登入選單
返回Google圖書搜尋
註釋TREACHERY is a nonfiction report of Iran/Contra felonies, including murder, sabotage, gun running, cocaine trafficking and an aborted mission to deploy a nuclear backpack in the Middle East. Some may argue that these activities are the 'norm', but they would have a hard time in the court of public opinion convincing citizens who expect their government to obey the rule of law and prosecute those who do not. The Canadian and US governments stand by the bogus story of ice on the wings, resulting in a loss of lift, causing a stall, and fatal crash of Arrow Air 1285 in Gander, killing 256 Americans. Les Filotas, a Ph.D. aeronautical engineer and member of the CASB, noted that there were no icing conditions at Gander when the McDonnell Douglas DC-8 63CF was on the ground. The forensic evidence of lethal levels of carbon monoxide in the bodies of the dead supported fire and explosion on the airborne aircraft. An Israeli American and former Mossad agent support that intelligence operatives placed explosives on the aircraft in Gander and remotely detonated them. Their motive was to kill everyone on the aircraft, remove from the crash scene dead soldiers in wooden boxes loaded on the aircraft in Cairo. The dead resulted from an aborted covert mission to deploy a MK54 Special Atomic Demolition Munition (nuclear backpack) in the Middle East. Arleigh McCree, the head of the LAPD bomb squad and officer Ron Ball, were killed in a booby-trapped bomb pipe bomb in February 1986. McCree had connected the dots of the Arrow Air crash to incendiary devices sold to the CIA and reported his findings to the federal government. A bomb in a package addressed to the manufacture of the incendiary devices exploded, killing the plant manager. Other murders were reported as suicides. Marine Colonel James E. Sabow was murdered in January 1991 to prevent him from blowing-the-whistle on the illegal cocaine trafficking into El Toro. The motive to kill this decorated officer was to keep him from blowing-the-whistle on this illegal covert activity. CIA proprietary aircraft flew tons of cocaine into El Toro and other military bases. The cocaine fueled the crack cocaine epidemic, killing thousands of Americans. On February 24, l995, five days after "60 Minutes" did a story on illegal C-130 acquisitions, Marine Colonel Jerry Agenbroad was found hanged in the Bachelor Officers Quarters at El Toro. His death was determined to be a suicide by the government. He oversaw Morale Welfare Recreation (MWR), which included responsibility for contracts with civilian air carriers, at the time of his death. Smuggling of weapons and cocaine was supported by the exchange of retired C-130 and P3A aircraft for obsolete C-119 aircraft owned by CIA proprietary airlines. The retired military aircraft were obtained from Davis-Monthan Air Force Base (the Air Force's aircraft boneyard), refurbished at contractor expense and put back into service. The forensic evidence supports homicide, crime scene tampering by federal agents, and a cover-up by the Defense Department. Marine Staff Sergeant Tom Wade, computer 'guru' at MCAS El Toro was another victim. On January 12, 1991, Inspector General Hollis Davison's team arrived at MCAS El Toro January 1991. They ordered Master Sergeant Felix Segovia to access the command staff computers. Segovia assigned this task to then Sergeant Tom Wade, his networking specialist. When Wade accessed the MWR computers, he reported that they were completely "purged." There was absolutely nothing in their memory, not even a program. Wade was promoted and transferred to Blount Island, FL. Arriving home from church services on Christmas Day, l994, Staff Sergeant Tom Wade was dragged from his car as his four-year old daughter watched in the back seat, shot in the head, execution style. The national security blanket protects the murderers.