08-01-2019, 04:32 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-01-2019, 04:39 PM by Firestarter.)
Fara Mansoor produced a confidential document called the "Country Team Minutes" that details a meeting in Iran on 26 April 1978, which states:
On 20 January 1977, President Jimmy Carter fired CIA-Director George H.W. Bush.
In July 1977, Bush´s covert team issued a plan for the possible transition of power in Iran.
CIA analyst and Deputy Chief Political officer of the US Embassy in Iran John D. Stemple wrote about this plan:
On 31 October 1977, President Carter became the enemy of the CIA when he fired 800 CIA covert operatives.
On 7 January 1978, an article in the Iranian daily newspaper Ettela'at attacked the exiled Khomeini, after which massive protests in the Holy City of Qum were staged the next day.
This Qum incident made many of the clergy oppose the Shah; a "dirty trick" by General Fardoust.
John D. Stempel, characterised Fardoust's importance: "it is hard to over estimate the value of having a mole in the inner circle of the Shah".
In late August 1978, U.S. Ambassador Sullivan recorded the Shah's pleadings over the outbreak of violence:
In mid-September 1978, at the height of the revolution, Khomeini's trusted associate Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Beheshti, secretly visited the US where he met with Ibrahim Yazdi in Texas.
On 12 December 1978, Ibrahim Yazdi made a trip to the US where he secretly met Director of the Iran Desk at the State Department Henry Precht (one of Bush’s main men in the Carter Administration).
Later Precht and Yazdi appeared for a televised discussion on Iran, where Yazdi assured that Khomeini’s "election would be absolutely free" and that the Islamic Republic "would enjoy full freedom of speech and the press, including the right to attack Islam”.
On 5 February 1979, Khomeni named Mehdi Bazargan interim Prime Minister. Yazdi and Abbas Amir Entezam became Bazargan's deputies.
On 14 February 1979, 2 weeks after Khomeini's returned to Iran in power, the US Embassy in Teheran was seized by Khomeini supporters disguised as leftist guerrillas, but the Iranian coalition government restored order immediately.
From August to 31 October 1979, pro-Bush CIA official George Cave visited Iran to provide intelligence briefings to Khomeini's aides, especially Yazdi and Entezam, on the Iranian officials who had restored order after the first Embassy seizure.
On 4 November 1979, with all those Iranian officials eliminated, the US Embassy was taken again. Leading the charge was Ambassador Sullivan's trusted Mashallah Kashani, the Embassy's former security chief: http://web.archive.org/web/2002061520334...orld2.html
In one of those strange coincidences, in the mid-1980s Michael Lewis was hired by the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), coming from the Justice Department's Office of Special Investigations (OSI).
Michael Lewis later became the director of AIPAC's Policy Analysis.
Michael Lewis is the son of none other than Princeton University´s Bernard Lewis, who devised the Muslim extremist strategy for the Middle East (still going strong): https://www.wrmea.org/1992-july/the-secr...ebate.html
Quote:The Ambassador commented on our distinguished visitors, Ronald Reagan, George Bush and Margaret Thatcher, and commented that Teheran seems to be the site for an opposition parties congress.I´ve searched in vain for this "Country Team Minutes" document...
On 20 January 1977, President Jimmy Carter fired CIA-Director George H.W. Bush.
In July 1977, Bush´s covert team issued a plan for the possible transition of power in Iran.
CIA analyst and Deputy Chief Political officer of the US Embassy in Iran John D. Stemple wrote about this plan:
Quote:A ten page analysis of the opposition written by the embassy's political section in July 1977 correctly identified Bakhiar, Bazargan, Khomeini and Behesti as major actors in the drama that begin unfolding a year later.
On 31 October 1977, President Carter became the enemy of the CIA when he fired 800 CIA covert operatives.
On 7 January 1978, an article in the Iranian daily newspaper Ettela'at attacked the exiled Khomeini, after which massive protests in the Holy City of Qum were staged the next day.
This Qum incident made many of the clergy oppose the Shah; a "dirty trick" by General Fardoust.
John D. Stempel, characterised Fardoust's importance: "it is hard to over estimate the value of having a mole in the inner circle of the Shah".
In late August 1978, U.S. Ambassador Sullivan recorded the Shah's pleadings over the outbreak of violence:
Quote:he said the pattern was widespread and that it was like an outbreak of a sudden rash in the country ... it gave evidence of sophisticated planning and was not the work of spontaneous oppositionists ... the Shah presented that it was the work of foreign intrigue...
this intrigue went beyond the capabilities of the Soviet KGB and must, therefore, also involve British and American CIA. The Shah went on to ask 'Why was the CIA suddenly turning against him? What had he done to deserve this sort of action from the United States?”
In mid-September 1978, at the height of the revolution, Khomeini's trusted associate Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Beheshti, secretly visited the US where he met with Ibrahim Yazdi in Texas.
On 12 December 1978, Ibrahim Yazdi made a trip to the US where he secretly met Director of the Iran Desk at the State Department Henry Precht (one of Bush’s main men in the Carter Administration).
Later Precht and Yazdi appeared for a televised discussion on Iran, where Yazdi assured that Khomeini’s "election would be absolutely free" and that the Islamic Republic "would enjoy full freedom of speech and the press, including the right to attack Islam”.
On 5 February 1979, Khomeni named Mehdi Bazargan interim Prime Minister. Yazdi and Abbas Amir Entezam became Bazargan's deputies.
On 14 February 1979, 2 weeks after Khomeini's returned to Iran in power, the US Embassy in Teheran was seized by Khomeini supporters disguised as leftist guerrillas, but the Iranian coalition government restored order immediately.
From August to 31 October 1979, pro-Bush CIA official George Cave visited Iran to provide intelligence briefings to Khomeini's aides, especially Yazdi and Entezam, on the Iranian officials who had restored order after the first Embassy seizure.
On 4 November 1979, with all those Iranian officials eliminated, the US Embassy was taken again. Leading the charge was Ambassador Sullivan's trusted Mashallah Kashani, the Embassy's former security chief: http://web.archive.org/web/2002061520334...orld2.html
In one of those strange coincidences, in the mid-1980s Michael Lewis was hired by the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), coming from the Justice Department's Office of Special Investigations (OSI).
Michael Lewis later became the director of AIPAC's Policy Analysis.
Michael Lewis is the son of none other than Princeton University´s Bernard Lewis, who devised the Muslim extremist strategy for the Middle East (still going strong): https://www.wrmea.org/1992-july/the-secr...ebate.html
The Order of the Garter rules the world: https://www.lawfulpath.com/forum/viewtop...5549#p5549