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Nelson's LBJ Mastermind book
#21
Phil's foreward: Yes, I found the Frank Nelson libel of Robert Groden as gusano (worm) as execrable. I don't confuse that person with the author of the extant book.

~~~


Craig I. Zirbel, Barr McClellan, Phillip Nelson, and Saint John Hunt.


I sent Saint John a five-page email in December, 2008, after reading my printout of his ebook, Bond of Secrecy, in which his father E. Howard Hunt suggests the assassination originated with Johnson.


I repeat that I deem Hunt's a deathbed deflection, not confession; that he died as he lived, a Company man, protecting it being foremost.


Johnson was eevil, no doubt about it, and he was bloody to his armpits, to be sure.


He was as expendable as Hoover and Nixon, and was expended in 1973 between those two other eevil, bloody men.


Johnson boo-hooed his way out of the most powerful position in the Free World in March of 1968 ostensibly because CIA-tool Uncle Walter deemed Tet a victory for the enemy.


And the next month King fell; and the month after that, Bobby.


I posit some little bird made Landslide an offer he couldn't refuse.


Hence, no master, but, no mind.


Some exponents of the Johnsoncentric Theory evince the enthusiasm I saw sitting next to Mark Rudd on the living room carpet of a Purdue professor as the budding young "Maoist" took a breather in his seven-hour recruiting session for SDS Days of Rage October 8-11, 1969.


One cannot hope to change the mind of such a cheerleader, whose red armbanded platoon had chanted the streets of Washington January 19, 1969 in their Nixon "Counterinnaugural"--


Ho ho ho Chi Minh
The NLF is gonna win


Banging the iron knockers of Justice (O Gene Wilder!)


Yet being on the same side of the street as Hunt in the Pin The Tail On The Sponsor Game can't be a good thing.


Or as a Zen phrase advises,


"Don't mistake the finger pointing at the moon for the moon."
#22
Phil has applied to join the forum, but has not been approved as yet. I post this on his behalf. As I have previously explained, LBJ was the pivotal member of the plot, since it could not have gone forward without him. Those who are familiar with the reports of Madeleine Duncan Brown, Billy Sol Estes, Barr McClelland, and E. Howard Hunt should appreciate what I am asserting. The plan was to take out JFK and that no one would pay a penalty for participating in the assassination. ONLY LBJ COULD CONTROL THAT. Plus Lyndon was a very "hands on" guy, who even sent his chief assistant, Cliff Carter, to Dallas to make sure all of the arrangements were in place. I respect those who hold different views, but were it not for LBJ, as Jack Ruby observed, JFK would not have been taken out. I regard this as one of the best books ever published about "The Big Event" and am just the least bit distressed to find worthies like Charles Drago being so dismissive of others like Robert Morrow, who, in my opinion, is on the right track. I am troubled that ad hominems may now become as prevalent here as they are at the EF, especially since one reason for creating the DPF was to rise above them there. As Lyndon told Madeleine, the CIA and the oil boys decided that JFK had to be taken out. But the person who benefited the most from that was LBJ himself. And he took steps to insure that it would be successfully executed and successfully covered up. He was the pivot. As Ruby observed, after being granted a new trial, http://www.jfkmurdersolved.com/ruby.htm

Jack: Everything pertaining to what's happening has never come to the surface. The world will never know the true facts, of what occurred, my motives. The people had, that had so much to gain and had such an ulterior motive for putting me in the position I'm in, will never let the true facts come above board to the world.

Reporter : Are these people in very high positions Jack?!

Jack : Yes. . . .

Jack: "When I mentioned about Adlai Stevenson--if he was vice president there would never have been an assassination of our beloved President Kennedy"--[and was] asked if he would explain it again, Ruby continued, "Well, the answer is the man in office now."

Rebuttal to Joe Green's Review of LBJ: The Mastermind of the JFK Assassination

by Phil Nelson

Mr. Green should be commended for his up-front, candid acknowledgement that he found his latest assignment distasteful: "This particular genre of Kennedy book is admittedly one I find less useful than others." There was never any doubt, after reading that comment, whether the review would be free of any preconceived bias. And with that, he proceeded to offer the reader his most thoughtful commentary about reading a book that he viewed with disdain even before opening it to the first page. He evidently accepted this assignment very grudgingly because it is apparent in his review that he never really understood it. Had he read it more thoroughly, with an open and curious mind, his impressions might have been more in line with other reviewers of the book.

But that result was never in doubt, even four months ago when Jim DiEugenio began making it clear that he didn't expect this book to be worthy of a well reasoned review, which was about the same time his man Seamus Coogan began publicly attacking the book as soon as it was published, declaring that "his side" would demolish it even as he vowed never to read it. Many of their posts alluded to the long-awaited book by Ed Tatro, essentially positing the official CTKA attitude that no "LBJ did it" book by anyone other than Tatro would ever be satisfactory to them. Well, the problem is, there is no such book by Tatro and no real indication that there ever will be. I've been waiting for two or three decades for someone else to write this book and would have gladly not done so myself if he or someone else had done it. Now, let's suppose that Ed Tatro never publishes a book; does that mean that Johnson's possible role in the assassination will forever be "off limits" for anyone else to ever explore? If so, long live Tatro!

The long-established rule at CTKA, apparently, is to disparage any book that attempts to analyze the assassination if it contains even a hint of criticism of JFK's personal life and reckless attitudes as perceived by his enemies. In fact, Kennedy created some of the very "vulnerabilities" to his enemies which caused some of them not only to hate him viciously, but led them to rationalize his killing as being a patriotic act. It was this phenomenon that must not be ignored in exploring the events that led to the assassination. Unfortunately, that has been declared out-of-bounds by the folks at CTKA, as evidenced by Green's repeated lament: "What does this have to do with the book? We were talking about Lyndon Johnson, right?" This material was put into a section properly labeled as "JFK's vulnerabilities" and thoroughly described as such; perhaps in his zeal to dismiss all of this material, Mr. Green overlooked that fact.

That rule also explains why James Douglass' book (which I agree is one of the best and is, by the way, within the same "genre" as my book) has been rated so highly by this group. Nary a word about any of the "darker side of Camelot" was included here, so of course it passed this hurdle. It further explains why Douglass was given a pass on using the rather wild and uncorroborated claims of Robert Vinson regarding his trip on a CIA owned four engine airplane (the equivalent of a DC-6, which was used extensively by airlines in the 1950s) which purportedly landed, and then took off again, on the shores of the Trinity River south of Dallas. If anyone else had used that story, they probably would have been savagely attacked for it, but in DiEugenio's review of the book, he glossed over the story in this ho-hum manner:

". . . this double was ultimately flown out of Dallas on a military transport plane. This is based on the testimony of retired Air Force officer Robert Vinson."

Not to put too fine a point on it, but most researchers do not put a whole lot of credence in this particular item. So what we can discern about the CTKA methodology here is that, if you write a book that avoids criticism of Kennedy and thoroughly praises him in practically every page, that earns you a pass for the use of any material which would not otherwise pass muster; not even a tiny caveat or minor qualification, mind you. Nothing that questions the veracity of that account was noted.

Another favored tactic of the CTKA crew is to denigrate the sources of any information which it deems to be unfavorable. In the case of Seymour Hersh, anything he says is discarded with a snide comment about his lack of credibility, based upon the completely spurious charge that he is somehow in the pocket of the CIA. Never mind the fact that Hersh has been battling the CIA and Pentagon for approximately forty years and is the least likely candidate for "CIA stooge" that one can imagine. Charging him with that is beyond absurd; it is simply laughable. His position as the best and most prolific investigative reporter of our times has been well established, except for anyone associated with the CTKA organization, who evidently have to submit to DiEugenio's dogma that he was and is somehow 180 degrees opposite of this. He should be judged on the basis of his entire body of work, and the awards he has received not least of which is the Pulitzer Prize which vindicate him and reveal the conflicted position of CTKA regarding his reputation. Quoting from a more "balanced" source, a ten year old article in Salon.com, the controversy about Hersh's book can be summarized as:

The story of the reaction to "The Dark Side of Camelot" ended up being much bigger than the book itself, which, truth be told, contained less new information than confirmation and amplification of known Kennedy misdeeds.[1]

So in fact, much of the dirty laundry on John F. Kennedy was already public knowledge before Seymour Hersh wrote his book; he merely corroborated the charges and gave them additional support and publicity. The CTKA folks seem to understand that, because they never deny the charges, they merely seek to cover them up; instead, they undermine any book that repeats them through innuendo and the premise that Hersh is not credible and this was all decided years ago when DiEugenio ran him over with the CTKA bus.

The fact is, Seymour Hersh is truly a great and iconoclastic figure whose well-earned but controversial reputation as a great investigative reporter is secure. He is comparable to, and arguably the contemporary embodiment of, the legendary I. F. Stone in the minds of objective observers. The folks who continue to take swipes at him for revealing the very secrets that Bobby Kennedy was attempting to contain have demonstrated that they have a greater interest in hiding truths than they do exposing them.

(Subsequent to the original posting of this rebuttal on the Education Forum, a lengthy exchange occurred between Mr. DiEugenio and me regarding his assertions that Seymour Hersh was a CIA stooge. He referenced a book which, he said, showed that Hersh knowingly withheld the fact that the My Lai massacre was part of Operation Phoenix. I then traced that reference to the original source, which indicated the exact opposite of DiEugenio's assertions. In fact, it confirmed that he DID state clearly all along that this was the case. The specific facts of that are appended to this rebuttal and can be found below).


It is not possible to understand the complexities of the JFK assassination unless one first understands the underlying dynamics of what caused so many people to hate JFK; those are the key people who became involved in the crime, either as part of the pre or post assassination conspiracies. But the CTKA knee-jerk reaction to anyone who dares reference Hersh makes one wonder just who really has the biggest "axe to grind." A list of other names was also mentioned of people who are on the same (apparently lengthy) list of unworthy sources who cannot be referenced for much the same reason: General Alexander Haig (and, by extension, Lamar Waldron and Thom Hartmann) Ronald Kessler, Nina Burleigh, Deborah Davis and Donald Wolfe. And, of course, Gus Russo, who, despite his questionable (subjective) conclusions, was referenced in the book on a few points which were pegged to objective factual findings.

Interestingly, no mention was made of Joseph Califano's comment that "as Robert Kennedy pressed for tougher actions, I thought: he is obsessed with Castro; he is pursuing a total war with Castro." Was it merely because Califano's reputation as a liberal Democrat saved him, while Haig's standing as a (marginally) conservative Republican caused him to be thrown overboard? Why was one name trashed and the other one ignored? They were saying essentially the same thing: Is that what drives CTKA's search for truth and justice?

Barr McClellan has been repeatedly attacked by DiEugenio for the lack of documentation of some of his references. For example, DiEugenio doesn't approve of how he referred to conversations he had with other attorneys in Ed Clark's law firm. Maybe Barr has learned that, whenever he is told top secret stuff by others that he should always get them to swear to their comments in an affidavit? He has established a policy, due to this deficiency and Barr's use of "faction" which he explains as simply a story telling device, McClelland's book is only eligible for referencing as a source for the Nathan Darby material. This keeps all of McClelland's unique insights into the "darker side of LBJ" under wraps and verboten as citations to other works. And, speaking of LBJ's "mental issues", it is noteworthy that Green made no comment at all about that point, which is arguably one of the most important issues raised by the book, regardless of everything else he did find reason to question.

Similarly, the depiction of Robert Caroanother holder of many professional awards including the Pulitzer, arguably the greatest presidential biographer everas someone who cannot be trusted, is equally disingenuous. This isn't the first time DiEugenio's group has attempted to do that. In his review of Douglas Horne's Volumes 4 and 5, DiEugenio stated that "Caro got reamed by Ronnie Dugger though when in his effort to pull out all the stops to demonize LBJ's senate race, Caro tried to make Coke Stevenson into a sort of Jacob Javits figure." That unique take on Caro's work suggests that Dugger somehow bested Caro; I don't think that is the impression most knowledgeable people have regarding that particular point. In the same thread, DiEugenio also said this about how some biographers have embellished Johnson's ugliness:

"Calling Lyndon Johnson a psychopath to me simply does not have a lot of forensic value these days. I mean, it don't know if he was or was not. I wasn't around him in any close sense and I do not know anyone who was. I do know that in the last say 30 years or so the tendency in biography is to make your subject as ugly as possible since that is the way publishers are convinced they will sell the most books. So as with many of the anti-Kennedy biographies e.g. Reeves, Horowitz and Collier etc, the recent biographies of LBJ e.g. Dallek and Caro, have tended to make LBJ out to be a little worse than Shakespeare's Richard III."

This attitude of Johnson as just a low-brow version of a regular guy is apparently the official doctrine of the CTKA reviewers, as it was restated by Green in equally pedantic terms:

"Now these sources do little harm to the early part of the book because Johnson's character is well-established. He was a low-class sort of a person, prone to vulgar and over bearing displays of machismo in public, and employing men like Mac Wallace who were murderous criminals. And if you take all these famous incidents a face value, and then string them in tandem over the years, then hey! Maybe LBJ does seem like the sort of man who, were it within his power, could have had the president killed and not be halted by any moral barriers."

In other words, at CTKA, the take on Johnson is evidently along these lines: "While he may have been a low class megalomaniac narcissist and stone cold killer who had a personal hitman, you can't just assume that by stringing along all those old incidents, these patterns might connect to the JFK assassination. Hey! cut LBJ a break, he was never convicted of anything." The key to ever solving the crime lies in understanding just how evil Johnson was; it was his criminal mind and his control over people which led him to successfully recruit others to join his cause.

WHOA, HOSS:

I found this statement, where Green begrudgingly admitted that perhaps Lyndon did have a few character faults, to be stunningly absurd for anyone who purportedly read the book:

To say the least, Lyndon Johnson was an unappealing personality. It would not necessarily be surprising, in the abstract, if he had foreknowledge or tacitly approved of the assassination. He might even have been directly involved, although one can argue that. I do not think, however, that at this date, given the documentary evidence, an explanation which ignores the larger political forces of the national security state can be taken seriously.

So, my book "ignores the larger political forces of the national security state?" And this from a person who simultaneously criticizes its length, saying it should have been shortened from 700 pages to 200? Maybe he missed entire chapters which were dedicated to explaining how the "national security state" (through Dulles, Angleton, Harvey, etc. etc.) interfaced with Johnson and was given the impetus to proceed in the end with the knowledge that he, as president, would provide the ultimate protection for everyone involved; without that, the enterprise would be doomed. Did I note every other possible name of potential directors of the "national security state"? No, because if I had, the book would have grown even larger and besides, the book attempted to focus on Johnson's role as the key organizer (thus the title). Maybe if I had chosen another title, without the word "Mastermind" and used the term "national security state" a little more generously, then the CTKA folks would have read it a little closer and even understood the real theme of the book, which was simply that Johnson was the critical mass to the plot and arguably the original initiator; I just assumed that anyone who actually read the book would eventually figure that out. As Jim Fetzer noted so eloquently above, "Describing LBJ as the "mastermind" does not imply that he was responsible for mopping the floors or sorting out the paperclips." I would only add to my friend Jim's sentence, "or even participating in any of the downstream planning or execution, except for the motorcade itself." I hope this umpteenth re-explanation of that term also answers DiEugenio's comment above: "to say that someone as unsophisticated as LBJ "masterminded" the whole thing, just does not match up to how complex and multi- tiered the conspiracy was." If not, please re-read, beginning at "As Jim Fetzer noted . . ." A lot of people have inferred their own definition of the term "Mastermind" in a way that was not implied in the book.

Mr. Green apparently confused my attempt to describe two sides of some events as itself being "confused". My actual confusion was that I erroneously assumed that typical readers would be able to tell the difference and understand that implicitly. But in regard to the Bay of Pigs issue, I even went to some lengths in the narrative to clarify it for those folks who might have otherwise missed the point, as in this passage:

Kennedy would never concede that withholding the air strike had caused the failure of the invasion, though the military had pleaded with him, using that very argument. It is easy to see, from different prisms, how Bissell and Cabell could blame Kennedy for the failed mission because he did not act as they assumed he would, yet understand how JFK instinctively knew that he had been sabotaged into not only authorizing the project, but being outmaneuvered in its execution.

A few paragraphs later, I again led off with "The CIA men, of course, portrayed the debacle quite differently. In their view. . ." Curiously, of all the "criticisms" of the book that I have read, this is the only one which proved me wrong on the assumption that typical readers would understand both points of view.

I knew that there would be some discussion of the Altgens photograph, which I contend shows, by the absence of Johnson's image in it, that he had previous knowledge of where the killing zone would be. It is clear to me, and other objective people, using an un-retouched, high quality photo or jpeg image, that Johnson is not to be seen; one would think that any attempt to rebut that point might consist of a strong and thorough analysis, based on blow-up copies and accompanying sketches, which at least attempts to spot LBJ's ear, or nose, or "whatever". But that would be wrong; Green's proof is simply his single sentence: "Except I can see LBJ in the photograph, as can most others." This perfunctory treatment of the photo is reflective of the overall quality of the review itself. On the original thread where this was discussed we witnessed a number of people posting that they were also convinced that he was the "white spot" while others tried to make the case (with the help of modified and enhanced photographs) that he was in the "dark blurry" area. Yet no one was able to make a convincing case of either of these; ultimately, it came down to their wordswhich were essentially the same as Green'swhich claimed that he was visible. I'd like to see what a jury of objective people would say about that, but if the other reviews I've seen have any relevance, it appears that more typical people (you know the kind, objective folks, without another agenda) appear to agree with me: Johnson is not in the photograph. But, to respond to those who claim to see him in the "white splotch" that would necessarily also mean that he was so far to the side of the car, and lower in profile to Lady Bird, that it would then mean that he was in the process of ducking. In either case, the point remains.

But the most difficult issue I have with Green's review is his mis-statement of a number of points:

~ He indicated that I stated that JFK had knowledge of the assassination attempts on Castro. In the passage he references, I said only that Bissell and Dulles had briefed Kennedy on the pending invasion of Cuba; never did I state that JFK had knowledge of the CIA attempts on Castro himself (though in the second edition I will clarify the referenced sentence to indicate the briefing was on the planned invasion; I have no reason to suspect that JFK didor did nothave such knowledge, I simply don't know). Any references to attacks on Castro were intended to apply to the government of Cuba.

~ In the section regarding Johnson's relationship with LeMay, Green jumps from what I was describing in 1961-63 to what happened in 1965 as Johnson attempted to micro manage the war: "This last remark simply isn't true. Even in pro-LeMay biographies, one gets the clear sense that LeMay counseled Lyndon Johnson in full commitment, an immense bombing campaign into North Vietnam." What does that have to do with how Johnson was feeding secrets through his back channels two to four years before that?

~ His "Meat of the Argument" comment is misstated: "LBJ got along better with the Department of Defense than JFK did. (Although Nelson does, curiously, quote Howard Burris from John Newman's book JFK and Vietnam, saying that he didn't believe Johnson had a "very deep" understanding of political issues.) Which is odd for a "mastermind."

That is not what the quote said. I refer you to page 131: "I don't think he had a really deep perception and comprehension of what the whole scene was about." The context was about Vietnam, and the military and intelligence reports about it and the overall social, geopolitical and historical dimensions of the place. (i.e. he had "no clue" even then about the implications of U.S. involvement in the war). The next sentence after the one quoted should have cleared up any misunderstandings he had: "According to author John M. Newman, Johnson's views "were rooted in the superficial politics
of Washington, not in the underlying realities of the situation in Vietnam."

These are the kinds of misstatements that could only result from either preconceived biases or superficial reading and analysis. Perhaps Mr. Green will have a chance to reread the book in its second edition, coming out next year with a new publisher. Next time, it would be helpful if he tried to read it with a clearer and more curious mind; if so, he will also better understand the "big picture" being described.

___________________________________

APPENDIX: Regarding the Allegation that Seymour Hersh was a CIA Plant:

"The Veneration of Seymour Hersh"

For many years (who knows how long?) the folks at CTKA, following their leader just as Sheeple do, have disgracefully smeared the name of one of the greatest, most prolific American patriots of the Twentieth Century. The man we should all honor for his incredible achievements, especially the exposure of My Lai. It took a man with brass cajones to expose the massacre there and, with it, the fact that there was a little program called Operation Phoenix along with it.

But, in their attempt to banish Seymour Hersh's book "The Dark Side of Camelot", from being used as a credible source for anything else, the CTKA organization has attempted to demolish Hersh's fine reputation as a great and iconoclastic figure who deserved nothing but praise from his fellow citizens. Instead, we were told exactly the opposite of the truth in this recent snippit from a post at the Education Forum. This has been going on for decade(s?) and the record needs to be corrected immediately.

---------------------
From a posting on the Education Forum "Joe Green's Review of LBJ the Mastermind":

__________on 27 December 2010 - 10:16 PM, said:

Blah, Blah, Blah...........

"Obviously, if you had the evidence for doing such things you would not have spent so much time regurgitating the likes of Sy Hersh and his completely discredited book "The Dark SIde of Camelot". I mean, do you know anything about the man? Apparently not. Hersh has been in bed with the CIA since the beginning of his career. Yes, that is true. Hersh started his career off by covering up a simple fact: That the My Lai massacre was part of Operation Phoenix. Which was one of the darkest CIA secrets of the Vietnam War. Hersh's book goes to all kinds of absurd lengths to conceal that fact, explicitly saying that the massacre was not part of any kind of operational conspiracy. Hersh did such a nice job covering it up that we had to wait for a real reporter, Doug Valentine, to show us My Lai was part of Operation Phoenix. But Hersh did such good cover up work that Phoenix was then exported to Central America, against the Contras."

_________________________

Something about all of that didn't make sense to me. Here we have a famous reporter and author, Seymour Hersh, who I have always felt was the "real hero" of that incredibly insane time in the history of this country. I acknowledge that there have been some controversies in his past, and much of his work is a bit controversial, but that's what happens when you're a true iconoclast, working on exposing truths to a nation not always receptive to the truth. But here, we are talking about the despicable trashing of a guy who was all alone on the fringes of the mighty military and intelligence machine, whose record to most thinking Americans is unblemished, among the general public. There was something wrong with that picture.

So I looked on Amazon to see if I could find anything in the book he had cited (The Phoenix Program Douglas Valentine) which might clarify all of this. Fortunately, the book is partially on-line, and there was a description of Operation Phoenix on pp. 342-435. Guess who Valentine has referenced three times as stating, both in his news reports and his subsequent book, Cover Up, that indeed the My Lai massacre was a part of Operation Phoenix. None other than the great Seymour Hersh!

Here are the excerpts, right out of Valentine's book, just so you don't have to bother looking them up for yourself:

.............

P.342
On August 25, 1970, an article appeared in the New York Times (by Seymour Hersh) hinting that the CIA, through Phoenix, was responsible for Mai Lai. The story line was advanced on October 14, when defense attorneys for David Mitchella sergeant accused and later cleared of machine-gunning scores of Vietnamese in a drainage ditch in My Laiciting Phoenix as the CIA's "systematic program of assassinations," named Evan Parker as the CIA officer who "signed documents, certain blacklists," of Vietnamese to be assassinated in My Lai. When we spoke, Parker denied the charge.

P. 343
In Cover-up, Seymour Hersh tells how in February 1968 Ramsdell began "rounding up residents of Quang Ngai City whose names appeared on Phoenix blacklists." Explained Ramsdell: "After Tet we knew who many of these people were, but we let them continue to fumnction because we were controlling them. They led us to the VC security officer for the district. We wiped them out after Tet and then went ahead and picked up the small fish." The people who were "wiped out", Hersh explains, were "put to death by the Phoenix Special Police.

P. 344
"As Hersh notes parenthetically, "Shortly after the My Lai 4 operation, the number of VCI on the Phoenix blacklist was sharply reduced."

......................

What __________ stated in the above thread, and has been repeating for many years, is the exact opposite of what was actually in the book. How many of his other assertions about Hersh would withstand the scrutiny of someone who had the time to track them all down and unparse the words used to drag his name through the mud? This is a major disservice to someone who ought to be venerated by all of his fellow countrymen.

Does this not vindicate my guy Hersh? Or, do I have to track down everything else uttered about him to correct the record?

Can we please take Seymour Hersh off the blacklist now??

[1] From Salon 1/18/2000 article by David Rubien: http://www.salon.com/people/bc/2000/01/18/hersh
#23
Now, in fairness to myself and Green, will Fetzer now post the replies by myself and Green to this post by Nelson?


Or if he cannot get them since Spartacus is down, will he
at least acknowledge they are there?

No he will not. Why? Because Fetzer made one of his many huge misjudgments, almost as bad as endorsing Gregory Douglas' piece of forgery when he interviewed Nelson about this book. He actually called it the "JFK and the Unpseakable" of the LBJ field.

Which of course means that 1.) Fetzer does not know why Douglass' book is so important, 2.) He does not really understand who Kennedy was, and 3.) He sure as heck does not understand who LBJ was. It would be impossible to write such a book about LBJ since he had no degree of sophistication about foreign policy, nowhere near what JFK had. Therefore, there could be no Julius Ceasar style plot against him. Further, Douglass would never stoop to using sources like Hersh and McClellan in his book. Nelson does.

COncerning Nelson's point about Valentine's book, apparently Nelson never read Hersh's first book on My Lai, which predates the articles he notes. I did. In that book, he maintains a government cover up about what happened. As the months wore on, and it became obvious that Calley and the higher ups were being protected by the military and Nixon, even a stooge like Hersh understood the cover up could not be maintained.

He then ignores the other two areas I pointed out about the stooge Hersh ie. Watergate and the fact "The Dark Side of Camelot" was a put up job as a reaction to Stone's film. He also did not point out the three pieces of journalistic falsehoods I pointed out in Hersh's book which show it was a hatchet job.

Fetzer, forever the polemicist, left those out. I would also. Somehow Fetzer ignored the facts that Nelson borrowed liberally from not just CIA slut Hersh, but the fabricating Barr McClellan.

Fetzer is too busy proving Zapruder did not take the Z film to notice faults in scholarship like that. Or else he never read my discussions of both books.

Shame on you Jim.
#24
The Peak of the hierarchy of the 1963 Coup d'Etat was not Richard Helms, James Angleton, David Atlee Phillips, David Morales, William King Harvey, E. Howard Hunt, Frank Sturgis and whoever was firing away at John Kennedy from multiple directions.

The peak of the hierarchy was Lyndon Johnson, Allen Dulles, Nelson Rockefeller, Clint Murchison, Sr., H.L. Hunt, J. Edgar Hoover.

And LBJ and his patron Clint Murchison, Sr were the ones lobbying the elites to get on board with the assassination. Basically Lyndon Johnson, Allen Dulles and the shadow government of Texas oil barons and Rockefellers murdered John Kennedy. [Honestly, I think John J. McCloy was just used in the cover up, imho, ... but he went dove hunting with Clint Murchison in summer 1963, so you have to look at him.]

The operational CIA guys - the ones doing the field work and logistics, the ones listed at top - knew they would have protection post assassination from Lyndon Johnson, J. Edgar Hoover and the shadow government of billionaires who were on board. (And just in case the military that was mobilizing troops on the day of the 1963 Coup d'Etat.)

Gen. Edward Lansdale would be at the level just below Lyndon Johnson and Allen Dulles.

Lyndon Johnson unsophisticated? The Kennedys thought so, too. And they ended up dead and riddled with CIA bullets in the 1960's and Colonel Cornpone lasted until 1973.

And Colonel Cornpone was really verrrrrrrry good friends with NELSON ROCKEFELLER, even secretly supporting Republican Nelson Rockefeller for president in spring, 1968. And Allen Dulles used to visit Colonel Cornpone at his ranch in July, 1960, about LBJ had just blackmailed his way on the 1960 Democratic national ticket.

Do you think Richard Helms and James Angleton were deep intelligence? Absolutely they were. Ok, now try Nelson Rockefeller, Henry Kissinger, Allen Dulles, John J. McCloy ... you can't get mucher deeper into the white hot inner core of US intelligence than those four. And they were close to Lyndon Johnson and the Texas oil barons, most especially Clint Murchison, Sr.
#25
Shameful things are going on at the EF, Lancer, and now the DPF, but they are surely not being committed by me or Phil Nelson. For someone who lacks the least grasp of the character and personality of LBJ, it is simply stunning that Jim DiEugenio continues to peddle tripe about LBJ's involvement in the assassination. If this guy had only understood my PREFACE to Phil's fine rebuttal, he would know more than he evinces here. And if he wants to post his replies to Phil's refutation, let him do so. Instead, he unloads (what I can only describe as) a dump truck of mindless manure on me and on Phil's magnificent book.

Lyndon B. Johnson was the most fascinating character ever to dominate the American political stage. He had an uncanny ability to discern the weaknesses in the personality and values of those he proved capable of manipulating through out his entire career. If this guy had actually read Phil's book, even only the first few chapters, he would not be making such frivolous and falsifiable claims. As John Connally observed, when he was asked to describe LBJ, "That would take every adjective in the dictionary!", because Lyndon had so many strengths both for good and for evil! And he was a political genius.

I used to believe that DiEugenio was a force for good, even though it bothered me that he seemed to understand neither the medical evidence nor the proof of fabrication of the film. In my opinion, those limitations severely restrict his capacity to make informed judgments about other aspects of the case. When he "reviewed" Doug Horne's INSIDE THE ARRB and faulted Doug for praising David Lifton's work, I had to post and ask him if he had actually READ THE BOOK, because the evidence for alteration of the throat wound and of surgery to the head, which Horne substantiates, vindicates Lifton's early research.

And that extends to Horne's extraordinarily detailed reconstruction of multiple entries of multiple caskets into the morgue. To this day DiEugenio does not appear to understand that JFK was ALREADY IN THE MORGUE when the gray Navy ambulance carrying Jackie herself pulled up in front of Bethesda Naval Hospital. As Jerrol Custer explained to Lifton and as he and I discussed it in person, he was headed upstairs in the company of Secret Service agents with X-rays that had been exposed but needed to be developed when he looked out the window and saw the formal entourage arrive. But the autopsy had already begun. Since JFK's body was in the morgue, it cannot also have been in the hearse.

Anyone who thinks that Lyndon Johnson was going to be riding in an open car in the very motorcade in which the only man standing between him and the presidency was going to be assassinated by a cross fire and NOT TAKE CHARGE OF THAT EVENT has lost their grip on reality. As Billy Sol first explained to William Raymond, a French investigative reporter, and later repeated in his book, A TEXAS LEGEND, Lyndon even sent Cliff Carter, his chief administrative assistant to Dallas to make sure that all of the arrangements were in place to effect the transition of governance from JFK to him.

DiEugenio disillusioned me on the old Judyth Vary Baker thread when he attempted to debunk the testimony of Mary Morgan, the daughter of a Louisiana state senator whom Lee Oswald was visiting in a feigned "search for a job", when he suggested that an interview with Mary, decades after she had described a mystery woman who was in the car while Lee was speaking with her father, should carry more weight than her consistent and repeated testimony in the past. I knew then that I was dealing with a person who, even in relation to historical methodology, had diminished understanding.

The next major development in my growing disillusionment with DiEugenio's research competence arose in the course of my inquiry into the conflict over the identification of three officials of the CIA at the Ambassador when Bobby was killed, George Joannides, Gordon Campbell, and David Sanchez Morales. What I discovered was that, even though Jefferson Morley and David Talbot had attempted to debunk them, the evidence supporting Bradley Ayers and Wayne Smith's IDs was actually far stronger than they had represented and the evidence against them far weaker, where DiEugenio was advancing feeble reasons to discount them, as I have explained in "RFK: Outing the CIA at the Ambassador", which I recommend to compare our work.

So he needs to fault Barr McClelland, who actually worked in the office of one of Lyndon's attorneys, who was involved in planning the assassination and the cover up. He also has to debunk the book by Madeleine Duncan Brown, with whom I had over a hundred conversations, and another by Billy Sol Estes, both of whom knew Lyndon as well as anyone possibly could. And of course he also has to extend his blanket dismissals to E. Howard Hunt--and therefore to Jesse Ventura's JFK "Conspiracy Theory" program--for the simple reason that Jesse takes Hunt's confession seriously, which undermines his attempts to deflect and undermine any evidence that implicates LBJ in the crime.

Somewhere DiEugeio acknowledges that Lyndon might have been the ambitious and narcissistic megalomaniac that others, including Phil Nelson, have described, but he would not know because he was never that close to LBJ! That's a remarkable admission for someone who is attempting to trivialize the most important study of this fascinating personality, where Robert Caro's superb series documents those tendencies in spades. And, most importantly, DiEugeio's admitted weakness is the great strength of Madeleine Duncan Brown, Billy Sol Estes, Barr McClelland, and even E. Howard Hunt. They all knew LBJ "up close and personal", none more so than Madeleine Duncan Brown.

If anyone had any doubts about the character of Jim DiEugenio, it is manifest here in his allusion to the difference between my first and second takes about REGICIDE by Gregory Douglas. I found his depiction of the role of James Jesus Angleton ferreting out that JFK had been communicating with Nikita Krushchev so fascinating that I did not initially pay sufficient attention to the alleged Soviet intelligence report about the assassination, which, by a coincidence too incredible to be true, reported that JFK had been taken out where three and only three shots had been fired. Since I already knew the number was actually eight, nine, or ten, I realized something had to be wrong.

So I undertook further analysis of Gregory Douglas, even arranging to meet him for lunch in Chicago. But he never showed up. I reassessed my views about him, for the first time revised a review of a book of mine on amazon.com, and wrote about it in assassinationresearch.com, where you can find my own candid evaluation of what I had been through at http://assassinationresearch.com/v1n2.html . This happened in 2002, however, and has no relevance to understanding LBJ. The very fact that he has now brought up this obscure incident from long ago reminds me of the extremely petty and shallow criticisms that I have had to deal with in the past from Josiah Thompson.

Like almost all of Tink's criticisms, almost all of DiEugenio's are baseless. I have no idea why he would suppose I do not understand the Douglass book. I interviewed Jim Douglass on JFK AND THE UNSPEAKABLE on 15 April 2009 and Phil Nelson on LBJ: MASTERMIND OF JFK'S ASSASSINATION on 3 September 2010. (The interviews can be found at my program's archives, http://radiofetzer.blogspot.com.) if anyone can find any reason to suspect that I did not understand either book, I would be fascinated to know of it. I have compared their books, because Jim's explains how JFK antagonized the country's most powerful special interests, including the CIA, the Joint Chiefs, the Mafia and the banksters, for example, while Phil's book explains what they did about it.

Phil Nelson has objected to DiEugenio's latest trashing of Seymour Hersh, who has to qualify as one of our best, if not our very best, investigative journalists. Not only did Hersh expose the My Lai massacre, which took enormous courage, but he has, more recently, exposed the existence of an executive assassination ring operating out of the office of Vice President Dick Cheney, which I addressed in "Has Cheney been Murdering Americans?" While I thought that THE DARK SIDE OF CAMELOT was a bit excessive about JFK's alleged escapades--since I do not believe he was physically capable of some of these exploits because of his back injuries--this has struck me as the last straw. I agree one of us is a mediocrity, but ask yourself if it's me.

Jim DiEugenio Wrote:Now, in fairness to myself and Green, will Fetzer now post the replies by myself and Green to this post by Nelson?

Or if he cannot get them since Spartacus is down, will he
at least acknowledge they are there?

No he will not. Why? Because Fetzer made one of his many huge misjudgments, almost as bad as endorsing Gregory Douglas' piece of forgery when he interviewed Nelson about this book. He actually called it the "JFK and the Unpseakable" of the LBJ field.

Which of course means that 1.) Fetzer does not know why Douglass' book is so important, 2.) He does not really understand who Kennedy was, and 3.) He sure as heck does not understand who LBJ was. It would be impossible to write such a book about LBJ since he had no degree of sophistication about foreign policy, nowhere near what JFK had. Therefore, there could be no Julius Ceasar style plot against him. Further, Douglass would never stoop to using sources like Hersh and McClellan in his book. Nelson does.

COncerning Nelson's point about Valentine's book, apparently Nelson never read Hersh's first book on My Lai, which predates the articles he notes. I did. In that book, he maintains a government cover up about what happened. As the months wore on, and it became obvious that Calley and the higher ups were being protected by the military and Nixon, even a stooge like Hersh understood the cover up could not be maintained.

He then ignores the other two areas I pointed out about the stooge Hersh ie. Watergate and the fact "The Dark Side of Camelot" was a put up job as a reaction to Stone's film. He also did not point out the three pieces of journalistic falsehoods I pointed out in Hersh's book which show it was a hatchet job.

Fetzer, forever the polemicist, left those out. I would also. Somehow Fetzer ignored the facts that Nelson borrowed liberally from not just CIA slut Hersh, but the fabricating Barr McClellan.

Fetzer is too busy proving Zapruder did not take the Z film to notice faults in scholarship like that. Or else he never read my discussions of both books.

Shame on you Jim.
#26
I do not agree with any of the personal attacks on the researchers into the 1963 Coup d'Etat. I might agree or disagree with their theories, though.

There is one point worth restating that I certainly agree with:

"Anyone who thinks that Lyndon Johnson was going to be riding in an open car in the very motorcade in which the only man standing between him and the presidency was going to be assassinated by a cross fire and NOT TAKE CHARGE OF THAT EVENT has lost their grip on reality. As Billy Sol first explained to William Raymond, a French investigative reporter, and later repeated in his book, A TEXAS LEGEND, Lyndon even sent Cliff Carter, his chief administrative assistant to Dallas to make sure that all of the arrangements were in place to effect the transition of governance from JFK to him."

You can say that again, brother!

I love the part about Colonel Cornpone hamming it up really good after the assassination tell at least 2 folks - a cop at Parkland and then Gen. Godfrey McHugh - that there was an "international conspiracy" just after the assassination; a play acting his hysteria so much that Gen. McHugh had to slap Johnson in the bathroom of Air Force One in order to compose LBJ (source: author Chris Anderson). Then within hours LBJ and Hoover are working FULL BORE to convince the world that it was just a lone nutter that killed JFK.

Slapping Lyndon Johnson: now that must have felt good!
#27
John Connally describing


Lyndon Johnson:


"There is no adjective in the dictionary to describe him. He was cruel and kind, generous and greedy, sensitive and insensitive, crafty and, ruthless and thoughtful, simple in many ways yet extremely complex, caring and totally not caring. As a matter of fact it would take every adjective in the dictionary to describe him"

John Connally was spot on. Lyndon Johnson was also a manic depressive. LBJ was also a psychopathic serial killer. Richard Goodwin, an LBJ aide, went to a psychiatrist and described LBJ's behavior as the Vietnam War was imploding/exploding and came back with the back of the envelope diagnosis: "a paranoid in disintegration." That means you are going completely bats and you suspect that everyone, including your mom and Mother Theresa is out to get you. Like someone who has been on crystal meth for a long time.
#28
I also agree with Jim Fetzer's analysis, (with the qualifier that "mastermind" is too strong a word for LBJ). However, that qualifier does not diminish the significance of LBJ's role nor does it serve to palliate his perfidy one ounce. Moreover, his role was entirely pivotal in the overall success, not only of the cover-up, but in the assured perpetual impunity of all others who were involved.

As for the Bay of Pigs... The immediate failure was caused by the cancellation of the pre-dawn air strikes that Kennedy had ordered. He had made the "go order" for the Bay of Pigs landing contingent on the successful destruction of Castro's remaining "air force". This is a point that is often missed. For decades following the fiasco, JFK was unjustly blamed for the Bay of Pigs' failure due to his having "cancelled promised" air support. That is a CIA misdirection and a myth. The ONLY airstrikes that were planned and ordered were the pre-dawn airstrikes from Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua. Kennedy's last standing order was to abort the invasion unless Castro's remaining aircraft were destroyed ON THE GROUND prior to Brigade 2506 landing on the beach. McGeorge Bundy inexplicably called General Cabell of the CIA and told him to delay those airstrikes until AFTER the brigade had secured the beach and had constructed a makeshift airstrip! That call was the immediate cause of failure because Castro's T-33's went airborne and shot down the anti-Castro rebel's much slower bombers when they finally did arrive. The myth that Kennedy had then refused "promised" air support AFTER the brigade landed, is bovine excrement. There NEVER was any plan for the United States to employ the use of active US military equipment or personnel, nor was there EVER a contingency plan to that effect.

Just for the record...
GO_SECURE

monk


"It is difficult to abolish prejudice in those bereft of ideas. The more hatred is superficial, the more it runs deep."

James Hepburn -- Farewell America (1968)
#29
And so the floodgates open.

No matter where these exchanges lead us, let me state for the record and as powerfully as I am able that:

1. Nothing herein disagreed upon will have the power to negate my friendship with and respect for Jim Fetzer.

2. Nothing I post should be construed as a respectful disagreement with Nelson and his acolyte Morrow. The LBJ/"mastermind" construction is a product of, at best, ignorance -- and at worst, of a wilfull attempt to disinform and protect the guilty.

3. The Fetzer/DiEugenio contratemps is best understood as an intentional byproduct of Nelson's horrific endeavor -- a manufactured conflict between natural allies. Jim F., Jim D. -- Stop it. For the love of all that is just in our shared endeavor, understand that Nelson and his idiot son Morrow are not worth the consequences of our disagreements. In my educated opinion, Nelson accomplishes a major part of his mission by weakening our alliance.

My goals in this thread and everywhere else I can engage the Nelson obscenity/absurdity are to expose it as such and to heal the rifts it is causing.

Is Nelson an enemy agent of disinformation? A simple-minded executioner of the mother tongue? Both?

In the final analysis, the distinctions matter not a hell of a lot. All of Nelson's arguments are, by their nature, sophistic: THEY ARE BASED ON A FALSE PREMISE.

Does Nelson know the premise is false, or is he honestly arguing a patently and demonstrably idiotic point?

In the final analysis, it matters not.

If a man wants to shoot you in the head because he hates you, or because he honestly believes that to do so will cure your headache, you still end up dead as Julius Caesar.

Here are the bottom lines:

1. Neither Nelson nor his factotum Morrow define "mastermind." With this context, they dare not/cannot.

2. To ascribe to any 20th century president OTHER THAN JFK the power Nelson ascribes to Johnson is to fatally and almost comedically misunderstand deep politics.

3. I reiterate: To declare that LBJ was the "mastermind" of the JFK assassination -- within reasonable parameters of the definition of "mastermind" -- is tantamount to claiming that a welder designed the Petronas Towers.

Charles Drago
#30
Greg Burnham Wrote:I also agree with Jim Fetzer's analysis, (with the qualifier that "mastermind" is too strong a word for LBJ). However, that qualifier does not diminish the significance of LBJ's role nor does it serve to palliate his perfidy one ounce. Moreover, his role was entirely pivotal in the overall success, not only of the cover-up, but in the assured perpetual impunity of all others who were involved.

Greg,

In the beginning, there was the word.

"Mastermind."

It gives away Nelson's game.

No one with even minimal deep political chops can deny the criminal involvement of LBJ in the public execution of John Fitzgerald Kennedy -- especially the coverup.

No one with even minimal deep political chops can fail to understand that LBJ was, at the pinnacle of his influence, a False Sponsor and Facilitator of the public execution of John Fitzgerald Kennedy.

With each passing day I find myself less able to discern an honest motive for Nelson's egregious ignorance both of deep politics and of the very meaning of the key word in his book's title.

LBJ was wholly owned and controlled by the Sponsors of the assassination. He was designated as a FALSE Sponsor. He was utilized as a Facilitator.

To believe otherwise is to believe that:

A. American presidents (JFK excepted) are anything but figureheads.

B. LBJ, crippled by scandal and on the verge of removal from office and criminal indictment, was in a position to give orders to anyone other than Madeline Brown and his Filippino stewards.

Ask Nelson to provide a model for the assassination conspiracy. I can. I have.

He can't. He won't.

Nelson's book advances the coverup. Whether or not such was Nelson's intent is, in the final analysis, a moot point.


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