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To: Berlin_Freeper

Ah, the CIA’s official propaganda sheet, managing PR on behalf of new world order financial elites, is weighing in on “what we should do”.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katharine_Weymouth
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_E._Graham
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katharine_Graham
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Bradlee

The CIA/communist/Wall Street old money links go on and on...


25 posted on 04/15/2014 10:49:19 AM PDT by PieterCasparzen (We have to fix things ourselves)
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To: Berlin_Freeper

Oh, a little more on the illustrious Ben Bradlee, form executive editor of WaPo...

from wikipedia article on him:

“In 1952 Bradlee joined the staff of the Office of U.S. Information and Educational Exchange (USIE), the embassy’s propaganda unit. USIE produced films, magazines, research, speeches, and news items for use by the CIA throughout Europe. USIE (later known as USIA) also controlled the Voice of America, a means of disseminating pro-American “cultural information” worldwide. While at the USIE, according to a Justice Department memo from an assistant U.S. attorney in the Rosenberg Trial, Bradlee was helping the CIA manage European propaganda regarding the spying conviction and execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg on June 19, 1953.

Bradlee was officially employed by USIE until 1953, when he began working for Newsweek. While based in France, Bradlee divorced his first wife and married Antoinette Pinchot. At the time of the marriage, Antoinette’s sister, Mary Pinchot Meyer, was married to Cord Meyer, a key figure in Operation Mockingbird, a CIA program to influence the media. Antoinette Bradlee was also a close friend of Cicely d’Autremont, who was married to James Jesus Angleton. Bradlee worked closely with Angleton in Paris. At the time, Angleton was liaison for all Allied intelligence in Europe. His deputy was Richard Ober, a fellow student with Bradlee at Harvard University.[citation needed]

In 1957, while working as a reporter for Newsweek, Bradlee created controversy when he interviewed members of the FLN. They were Algerian guerrillas who were in rebellion against the French government at the time. According to Deborah Davis, author of Katharine the Great about Katharine Graham, this had all the “earmarks of an intelligence operation”. As a result of these interviews, Bradlee was given an expulsion order from France. The order was later suspended and finally repealed.[citation needed]”


41 posted on 04/15/2014 10:59:13 AM PDT by PieterCasparzen (We have to fix things ourselves)
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