gulf Warwinning of
Haileybury College
Haiphong
Halberstam, David
Hamilton, Lee
Harkins, Gen. Paul
Harrelson, Charles
Harriman, Averell
Harper’s
Hegel, G.W.F.
Helicopters
Helms, Richard
Hillenkoetter, Adm. Roscoe
Hiroshima
H–19 helicopter
Ho Chi Minh and Tonkinese refugees
Hoover, J. Edgar, on Kennedy assassination
Hue
Huey helicopter
HUK insurgency
Humes, James
Hunger, impact of
Hunt, Howard
Huongca
Hydrogen bomband Vietnam war
See also
Atomic bomb, Nuclear weapons
Import/export
Indochina.
See
also
France; Vietnam warIndonesia
Intelligence organizations, types of
See also
CIA, KGBInternational Security Affairs Office
International Monetary Fund
In the Midst of Wars
(Lansdale)Iran
Iron Curtain, derivation of
Israel
Italy
Jackson, Sen. Henry
Javits, Jacob K.
Japan, and atomic bomb
JFK
(movie), Oliver Stone on Prouty onresponse toJohnson, Kelly
Johnson, Lyndon Bainesand Kennedy assassination and Vietnam
Johnson, U. Alexis
Johnston, David
Joint Chiefs of StaffKennedy on 167–169; and national sovereigntyand NSAM #55
See also individual names and subjectsJones, john Paul
Jordan
Journal of the American Medical Association
Kahler, Katherine
Kennedy, Edward
Kennedy, John Fitzgerald, vs. CIA power Dallas speech of long-range plans of managerial style ofand 1960 campaign. See
also
Kennedy administration; Kennedy (John) assassinationKennedy, Robert F and Maxwell Taylor
Kennedy
(Sorenson)Kennedy administration, and Bay of Pigs characterizedand Cuban exilesearly concerns of and NSAM #55and military-politics relationship military spending inand space programand Strategic Hamlet programVietnam policy of
Kennedy (John) assassination assassins in cabinet conspiracy incover story for and Cuban exilesexecution ofFord on further investigation ofimpact of and military-industrial complexmotives for and news mediaand Nixon requirements for planning ofand NSAM #263 reversalresearchers of and security arrangements and succeeding presidents unfolding plot ofand Warren Commission
See also individual names and subjectsKGB
Khamba tribesmen
Khrushchev, Nikita
King, Martin Luther, Jr.
Kissinger, Henry
Korean airlines incident
Korean warorigins of winning of
Krulak, Lt. Gen. Victor H.
Kubrick, Stanley