Richard Nixon/Presidency
Nixon posing with his cabinet in 1972. | |
| Date | January 20, 1969 - August 9, 1974 |
|---|---|
| Description | The Richard Nixon administration |
| Participants | Spiro Agnew, Anne Armstrong, Roy Ash, Winton M. Blount, Peter J. Brennan, Claude Brinegar, Dean Burch, Arthur F. Burns, George H. W. Bush, Earl Butz, John Connally, Frederick B. Dent, Robert Finch, Gerald Ford, Clifford M. Hardin, Bryce Harlow, Wally Hickel, James Day Hodgson, David M. Kennedy, Henry Kissinger, Richard Kleindienst, Melvin Laird, James T. Lynn, Robert P. Mayo, John N. Mitchell, Rogers Morton, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Peter G. Peterson, Elliot Richardson, William P. Rogers, George W. Romney, Donald Rumsfeld, Kenneth Rush, William B. Saxbe, John A. Scali, James R. Schlesinger, George Shultz, William E. Simon, Maurice Stans, John Volpe, Caspar Weinberger, Charles Yost |
For his background and earlier and later deep state connections, see Richard Nixon
Richard Nixon 'was president of the United States from January 20, 1969, until he resigned on August 9, 1974, in the face of almost certain impeachment and removal from office.
Contents
Kitchen cabinet
In 1970, the New York Times described how "Arrayed around the President is a small, exclusive fraternity of friends outside the government who are privy to Mr. Nixon's personal life and who exercise an indirect, though vital influence on his official life.... Prominent in that elite coterie are Elmer H. Bobst, honorary chairman of the Warner-Lambert Pharmaceutical Co.; Donald M. Kendall, chairman and chief executive officer of PepsiCo Inc.; Hobart D. Lewis, editor-in-chief of Reader's Digest; W. Clement Stone, Chicago insurance magnate; Robert H. Abplanalp, inventor of the aerosol valve; evangelist Billy Graham; Jack Drown, Los Angeles newspaper and magazine distributor; and C.G. (Bebe) Rebozo, Florida realtor and banker."[1]
Vietnam War
- Full article: Vietnam War
- Full article: Vietnam War
In 1969, Nixon told his speechwriters Ray Price, Pat Buchanan and Richard Whalen that "I’ve come to the conclusion that there’s no way to win the war. But we can’t say that, of course. In fact we have to seem to say the opposite, just to keep some degree of bargaining leverage."[2]
Giant Lance
On October 27, 1969, in what Jeremi Suri termed "a strategy of premeditated madness"[3] Nixon ordered operation Giant Lance, in which eighteen B-52 bombers armed with nuclear weapons to launch from bases in California and the state of Washington, to cross Alaska, were they were refueled in mid-air by KC-135 air tankers, while flying an oval pattern around the polar ice cap toward the Soviet Union and back for eighteen hours. This failed to get the Soviet Union to back down about Vietnam.[4]
Tapes
Nixon had some Whitehouse conversations recorded, later used by the US deep state to remove him from power in the Watergate coup. They provide insight into his thinking as US President.
Deaths in Vietnam
Nixon: The only place where you and I disagree is with regard to the bombing. You're so goddamned concerned about civilians and I don't give a damn. I don't care.
Kissinger: I'm concerned about the civilians because I don't want the world to be mobilised against you as a butcher.
Nuclear weapon use
On April 25, 1972, Nixon was recorded on tape suggesting using nuclear weapons in the war in Vietnam. "I'd rather use the nuclear bomb," he told Henry Kissinger. "That, I think, would just be too much," National Security Advisor Kissinger replied. Nixon responded, "The nuclear bomb. Does that bother you?" Later Nixon remarked, "I just want you to think big."[5]
Facing questions by reporters about possible impeachment, Richard Nixon remarked in 1974: "I can go into my office and pick up the telephone, and in 25 minutes, 70 million people will be dead".[6]
1973 Chile coup
- Full article: Chile/1973 coup
- Full article: Chile/1973 coup
The September 11, 1973 Chilean coup d'état overthrew of the democratically elected Salvador Allende.
"War on Drugs"
- Full article:
“War on Drugs”
- Full article:
The "War on Drugs" is a social control policy conceived in the USA in the late 1960s and launched in 1971 by the government of Richard Nixon.
"War on Cancer"
- Full article: Cancer
- Full article: Cancer
In 1971 president Richard Nixon declared a war on cancer and announced his goal to cure cancer by 1976.[7]
Watergate
- Full article: Watergate Coup
- Full article: Watergate Coup
Mark Gorton explains that what is referred to by the commercially-controlled media as the "Watergate Scandal" was in fact a coup by the cabal to remove Nixon from power. He went along with this and was duly pardoned by his successor, Ford to prevent any legal light from revealing what really happened.
Employee on Wikispooks
| Employee | Job | Appointed | End | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elmer Bobst | White House advisor on health issues. | 1968 | 1974 | Initiated "war on cancer" |
Known Participants
26 of the 42 participants already have pages here:
| Participant | Description |
|---|---|
| Spiro Agnew | US Vice President under Richard Nixon. Removed by the cabal before the Watergate coup so Gerald Ford could retake the presidency for them. |
| Anne Armstrong | United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom |
| Arthur Burns | US diplomat |
| George H. W. Bush | Skull and bones mastermind of the bush family busine$$. |
| John Connally | Corrupt Texas politician who was close to Lyndon B. Johnson. Seriously wounded while riding in John F. Kennedy's car at Dealey Plaza in Dallas. Later United States Secretary of the Treasury under Nixon. |
| Frederick Dent | United States Secretary of Commerce. Bohemian Grove |
| Gerald Ford | US Deep State functionary who was made US President by The Cabal after they removed Richard Nixon with the Watergate Coup |
| David Kennedy | Chicago banker, Secretary of the Treasury and NATO ambassador under Nixon, with hints at deep state connections. |
| Henry Kissinger | US deep politician, 46 Bilderbergs, Nobel peace prize, war criminal |
| Richard Kleindienst | United States Attorney General 1972-1973 |
| Melvin Laird | |
| John Mitchell | US Attorney General from 1969-1972, a friend of the 1980s sexual blackmailer, Craig Spence |
| Daniel Moynihan | US diplomat who pushed the "war on terror" |
| Peter Peterson | Long time CFR chair |
| Elliot Richardson | Pilgrims, Bilderberg, TLC, wrote in the New York Times that he believed Danny Casolaro was murdered. |
| William Rogers | US Secretary of State overshadowed by Henry Kissinger |
| Donald Rumsfeld | Senior member of the cabal, former US Defense Secretary, got aspartame approved |
| William Saxbe | |
| John A. Scali | |
| James Schlesinger | USDSO, DCI, RAND, US Defense secretary |
| George Shultz | US Cold warrior who attended the 1984 Washington Conference on International Terrorism |
| William Simon | Wrote a working paper on U.S. Economic Performance and Prospects for the 1982 Bilderberg. |
| Maurice Stans | Nixon associate who handled black funds |
| John Volpe | Governor of Massachusetts, later Secretary of Transportation and US Ambassador to Italy. |
| Caspar Weinberger | US Deep state operative whom GHWB pardoned as part of the cover-up of "Iran Contra" |
| Charles Yost | US diplomat with deep state connections |
References
- ↑ https://www.nytimes.com/1970/01/17/archives/nixons-inner-circle-here-remains-close-to-him-friends-in-nixons.html
- ↑ "Exposing Nixon’s Vietnam Lies"
- ↑ "The Nuclear Breakfast Menu"
- ↑ "Nixon's Nuclear Ploy: The Vietnam Negotiations and the Joint Chiefs of Staff Readiness Test, October 1969"
- ↑ "Vietnam War Nuclear Weapon Option"
- ↑ "Facing The Failing Culture Of Control"
- ↑ https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2945373/