13-04-2019, 06:30 PM
(This post was last modified: 13-04-2019, 07:05 PM by James Lateer.)
Mr. Kowalski and others:
In the Bloomfied letter to Sir William Stephenson in 1954, he was actually writing to Richard Coit, c/o Stephenson. Below is info taken from an historical website on Stephenson and Coit and this actually implicates Bloomfield in spying activity of some sort:
"...One of Stephenson's agents was Ivar Bryce. According to Thomas E. Mahl, the author of Desperate Deception: British Covert Operations in the United States, 1939-44 (1998): "Bryce worked in the Latin American affairs section of the BSC, which was run by Dickie Coit (known in the office as Coitis Interruptus). Because there was little evidence of the German plot to take over Latin America, Ivar
found it difficult to excite Americans about the threat..."
"...Nicholas J. Cull, the author of Selling War: The British Propaganda Campaign Against American Neutrality (1996), has argued: "During the summer of 1941, he (Bryce) became eager to awaken the United States to the Nazi threat in South America." It was especially important for the British Security Coordination to undermine the propaganda of the American First Committee. Bryce recalls in his autobiography, You Only Live Once (1975): "Sketching out trial maps of the possible changes, on my blotter, I came up with one showing the probable reallocation of territories that would appeal to Berlin. It was very convincing: the more I studied it the more sense it made… were a genuine German map of this kind to be discovered and publicised among… the American Firsters, what a commotion would be caused..."
http://intrepid-society.org/W4/personal-history/
This may be the same Richard Coit that lived in "Turtle Creek" in Dallas, (near General Walker?) who was involved with Texas Instruments. Bloomfield was involved with G Peter Fleck through Amsterdam Overseas Corporation, which was also related to Texas Instruments and financed by the Rothschilds. Fleck was chairman of New Court Securities which handled the "initial financing" of Texas Instruments. Flick was a fugitive from Nazi-invaded Netherlands in 1941
James Lateer
In the Bloomfied letter to Sir William Stephenson in 1954, he was actually writing to Richard Coit, c/o Stephenson. Below is info taken from an historical website on Stephenson and Coit and this actually implicates Bloomfield in spying activity of some sort:
"...One of Stephenson's agents was Ivar Bryce. According to Thomas E. Mahl, the author of Desperate Deception: British Covert Operations in the United States, 1939-44 (1998): "Bryce worked in the Latin American affairs section of the BSC, which was run by Dickie Coit (known in the office as Coitis Interruptus). Because there was little evidence of the German plot to take over Latin America, Ivar
found it difficult to excite Americans about the threat..."
"...Nicholas J. Cull, the author of Selling War: The British Propaganda Campaign Against American Neutrality (1996), has argued: "During the summer of 1941, he (Bryce) became eager to awaken the United States to the Nazi threat in South America." It was especially important for the British Security Coordination to undermine the propaganda of the American First Committee. Bryce recalls in his autobiography, You Only Live Once (1975): "Sketching out trial maps of the possible changes, on my blotter, I came up with one showing the probable reallocation of territories that would appeal to Berlin. It was very convincing: the more I studied it the more sense it made… were a genuine German map of this kind to be discovered and publicised among… the American Firsters, what a commotion would be caused..."
http://intrepid-society.org/W4/personal-history/
This may be the same Richard Coit that lived in "Turtle Creek" in Dallas, (near General Walker?) who was involved with Texas Instruments. Bloomfield was involved with G Peter Fleck through Amsterdam Overseas Corporation, which was also related to Texas Instruments and financed by the Rothschilds. Fleck was chairman of New Court Securities which handled the "initial financing" of Texas Instruments. Flick was a fugitive from Nazi-invaded Netherlands in 1941
James Lateer