The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front

The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front

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It was evident that P2 was indirectly linked to the assault on Pope John Paul II and that the lodge organized the explosion at the railway station in Bologna, the foremost communist central in Italy, on 2 august 1980, where 85 people died and 200 were wounded. Gelli himself financed this bombing. The Italian weekly Panorama disclosed in September 1984 that Stefano delle Chiaie, the Italian freemason and terrorist leader who in 1982 had been named by the ex-freemason Ciolini as the brain behind the Bologna bombing, later became a consultant to the communist terror group Sendero Luminoso in Peru. At the end of the 1960s he was the leader of the neo-nazi group Avanguardia Nazionale in Rome. In the mid-1980s he worked with Alianza Argentina Anti- comunista, an organization of 2000 men, financed with drug profits. Later he led a South American private army (an assassination group). Panorama stated that the decision to place the bomb in Bologna actually was made by the Swiss Grand Lodge Alpina together with lodges in Lausanne and Monte Carlo. P2 only served as a middleman in organising the bombing. In October 1984, General Pietro Musumeci, head of the domestic department within the Italian military intelligence (SISMI), was char- ged with covering up the Bologna incident. The General was also a member of P2 (David Yallop, "In God's Name", London, 1985, p. 465). P2 was from the beginning financed by the KGB as well, which had recruited Gelli early on. The aim of the KGB was to destabilise Italy and to weaken NATO's southern flank. At the same time P2 was, of course, also financed by the CIA. The British writer Stephen Knight published a secret document, dated 4 June 1981, which he had received from the intelligence service MI6. In the document it shows that KGB was behind P2 and that they used masonic lodges to infiltrate Western nations with their agents. Communist agents that were freemasons in the West received substantial aid in their careers from their lodge brothers. One could mention, Georges Ebon, who was arrested in France in the 1950s (Terry Walton, "KGB in France", Moscow, 1993, pp. 67-68). 235

This document stressed the fact that within the intelligence services freemasons more easily reach top positions. KGB's greatest success was when their agent Sir Roger Hollis was named director of MI5, where he served from 1955 to 1965. The official investigation did not reach this conclusion, however. Hollis was a freemason, and according to the above-mentioned document, high officials that also were freemasons usually were never exposed when suspected of wrong-doing. Either the case was closed or it was dropped for lack of evidence. Therefore the author of the document demanded that the heads of intelligence services should not belong to a masonic order. Stephen Knight pointed out that the freemasons in Great Britain have a very great influence. Prince Charles is the first in modern times to break the tradition that male pretenders to the throne be freemasons. In 1980, the chekist Ilya Dzhirkvelov who was stationed in Italy defected to the West and disclosed that the KGB was using the masonic lodges for their own purposes. Especially successful were the Soviet agents in Great Britain (as well as in Italy), since they mana- ged to infiltrate the most powerful lodges. Dzhirkvelov explained how the KGB gave instructions to its British agents to become free- masons, since society was ruled from these lodges. Licio Gelli plundered Italy's largest private bank, Banco Ambro- siano, of a billion dollars in 1982. He used 200 million dollars to buy arms for Argentina to use in the coming war for the Falklands. The Argentine General Carlos Suirez and Admiral Emilio Massara, who participated in planning the invasion, were also P2 members. The swindle put the bank in liquidation soon thereafter. The Vatican- owned Banco Ambrosiano left a deficit of nearly a billion dollars. It was the greatest banking scandal in Italy in modern times. The manager and chief owner of Banco Ambrosiano Roberto Calvi, his masonic bodyguards Florio Carboni and Sylvano Vittot, went from his home in Rome first to Switzerland on 10 June and arrived in London on 15 June 1982. He told the press: "Sono massone, ma della loggia di Londra." ("I am a freemason, but belong to the lodge in 236

It was evident that P2 was indirectly linked to the assault on Pope<br />

John Paul II and that the lodge organized the explosion at the<br />

railway station in Bologna, the foremost communist central in Italy,<br />

on 2 august 1980, where 85 people died and 200 were wounded. Gelli<br />

himself financed this bombing.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Italian weekly Panorama disclosed in September 1984 that<br />

Stefano delle Chiaie, the Italian freemason and terrorist leader who<br />

in 1982 had been named by the ex-freemason Ciolini as the brain<br />

behind the Bologna bombing, later became a consultant to the<br />

communist terror group Sendero Luminoso in Peru. At the end <strong>of</strong> the<br />

1960s he was the leader <strong>of</strong> the neo-nazi group Avanguardia Nazionale<br />

in Rome. In the mid-1980s he worked with Alianza Argentina Anti-<br />

comunista, an organization <strong>of</strong> 2000 men, financed with drug pr<strong>of</strong>its.<br />

Later he led a South American private army (an assassination group).<br />

Panorama stated that the decision to place the bomb in Bologna<br />

actually was made by the Swiss Grand Lodge Alpina together with<br />

lodges in Lausanne and Monte Carlo. P2 only served as a middleman<br />

in organising the bombing.<br />

In October 1984, General Pietro Musumeci, head <strong>of</strong> the domestic<br />

department within the Italian military intelligence (SISMI), was char-<br />

ged with covering up the Bologna incident. <strong>The</strong> General was also a<br />

member <strong>of</strong> P2 (David Yallop, "In God's Name", London, 1985, p. 465).<br />

P2 was from the beginning financed by the KGB as well, which had<br />

recruited Gelli early on. <strong>The</strong> aim <strong>of</strong> the KGB was to destabilise Italy<br />

and to weaken NATO's southern flank. At the same time P2 was, <strong>of</strong><br />

course, also financed by the CIA.<br />

<strong>The</strong> British writer Stephen Knight published a secret document,<br />

dated 4 June 1981, which he had received from the intelligence<br />

service MI6. In the document it shows that KGB was behind P2 and<br />

that they used masonic lodges to infiltrate Western nations with<br />

their agents. Communist agents that were freemasons in the West<br />

received substantial aid in their careers from their lodge brothers.<br />

One could mention, Georges Ebon, who was arrested in France in the<br />

1950s (Terry Walton, "KGB in France", Moscow, 1993, pp. 67-68).<br />

235

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