15.06.2015 Views

Final_Judgment

Final_Judgment

Final_Judgment

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Photo Section 396<br />

At the time of the Warren Commission inquiry into the JFK assassination, Detroit industrialist<br />

Max Fisher (left) was a close advisor and chief financial backer of then-Congressman Gerald<br />

Ford (inset, left) one of the commission’s most dedicated defenders. Fisher not only had longstanding<br />

ties to the Lansky Crime Syndicate, but he was also a business partner of Mossad<br />

officer Rabbi Tibor Rosenbaum and Israeli billionaire Shaul Eisenberg (right) who were<br />

prime movers behind the Permindex web that was central to the JFK assassination conspiracy.<br />

Eisenberg, the Mossad’s longtime liaison with Red China, was a key player in the highly<br />

secretive joint nuclear bomb development programs between Israel and Red China. President<br />

Kennedy’s plan to launch a military strike on Red China’s nuclear bomb production facilities<br />

was reversed by Lyndon Johnson within 30 days of the JFK assassination, with the result that<br />

the Chinese effort went forward. Evidence suggests that “China’s” first explosion of a nuclear<br />

device was, in fact, a joint venture between Israel and Red China.<br />

Another of Mossad figure Tibor Rosenbaum’s<br />

partners in intrigue was controversial Prince<br />

Bernhard of the Netherlands (left), whose<br />

dealings with Rosenbaum were the object of<br />

scandal. Perhaps not coincidentally, at the time<br />

of the Warren Commission inquiry, Bernhard<br />

(the founder of the powerful Bilderberg<br />

Group) was playing host to not only Ford but<br />

also another commission member, John<br />

McCloy, at one of Bilderberg’s conclaves.<br />

Bernhard also had dealings with Rosenbaum’s<br />

Permindex associate, Clay Shaw of New<br />

Orleans, going back as far as 1954. The New<br />

Orleans Times-Picayune reported on<br />

March 20, 1954 that Bernhard had visited<br />

Shaw’s International Trade Mart on a visit the<br />

Dutch consulate said was “strictly<br />

incognito.”

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!