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302 Double Cross in Dallas? [241]<br />

the central part in the JFK assassination conspiracy. 648 However, according<br />

to JFK writer Gus Russo, the book's origins are a little more complicated<br />

than that.<br />

Russo claims that shortly after the JFK assassination—when Robert<br />

Kennedy launched a private inquiry into his brother's murder, utilizing a<br />

British intelligence asset who was a long-time Kennedy family friend (an<br />

inquiry which we referenced at the beginning of Chapter 9)—the British<br />

investigator hired two former French intelligence operatives to conduct the<br />

investigation. Russo says that one was Andre Ducret, former head of the<br />

French intelligence agency, and that the other was known only as<br />

"Philippe," but believed to be Philippe deVosjoli, former head of French<br />

intelligence in Washington.<br />

The French investigators then spent several years conducting the<br />

investigation, finally providing RFK a report that alleged, generally, that<br />

Texas oil barons in league with Lyndon Johnson had been behind the<br />

assassination. Although RFK was killed shortly after receiving the report,<br />

the British agent who sponsored the investigation asked the surviving<br />

brother, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, what should be done with the report.<br />

Kennedy said his family was not interested, according to Russo, and at that<br />

point the report was turned over to Herve LaMarre who then fashioned the<br />

report into the book Farewell America. While never published in the United<br />

States, the book nonetheless received "underground" distribution here. 649<br />

However, while the book (and the report on which it was based) may<br />

have contained grains of truth, there is good reason to believe that it was<br />

largely CIA-Mossad disinformation. Here's why:<br />

If indeed Philippe deVosjoli was one of those who handled the<br />

"investigation" for the Kennedy friend in British intelligence, the fact is that<br />

Vosjoli had a "long friendship [and] special relationship" with the Mossad's<br />

CIA loyalist James J. Angleton 650 to the point that deVosjoli not only<br />

refused French orders to spy on the United States, but instead apparently<br />

helped Angleton conduct espionage against France. 651<br />

Considering this, we can understand why Farewell America was so<br />

vague and so inconclusive and steered the finger of blame away from both<br />

the CIA and the Mossad, and, for that matter, suppressed the little-known<br />

"French connection" to the JFK assassination that has been long discussed,<br />

but which, if dissected as we shall now do here, points directly toward not<br />

only Angleton at the CIA, but the manipulations of disloyal elements in<br />

French intelligence by both Angleton and his Mossad allies.<br />

It's an amazing story that has never been told before, but which we will<br />

outline here for the first time ever.<br />

THE FRENCH CONNECTION . . .<br />

In a private communication to this author after he read the first draft of<br />

<strong>Final</strong> <strong>Judgment</strong>—sent to him by no less than former U.S. Congressman<br />

Paul Findley (R-Ill.)—former French intelligence officer Pierre Neuville<br />

stated (based on his own inside knowledge) that a French team—professional

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