September 14, 1996

Good Morning from the Zundelsite:


Three items of interest, to be perused and pondered duly with your morning coffee:

"Defending 'Ivan the Terrible': The Conspiracy to Convict John Demjanjuk" by Yoram Sheftel, Regnery Publishing, Washington, D.C. 1996 445 pages, hardbound, $27.50 was reviewed by Katherine Notley of the Executive Intelligence Review, an organization that has investigated and published a lot of latter-day political and social scandals - Satanism in the United States, the fraud web surrounding AIDS research, the New World Order conspiracy entitled "Global 2000" and others. Writes Notley:

"There are two major facets of this book, written by John Demjanjuk's Israeli defense attorney: First, and most prominent in Sheftel's book itself, is the corruption within the Israeli justice system that led it to conduct a show-trial with the sole purpose of convicting Demjanjuk as the Nazi war criminal "Ivan the Terrible."

Second, but more important, is that the book reveals the depravity deep within the U.S. Justice Department permanent bureaucracy, in which a U.S. citizen, known to be innocent, was accused of being Ivan the Terrible, stripped of his citizenship and extradited to Israel to stand trial, on the only charges for which Israel invokes the death penalty: Nazi crimes of genocide.

EIR has consistently exposed this Justice Department permanent bureaucracy, since it was given a sort of formal existence with the creation of the "Nazi-hunting" agency, the Office of Special Investigations (OSI), going back to its beginnings in 1978. This outfit was established under the patronage of Henry Kissinger in the late 1970's, as part of his geopolitical "condominium" with the Soviet regime.

Under the arrangements between the OSI and the Soviet Procurator General's office, evidence targeting U.S. citizens from eastern Europe as Nazi war criminals could be accepted into U.S. courts, undisputed. The brazenness with which the OSI collaborated with the KGB - as in the cases of Tscherim Soobzokov and Karl Linnas - were beginning to tarnish its "Nazi-hunting" image: In the former, the OSI shopped out KGB-manufactured evidence to the New York Times, which pilloried Soobzokov, who was able to prove his innocence in a suit against the Times.

Hence, the OSI turned to Israel, a U.S. ally, offering it a "really big Nazi" to try, in an effort to bolster the OSI's flagging credibility: With the usual contribution of forged documents from the Soviet KGB, the OSI sought to have retired Cleveland auto worker John Demjanjuk denaturalized and deported to Israel to stand trial as "Ivan the Terrible."

As I behold the ever-more revealing evidence of just how seedy and dilapidated is the infrastructure of our opposition, a Dutch proverb comes to mind: "When a mouse falls into a meal sack, he thinks he is the miller."

Let that be your Thought for the Day.

Ingrid



Comments? E-Mail: irimland@cts.com

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