Sunday, 12 August 2012

Operation Gladio - NATO False Flag Terror Operations






There's a misconception that NATO would never do anything other than above board military action. 

That's naive. 

Right from its establishment after WWII, NATO has used false flag terror to secure its own position and disseminate the idea that the European people are under attack and thus helpless without the strong arm of military crackdowns. It's well worth researching Gladio to understand how fear is used against peaceful populations to direct energy in negative ways.

This BBC programme is of a nature that cannot be found in contemporary programming. Somebody had the foresight to record it on video and the generosity to upload it. No account of Europe or E.U. elite manipulation is complete without it. 

You will see the many hands of the invisible body that washes itself including the SAS, Special Branch, P2 Masonic Lodge and former Prime Ministers of Italy and senior CIA (OSS) officials. This is as good as it gets in video research. Unbeatable.

The Company




I was researching Operation Gladio and James Jesus Angleton and came across this mini series called The Company on Youtube. You know, it's not bad at all. The character acting is good but the scripts don't suck and that goes a long way for me. There's a lot of love-in-the-CIA theme but somehow the actors transcend the obvious. Michael Keaton plays James Jesus Angleton in this dramatization though my favourite theme from around this time is the Cambridge homosexual double and triple agents without whom things would have gone far to straight forward given the string pullers of the intelligence agencies are extraordinarily venal. Regrettably most spies don't actually know that.

Rome and Birdcage Walk etc.

Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Sly



I'm quite fussy about movies. It's somewhat hard for me to suspend disbelief and so for some reason I lucked out and can recommend Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. Not because I think it's perfectly faithful to the espionage business but because it gets the 70's down pat and that's a lot harder to do than is evident from the outside.  I mentioned I enjoyed this on Facebook and a few people agreed so I'm recommending it to you.

John Hurt and Gary Oldman? You can't go wrong really but it's understated and that's a winner in spy movies. I could yawn from here into the 22nd century with the American guff they pump out from Hollywood with a few exceptions.