6
7/27/2019 The Strange Case of General Vaseliev-Bulliten-1970-6pgs-POL http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-strange-case-of-general-vaseliev-bulliten-1970-6pgs-pol 1/6 Archibald ELtCol, AUS, ret, Director PRICE : ALL BULLETINS 100: $ 15 . 0 0 - 50: $ 10 25 : $ 7 . 0 0 - 10 : $ 4 . 0 0 Add $2 .00 for postage and handling . Will bill postage on orders over 100 THE STRANGE CASE OF GENERAL VASILIEV* "The U .S . (upon the admission of Re d China to the United Nations) will push for approval of a joint U .S . Philippine plan to weld t he military forces of all sixt y member nations into a workable international army." NEW YORK SUNDAY NEWS, September 12,1954. Millions of Americans today are deeply The scope of this "responsibility" is t ro uble d by polit ical pres s ures which, unlimit e d . It provides, under Article 42, under the guise of "International Peace and for U .N. military action "by air, sea, or Security," undermine the Constit ution of land forces as may be necessary, to these United States . maintain or resto re international peace Those who have studied t h e Un i t ed and security," e . g . " Korea, Katanga, Nations and its Charter believe that the Dominican Republic, Viet Nam, and in greates t threat to our national survival is the near future South Africa . ' embodied in the thrust to centralize world Weaponry and manpower for such military power in the Security Council of military adventures as may be embarked the United Nations Organization . upon by the Security Council are Public and private spo kesmen for the provided by member nations which make U .N ., with increasing regularity, loft trial "available to the Security Council, on its balloons extolling an imaginary world call and in accordance with a special security to be achieved by establishing an agreement or agreements ( i . e . " NATO, international "Peace Force" - a Peace SEATO, CENTO, OAS, etc . ) ' , armed Force which Americans are to man and forces, assistance and facilities, including finance .' These dubious promotions have rights of passage, necessary for the convinced many citizens that the build up purpose of maintaining international of an international army under U .N . c o n t r o l peace and security . " 5 will lead inevitably to a to talitarian one- These co ntributions of men, hardware, world government . ' and national sovere ignty to the cause o f, Prese nt war-making capability of the "international peace and security," as United Nations Security Council is defined by the United Nations Charter substantial and alarming . The authority and by those who implement its policy, which this supra-government war are not subject to debate or veto - at least department exerts over Americans in not by America . The Charter irrevocably uniform is s uccinctly spelled o ut in the binds the signatory nations and their articles of the U .N . Charter. citizens to the decisions of the Se curity "In order to ensure prompt and Council . "The Members of the United effective action by the United Nations," Nations," directs Article 25, "agree to states Article 24, "its Members confer on accept and carry out the decisions of the the Security Council primary Security Council in accordance with the responsibility for the maintenance of present Charter . " international peace and security . " The pre-eminence of the United Nations Treaty agreements in American domestic and international affairs, "Six House GOP's Seek Backing on U . S . Force for U.N . " Denver Post, June 20, 1965. ' "52 Prominent Americans Urge World Government Formation," Denver Post, October 6, 1965. *From, VICTORY DENIED, by Archibald E . Roberts, Lt Col (then Major), 301 pgs . Library o f Congress Card #66-20665 . (1966) O UT OF PRINT BULLETIN COMMITTEE TO RESTORE THE CONSTITUTION ® Founded 1965 Incorporated 1970 Registered 1984 MEMBERSHIP / SUBSCRIPTION: $25.00 Monthly resource publication revealing hidden facts behindnational crisis . Explains constitutional authority to halt economic/political exploitation. Incorporates model procedures for county & state action to restore interest-free money, defend/preserve freedom of person and property guaranteed to the people by the Constitution . "Apartheid and United Nations Collect ive Measure s , " Ca r n e gie Endowment for International Peace, U .N. Plaza, N.Y. ° North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Southeast Asia Treaty Organization, Central Treaty Organization, Organization of American States . United Nations Charter, Article 43 . 1 June 1996 #413 Copyright © 1996 W r i t e f o r f r e e C R C l i s t : b o o k s , c a s s e t t e s , v i d e o t a p e s . P.O (970) 484-2575 irrespective of the misleading insertion of paragraph 7, Article 2 barring U .N. intervention in matters, "which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state," has been deliberately blurred by a public relations image of the U .N . as a benevolent world body responsive to the consensus o f its members. This popular and erroneous concept is fraught with peril . Whether U .N . purposes and objectives are benign or malignant is, of course, the subject of this study . However, a quick corollary may be drawn by comparing pro-U .N . publicity with the st range case of General Vasiliev. Lieutenant General Alexandre Ph . Vasiliev was the So viet representative on the United Nati ons Milit ary Staff Committee from 1947 until the USSR withdrew from the committee on January 19, 1950. This former chairman of the U .N . Military Staff Committee was thereupon ordered to North Korea where he was placed in command of all Chinese Communist movements across t he thirty- eighth parallel . The Vasiliev case history of international deceit begins with U S . S t a t e Department B ulletin Number 442A, dated August 3, 1947, titled, "Arming the United Nations ." On page 239 of this official document our State Depart ment says : "On Ap r il 30, 1947, Lieutenant General A . Ph . Vasiliev, of the Re d Army, chairman of the Military Staff Committe e of the United Nations, forwarded to Trygve Lie, Secretary-Gene ral, for transmission to the Security Council, a report of the Military Staff Committee containing recommendations on the general principles governing the organization of the armed forces made available to the Security Council by member Nations of the United Nations . "Article 43 of the Charter, " this report continues, "appears in Chapter VII, (continued on page 2)

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THE STRANGE CASE OF GENERAL VASILIEV*"The U. S . ( u p o n t h e a d m i s s i o n o f R e d C h i n a t o t h e U n i t e d N a t i o n s ) w i l l p u s h f o r

a p p r o v a l o f a j o i n t U. S . P h i l i p pi n e p l a n t o w e l d t h e m i l i t a r y f o r c e s o f a l l s i x t y m e m b e r

nations into a workable international army." NEW YORK SUNDAY NEWS,September 12,1954 .

M il li on s o f A me ri c an s t o da y a re de e pl y T he s co p e o f t h i s " re s po n s i bi li t y " i s

t r o u b le d b y p o l it i c al p r e s s ur e s w hi ch , u n l im i t e d . I t p r o v i d e s , u n d e r A rt i c l e 4 2 ,

u n d e r t h e g u i s e o f " I n t e r n a t i o n a l P e a c e a n d for U . N . m i l i t a r y ac t i o n " b y a i r, s e a , o r

S e c u r i t y , " u n de r m i n e t h e C o n s t i t u t i o n o f land forces as may be necessary, to

t h e s e U n i t e d S t a t e s . m a i n t a i n o r r e s t o r e i n t e r n a t i o n a l p e a c e

Those who h ave studied the Unite d and securit y," e . g . " Korea, Katanga,

N a t i o n s a n d i t s C h a r t e r b e l i e v e t h a t t h e Dominican Republic, Viet Nam, and in

g r e a t e s t t h r e a t t o o u r n a t i o n a l s u r v i v a l i s t h e n e a r f u t u r e S o u t h A f r i c a . '

e m b o d i e d i n t h e t h r u s t t o c e n t r a l i z e w o r l d Weaponry and manpower for such

m il it a ry po w e r i n t h e S e cur it y Co un ci l o f m i li t a r y ad v e n t ur e s a s m a y b e e m b ar k e d

t h e U n i t e d N a t i o n s O r g a n i z a t i o n . upon by the Security Council are

P u b l i c a n d p r i v a t e s p o k e s m e n f o r t h e provided by member nations which makeU. N . , w i t h i n c r e a s i n g r e g u l a r i t y , l o f t t r i a l " a v a i l ab l e t o t h e S e c u r i t y C o u n c i l , o n i t s

balloons extolling an imaginary world call and in accordance with a special

s e c u r i t y t o b e a c h i e v e d b y e s t a b l i s h i n g a n agreement or agreements ( i . e . " NATO,

international "Peace Force" - a Peace SEATO, CENTO, OAS, e t c . ) ' , a r m ed

Force which Americans ar e to man and f o r c e s , a s s i s t a n c e a n d f a c i l i t i e s , i n c l u d i ng

f i n a n c e . ' T h e s e d u b io u s p r o m o t i o n s h a v e rights of passage , necessary for the

c o n v i n c e d m a ny c i t i z e n s t h a t t h e b u i l d up purpose of maintaining international

o f a n i n t e r n a t i o n a l arm y un d e r U .N. c o n t r o l p e a c e a n d s e c u r i t y . " 5

w i l l l e a d i ne v i t a b l y t o a t o t a l i t a r i a n o n e - T h e s e c o n t r i b ut i o n s o f m e n , h a r d w a r e ,

w o r l d g o v e r n m e n t . ' a n d n a t i o n a l s o v e r e i g n t y t o t h e c a u s e o f ,

P r e s e n t w a r - m a k i n g c a p a b i l i t y o f t h e " i n t e r n a t i o n a l p e a c e a n d s e c u r i t y , " a s

United Nations Security Council is defined by the United Nations Charter

s u b s t an t ia l a nd al ar mi ng . T h e au t h o ri t y a n d b y t h o s e wh o i mp l e m e nt i t s p o l i c y ,

which t h i s supra-government war a r e n o t s u b j e c t t o d e b a t e o r v e t o - a t l e a s t

dep a r t m e n t e x e r t s ov e r Am e r i c a n s i n n o t by Am e r i c a . T h e C h a r t e r i r r e v o c a b l y

u n i fo r m i s s u c c in c t l y s p e l l e d o u t i n t h e binds the signat ory nations and their

a r t i c le s o f t h e U .N . C h a r t e r . c i t i z e n s t o t h e d e c i s i o n s o f t h e S e c u ri t y

"In order to ens ure prompt and C o u n c i l . "The Members of the United

e f f e c t i ve a c t i o n b y t h e U ni t e d N a t i o ns , " N at i o ns , " d ir e ct s A r t i cl e 2 5 , " ag re e t o

s t at e s A rt i cl e 2 4, " it s M e mb e rs c o nf er o n a cc e pt a nd c ar ry o u t t h e de c is i on s o f t h e

t h e S e c u r i t y Council primary S e c u r i t y C o u n c i l i n a c c o r d a n c e w i t h t h e

responsibility for the maintenance of p r e s e n t C h a r t e r . "

i n t e r n a t i o n al p e a c e a n d s e c u r i t y . " The pre-e minence of th e United

Nations Treaty agr eements i n American

domestic and i n t e r n a t i o n al a ffa i r s ,

"Six House GOP's Seek Backing on U . S . F o r c e

fo r U.N . " D e n v e r P o s t , June 20, 1965 .

' "52 Prominent Americans Urge World

Government Formation," Denver Post, October 6,

1965 .

*Fro m, VICTORY DENIED, by Archi bal d E .

R o b e r t s , L t C o l ( t h e n M a j o r ) , 3 0 1 p g s .

Library o f Congress Card #66-20665 . (1966 ) OUT

OF PRINT

BULLETINCOMMITTEE TO RESTORE THE CONSTITUTION®

Founded 1 9 6 5 Incorporated 1970 Registered 1984

MEMBERSHIP / SUBSCRIPTION: $ 2 5 . 0 0

Monthly resource publication revealing hidden facts behind national

crisis . Explains constitutional authority to halt e conomic/political

e x p lo i t at i o n . I n c o r p o r a t e s m o d e l p r o c e d u r e s f o r c o u n t y & s t a t e a c t i o n t o

r e s t o r e i n t e r e s t - f r e e m o n e y , d e f e n d / p r e s e r v e f r e e d o m o f p e r s o n a n d pr o p e r t y

g u a ra n t e e d t o t h e p e o p l e b y t h e C o n s t i t u t i o n .

" A p a r t h e i d a n d U n i t e d Na t i o n s C o l l e c t i v e

Measur es," Carneg ie Endowment for

I n t e r n a t i o n a l P e a c e , U .N . P l a z a , N .Y .

° N o r t h A t l a n t i c T r e a t y O r g a n iz a t i o n , S o u t h e a s t

A s i a T r e a t y O r g a n i z a t i o n , C e n t r a l T r e a t y

O r g a n i z a t i o n , O r g a n i z a t i o n o f A m e r i c a n S t a t e s .

U n i t e d N a t i o n s C h a r t e r , A r t i c l e 4 3 .

1

June 1996

#413

Copyright © 1996

W r i t e f o r f r e e C R C l i s t :

b o o k s , c a s s e t t e s , v i d e o t a p e s .

C o l o r a d o N o n - P r o f i t C o r p o r a t i o n

P . O . B o x 9 8 6 , F t . C o l l i n s , C O 8 0 5 2 2

( 97 0 ) 4 8 4 - 2 5 7 5

i r r e s p e c t i v e o f t h e m i s l e a d i n g i n s e r t i o n o f

paragr aph 7, Article 2 barring U .N .

intervention in matters, "which are

essentiall y within t h e domestic

jurisdiction of any stat e," has been

d e l i b e r a t e l y b l u r r e d b y a p u b l i c r e l a t i o n s

i m a g e o f t h e U .N . a s a b e n e v o l e n t w o r l d

b o d y r e s p o n s i v e t o t h e c o n s e n s u s o f i t s

members .

T h i s p o p u l a r a nd e r r o n e o u s c o n c e p t i s

f r a u g h t w i t h p e r i l .

Whether U .N . p u r p o s e s a n d o b j e c t i v e s

a r e b e n i g n o r m a l ig n a n t i s , o f c o u r s e , t h e

s u b j e c t o f t h i s s t u d y . H o w e v e r , a q u i c k

corollar y may be drawn by comparing

pro-U.N . p u b l i c i t y w it h t h e s t r a n g e c a s e

o f G e n e r a l V a s i l i e v .

Lieutenant General Alexandre Ph .

V a s i l i e v wa s t h e S o v i e t r e p r e s e n t a t i v e o n

t h e Un it ed Na tio ns M i l i t ar y S t a ff

Committe e from 1947 unti l the USSR

w i t h d r e w f r o m t h e c o m m i t t e e o n J a n u a r y

19, 1950 . T h i s f o r m e r c h a i r m a n o f t h eU.N . Military Staff Committee wast h e r e u p o n o r d e r e d t o N o r t h K o r e a w h e r e

h e w a s p l a c e d i n c o m m a n d o f a l l C h i n e s e

C o m m u n is t m o v e m e n t s a c r o s s t h e t h i r t y -

e i g h t h p a r a l l e l .

Th e V a s i l i e v c a s e h i s t o r y of

i n t e r n a t i o n a l d e c e i t b e g i n s w i t h U S . S t a t e

D e p a r t m e n t B u l l e t i n N u mb e r 4 4 2 A , d a t e d

August 3, 1947, titled, "Armin g the

United Natio ns ." On page 239 of this

o f f i c i a l d o c u m e n t o u r S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t

s a y s :

"On Apri l 30, 1947, Lieutena nt

General A . P h . V a s i l i e v , o f t h e R e d A r my ,

c h a i r m a n o f t h e M i l i t a r y S t a f f C o m m i t t e e

of th e United Nations , forwarded to

Trygve L i e , S e c r e t a r y - G e n e r a l , f o r

t r a n s m i s s i o n t o t h e S e c u r it y C o u n c i l , a

r e p o r t o f t h e M i l i t a r y S t a f f C o m m i t t e e

c o n t a i n i n g r e c o m m e n da t i o n s o n t h e

g e n e r a l p r i n c i p l e s governing t h e

organiz ation of the a rmed forces made

available to the Security Council by

m e m b e r N a t i o n s o f t h e U n i t e d N a t i o n s .

" A r t i c l e 4 3 o f t h e C h a r t e r , " t h i s r e p o r t

continues, "appea rs in Chapter VII,

(continued on pag e 2)

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VASILIEV (continued)

`Action with Respect to Threats to the

Peace, Breaches of the Peace, and Acts of

Aggression.' This article contains theundertaking assumed by members to

make military forces available to the

Security Council . "

Following a quotation of the text of

Article 43, this State Department report

continues :

"Authorization for the Security

Council to employ such forces iscontained in Article 42 . ° ' 6

Most Americans, of course, assume

that U.S. Army organization tables and

battle plans are prepared in the Pentagon

at the direction of the Congress .

The U.S. State Department, however,

reveals that war plans for the employment

of American soldiers are now prepared by

foreign generals under the direction of

Soviet Communists at the United Nations

military headquarters .

The spectacle of a Red Army general

drawing up plans for the assignment of

our soldiers in an "Armed UnitedNations" is a shocking expose of the

casual manner in which our government

has become party to gross violations of

the United States Constitution .

By following the spoor of General

Vasiliev it can be revealed how he applied

his plans for "Arming the UnitedNations ." The trail next leads to the

Pentagon .

On May 15, 1954 the Office of Public

Information, Department of Defense,released a paper titled, The Truth about

Soviet Involvement in the Korean War . Onpage five of this official intelligence digest

is the following information :

"One prisoner of war, a Major of North

Korean engineers, said that as the flow of

Russian equipment to Korea increased

during the period immediately preceding

the initial attack, the flow of Russian

advisors increased with it . All orders, he

said, came from these advisors, and he,

who spoke Russian, was given the job of

translating them into Korean .

"Many Russian `advisors' wereattached to the North Korean Armyadvance headquarters established in June,

1950. They wore civilian clothing, the

Major added, and it was forbidden to

address them by rank. They wereintroduced as `newspaper reporters' but

they had supreme authority . They took the

lead in making operational andmobilization plans, and in commanding

and manipulating troops . They treated the

Korean officers who were nominally their

chiefs, the Major said, `like their servants,

f i "Arming the United Nations," US. State

Department Bulletin 422A, August 3, 1947, page

239 .

or children . '

"The North Korean Major identified

two of these Russian Advisors' asLieutenant General Vasiliev and Colonel

Dolgin. Vasiliev, he said, apparently was

in charge of all movements across the

thirty-eighth parallel .

"Another prisoner interrogation report

identified Colonel Yun, a Russian who

spoke Korean haltingly, as advisor to the

Tank Command of the North Korean

Army in June, 1950 . It named as head of

communications along the frontier before

and during the initial attack a Russian

colonel named Gregor. This prisoner also

said he actually heard General Vasiliev

give the order to attack on June 25 ." '

This General Vasiliev is, of course, the

same Alexandre Ph . Vasiliev of the Red

Army who, as Chairman, U.N. Military

Staff Committee, directed the preparation

of plans for an "Armed United Nations . "

He later directed the Chinese hordes who

were let loose to murder United Nations

soldiers in Korea - including manythousands of Americans who were killed

or captured to be tortured in Chinese

Communist Prisoner of War cages inNorth Korea

Korea is a savage example of United

Nations "non-wars" in which scenario and

stage-management are under the exclusive

direction of professional internationalists

operating behind a "front" of national

militarists .

The stomach-churning case of General

Vasiliev constitutes grounds for American

victims of the Korean blood bath to bring

charges of mass murder against members

of the Security Council of the United

Nations .

This evidence strongly supports the

conviction of many U.S. citizens that the

Korean War was engineered by the United

Nations and the State Department so that

the supreme military authority of the U .N.

might be established by force of arms and

endorsed before the world . There can be

no more shocking evidence of UnitedNations cynicism than the concealed

duplicity of General Vasiliev; nor a more

terrible indictment of our own military

and political leadership .

It is ironic that Vasiliev was not in

violation of the high-sounding U.N.

Charter which, in paragraph 1, Chapter

XV, announces :

"In the performance of their duties the

Secretary-General and the staff shall not

seek or receive instructions from any other

authority external to the Organization .

They shall refrain from any action which

might reflect on their position asinternational officials responsible only to

The Truth about Soviet Involvement in the Korean

War DOD, Office of Public Information, May 15,

1954, page 5 .

2

the Organization .."" There is little question

that, as United Nations "advisor" to the

Chinese Communists, General Alexandre

Ph. Vasiliev of the Red Army was," . . .responsible only to the Organization"

There exists the rationale that Korea

"happened a long time ago" and theconditions which applied then do not

threaten Americans today . In rebuttal to

this specious argument it is pertinent now

to submit for examination two points of

evidence . The first is Senate Concurrent

Resolution Number Thirty-two,

introduced by Senator Joseph S . Clark of

Pennsylvania on April 8, 1965, requesting

that the President formulate as speedily as

possible "specific and detailed proposals

for the implementation of the foreign

policy objectives of the United States

regarding the establishment of an

international authority to keep the peace

under conditions of general and complete

disarmament;" secondly, the UnitedNations War in Viet Nam .

Resolution Number 32 reveals that our

Congress is seriously considering

enactment of the final tyranny by inserting

into federal statute the supra-government

provisions of the United Nations Charter,

i . e . :

(a) an International Disarmament

Organization,

(b) a permanent World Peace Force,

(c) World Tribunals for the peaceful

settlement of all international

disputes,

(d) other International Institutions

necessary for the enforcement of

world peace, and

(e) appropriate and reliable Financial

Arrangements for the support of

such peacekeeping machinery . '

It requires small knowledge of thesemantics of professional internationalists

to understand that Resolution 32 is to be

the legal machinery for establishing

United Nations control over U .S. national

defensive armaments and atomic

weapons, and to make absolute the U .N

power to wage war and make peace ; t o

transfer American military personnel

under direct United Nations Command ; to

create a world-wide bureaucracy enabling

the United Nations to control all of the

world's people and resources, and lastly,

to establish a United Nations revenue

bureau with the authority to directly tax

all Americans so as to "reliably finance" a

one-world United Nations government .

All of these proposed legislative-

executive acts are in contradiction to the

limited and delegated powers enumerated

(continued on page 3)

" U.N . Charter, Article 100 .

" Senate Concurrent Resolution 32, 89th Congress,

April 8, 1965 .

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VASILIEV (continued)

in the United States Constitution . The

Constitution is very explicit about the

powers of making war, keeping peace, the

jurisdiction of the courts and the methods

of amending those powers . Nowhere in

the Constitution is to be found the power

of relegating those functions to any other

body, or to an international organization

of any kind .

I t i s apparent, therefore, t h a t

Resolution 32 springs, not from the

United States Constitution, but from the

United Nations Treaty agreement . I t i s

intended to strip away the public pretense

that the United Nations Charter is merely

a " t r e a t y ." The United Nations Charter is

to be proclaimed the "supreme law of the

land" by congressional statute, say its

supporters .

Senate hearings on this pending world

socialist legislation have been completed

and recorded in a public document titled,

"Planning for Peace . " " ' The testimony

contained therein represents largely the

views held by one-worlders, collectivists,

an d socialists who are governm ent

financed and/or supported by tax-exempt

foundations . There is a thin sprinkle of

opposition by citizen-backed organiza-

t i o n s . This "Minority opposition" is

intended to create the fiction that the

h e a r i n g s c o n s t i t u t e a n a t i o n a l c o n s e n s u s o f

opinion and agreement . Random extracts

o f t e s t i m o n y , d e l i b e r a t e l y o r g a n i z e d i n t h e

order of the five principles presented in

Resolution Thirty-two, illustrate the

technique :

l . International Disarmament Organization :

Adrian Fisher, Deputy Director, Arms

Control and Disarmament Agency (pages

135 and 136) "We are, however, giving

continuing study to the kinds of

organization which might monitor a

comprehensive test ban treaty, a freeze

on the numbers and characteristics of

strategic bombers and missiles, major

arms reduction measures and

comprehensive disarmament . . . These

s t e p s w o u l d c l e a r l y r e q u i r e c o n s i d e r a b l e

change in the existing practice and

a t t i t u d e s o f n a t i o n s . "

2 . Permanent World Peace Force :

Professor Emile Benoit, Americans for

Democratic Action (page 104)

"The basic unsolved issues underlying

disarmament ar e e s s e n t i a l l y those

i n v o l v e d i n t h e s u b s t i t u t i o n o f a s u p r a -

n a t i o n a l inspection an d defense

establishment, for the national defense

e s t a b l i s h m e n t s , a n d t h e t r a n s f e r t o t h i s

supra-national inspection and defense

""'Planning for Peace", Hearings before the

Committee on Foreign Relations, USS, 89th

Congress, on Sen . Con. Res. 32, May 11-1 2,

1965 .

e s t a b l i s h m e n t o f t h e e s s e n t i a l o b l i g a t i o n s

to enforce not only the continued

d i s a r m a m e n t o f t h e n a t i o n - s t a t e s b u t a l s o

t h e i r c o n t i n u e d p o l i t i c o - m i l i t a r y s e c u r i t y

- i n s h o r t, a s ubs t i tut i o n o f s upr a-n at i o n al

s e c u r i t y g u a r a n t e e s f o r s e c u r i t y b a s e d o n

t h e n a t i o n ' s o w n d e f e n s e f o r c e s . " Shelby

Southard, a s s i s t a n t d i r e c t o r , C o o p e r a t i v e

League of the USA (page 152) "A

p e a c e k e e p i n g f o r c e i s n e e d e d t h a t w i l l b e

responsive to the collective moral

conscience of freedom-loving people

everywhere - o n e t h a t w i l l a c t f o r a l l o f

them :

Douglas MacArthur I I , A s s i s t a n t

Secretary for Congressional Relations,

f o r t h e S e c r e t a r y o f S t a t e ( p a g e 5 )

"The earmarking of standby forces for

emergency U.N . service by th e

Scandinavian countries, Canada, and

o t h e r s i s a n e x a m p l e o f t h e k i n d o f s t e p s

which are contributing significantly to

the U .N .'s capacity to keep the peace

w i t h i n t h e l i m i t s o f w h a t n a t i o n s a r e n o w

w i l l i n g t o u n d e r t a k e . "

Honorable Joseph D . T y d i n g s , United

S t a t e s S e n a t o r f r o m t h e s t a t e o f M a r y l a n d

( p a g e 1 7 )

" U n t i l c a l l e d i n t o s e r v i c e b y t h e U n i t e d

Nations, these units would be financed

and controlled by t h e i r own

governments . "

3 . World Tribunals :

Harlan Cleveland, A s s i s t a n t S e c r e t a r y o f

State for International Organization

A f f a i r s ( p a g e 1 2 6 ) " T h e g o a l i s c l e a r . . . I t

is to work everlastingly at the tough,

practical jobs of strengthening U .N .

machinery for keeping the peace and for

peaceful settlement . . . of extending the

r e a c h o f t h e i n t e r n a t i o n a l C o u r t . . . "

C Maxwell Stanley, United World

F e d e r a l i s t s ( p a g e 5 8 )

"Peace demands a world-wide system of

j u s t i c e , l a w , a n d o r d e r . "

4 . O t h e r I n t e r n a t i o n a l I n s t i t u t i o n s :

Honorable Jacob K . D a v i t s , U n i t e d S t a t e s

S e n a t o r f r o m t h e s t a t e o f N e w Y o r k ( p a g e

107)

" F i r s t , m o s t p e o p l e a g r e e t h a t s o m e t i m e ,

somehow, somewhere, there will be an

i n t e r n a t i o n a l p e a c e k e e p i n g o r g a n i z a t i o n ,

supra-national in character, which will

probably be built upon the new concept

o f r e g i o n a l i s m i n t h e a f f a i r s o f m a n k i n d ,

which is very quickly developing right

under our very eyes - and we are

undoubtedly going through a stage of

t r a n s i t i o n f r o m n a t i o n a l i s m , p e r h a p s t h e

first really historic transition since

medieval times which saw the birth of

nations, the beginning of the birth of

n a t i o n s , a n d n o w i n t o r e g i o n a l i s m . "

5 . Reliable Financial Arrangements :

Clark M Eichelberger, chairman,

Commission to Study the Organization

3

o f P e a c e ( p a g e 5 6 )

"My theory has been that the United

N a t i o n s m u s t h a v e s o v e r e i g n t y o f i t s o w n

a n d i t m u s t h a v e i t s o w n t a x i n g p o w e r . I t

m u s t h a v e t h e p o w e r o f t h e p u r s e . "

The shocking contempt for th e

Constitution and for the American people

revealed in this sampling of official and

private political philosophy is a shrill

warning signal of impending United

Nations world tyranny . Unless the

r e s p e c t i v e s t a t e l e g i s l a t u r e s a c t q u i c k l y t o

a s s e r t t h e i r s o v e r e i g n t y , t h e p e o p l e w i l l b e

committed to support and obey the one-

world government plans of th e

internationalists in Washington . Senator

John P. Sparkman (D-Ala . ) , for example,

is wholly favorable to dismantling the

United States military establishment .

Sparkman's anti-American conviction

was identified as early as July 21, 1958,

when, practically single-handed, he

succeeded in passing a Senate resolution

calling for a permanent United Nations

p o l i c e f o r c e .

Senator William Jenner denounced the

manner in which the resolution was

slipped through the Senate by Sparkman

and warned that "the plan is to build up

U.N . military power step by step and cut

down U. S . m i l i t a r y p o w e r s t e p b y s t e p .

"How long," he asked, "before troops

from Poland and Czechoslovakia or

Indonesia will be posted at key points on

American soil?"

The "Planning for "Peace" testimony

before the U . S . Senate Foreign Relations

Committee has a direct bearing on the

conduct of the United Nations war in Viet

Nam as the provisions of the SEATO

agreement reveal .

The Southeast Asia Treaty

Organiz ation (SEATO), signed at Manila

September 8, 1954, binds the signatory

n a t i o n s , i n c l u d i n g t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s , t o t h e

United--Nations Organization -and--to the

provisions of the United Nations Charter .

" R e i t e r a t i n g t h e i r f a i t h i n t h e p u r p o s e s a n d

in agreement with the principles set forth

in the Charter of the United Nations,"

states Article one of SEATO, thep a r t i c i p a n t s " u n d e r t a k e t o r e f r a i n i n t h e i r

international relations from the threat or

use of force in any manner inconsistent

with the purposes of th e United

Nations . " "

Under Article IV, paragraph one, the

SEATO agreement further directs that,

"measures taken under this paragraph

shall be immediately reported to the

Security Council of the United Nations . "

It should be noted parenthetically that

NATO and CENTO treaties contain

identical wording. A

( c o n t i n u e d o n p a g e 4 )

" Southeast Asia Treaty Organization, Article 1 .

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VASILIEV (continued)

SEATO is, therefore, a "front"

organization or regional arrangement for

the United Nations military comman d in

New York City and Articles 53 and 54 of

the U .N. Charter a pply as they did in

Korea ; i . e . : "The Security Council shall at

a l l t i m e s b e k e p t f u l l y i n f o r m e d . " 1 2

Operational control of the U.N .

Security Council, the U .N . military

h e a d q u a r t e r s , i s e x e r c i s e d b y i t s e x e c u t i v e

officer, who als o holds the title Qf

" U n d e r s e c r e t a r y f o r P o l i t i c a l a n d S e c u r i t y

Council Affairs . " T h i s e x e c u t i v e o f f i c e r i s

t h e c u s t o d i a n o f a l l U n i t e d S t a t e s p l a n s f o r

self-defense and he controls all military

f o r c e s p l a c e d a t t h e d i s p o s a l o f t h e U n i t e d

Nations in consonance with U.N . C h a r t e r

Articles 44, 45, and 46 . The Under-

s e c r e t a r y o f P o l i t i c a l a n d S e c u r i t y C o u n c i l

A f f a i r s i s e a s i l y t h e m o s t p o w e r f u l m a n i n

the United Nations .

The individual now holding this U .N .

military post, as w i l l be noted

subsequently, is Vladimir P . Suslov, a

Soviet Communist . Suslov is also th e th ird

member of the U.N . Marxist "troika,"

consisting of U Thant, Ralph Bunche and

Suslov .

The authority exercised by the U .N .

Security Council in the Viet Nam "war of

liberation" has been confirmed by the

administration in Washington . OnTuesday, July 13, 1965, President Johnson

told the American people that American

troops are dying in Viet Nam becaus e of

our commitment to the SEATOagreement. " . . .we expect to keep that

commitment," said the President . "Our

n a t i o n a l h o n o r i s a t s t a k e .""

The a cc ur ac y o f t he P re s id en t 's

statement is beyond question, for Article

2 5 , U n i t e d N a t i o n s C h a r t e r , s t a t e s :

"The Members of the United Nations

a g r e e t o a c c e p t a n d c a r r y o u t t h e d e c i s i o n s

of the Security Council in accordance

with the present Charter . "

America's soldier sons in Viet Nam

are, therefore, again committed to a

United Nations "no win" war under the

same kind of internationally-programmed

s c e n a r i o a s e x i s t e d i n t h e K o r e a n c o n f l i c t .

The men and the system which has

t r a n s f e r r e d t h e U. S

. m i l i t a r y e s t a b l i s h - m e n t

t o U n i t e d N a t i o n s c o n t r o l w i l l b e c r i t i c a l l y

examined in succeeding chapters .

AExhibit - NATO "The North Atlantic Treaty"

1 z U.N . Charter, Chapter VIII, "Regional

Arrangements," Article 54 .

"Increased Cong Action may force Step- up by

U S . " , Denver Post, Wednesday, July 14, 1965 .

UNITED NATIONS ONE-WORLD GOVERNMENTA m e r i c a n s m u s t h a l t t h e b u i l d - u p o f a U n i t e d N a t i o n s A r m y , o r w e w i l l s o o n f i n d o u r s e l v e s

s u p e r v i s e d b y s o c i o l o g i c a l d r o v e r s o n a o n e - w o r l d a n i m a l f a r m .

My i n t e r e s t in United Nations

cabalistic nuance began in Korea where I

observed the American flag and the

United Nations banner flying side by side

at the Pusan headquarters, Supreme

United Nations Command, Korea . I t was

also in Korea that, for the first time, I

observed American dead being buried

u n d e r a f o r e i g n d e v i c e i n a U n i t e d N a t i o n s

cemetery .

This curiosity increased during the

course of my struggle to comply with

military orders which directed th e

establishment of pro-American troop

educational programs in Germany . These

military directives, I found, were

sabotaged by concealed forces in the

Pentagon and in the Department of State .

I was to discover later that these policy

moves originated in the United Nations

under authority of the United Nations

Charter .

Additional evidence of a strange

ambivalence regarding official statements

concerning troop information objectives

and th e field application of those

principles was revealed during the course

of th e Senate "military muzzling"

investigations which sprang from this

struggle . It then became apparent that

h i d d e n p o l i c y p l a n n e r s a t a n i n t e r n a t i o n a l

level were in fact directing a propaganda

campaign which opposed the principles

s e t f o r t h i n t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s C o n s t i t u t i o n ;

the Constitution which I have sworn to

"defend and preserve . "

Confronted with the divided allegiance

demanded by the new, military morality I

determined to trace the origins of this

mischief and to make it m y mission to

seek the means for correcting the

misdirection of a rmed forces policy and

which would end the exploitation of

America's soldier sons in international

adventures .

The information gleaned during the

course of my personal investigations, and

the situations which produced such

evidence, are presented in this book . T h i s

compendium of international deceit is

drawn from actions in which I was

p e r s o n a l l y i n v o l v e d o r w h i c h a r e t h e r e s u l t

of related research and examination of

public and private documents .

T h e f o l l o w i n g f a c t o r s w i l l b e d i s c l o s e d

as having a material bearing on the abuse

of American fighting forces and the

undermining of the United States

Constitution :

a. The United Nations Organization is

t h e p r o d u c t o f i n t e r n a t i o n a l i s t s w h o s e

o b j e c t i v e i s S o v i e t - s t y l e c o n t r o l o v e r

the world's people and resources .

4

b. A prime requisite for the achievement

of one-world government under the

U.N . flag is United Nations command

of U . S . m i l i t a r y f o r c e s .

c . Technique f or achieving U.N .

Command of the U .S. military

establishment include U .N . manipu-

lation of United States government

agencies, establishment of inter-

locking propaganda media, and the

employment of politically oriented

agents who are in sympathy with one-

world government policy .

The purpose of the disclosure is two-

f o l d ; f i r s t , t o i n d i c t p u b l i c l y t h e U n i t e d

Nations Organization and, second, to

illustrate the importance of immediate

action to resolve this condition of dire

peril .

A major objective of the work is th epresentation of a Constitution-cen tered

c i t i z e n a c t i o n p l a n w h i c h w i l l l e a d t o t h e

reestablishment of the United States

Constitution as the "Supreme Law of the

Land ." The concluding portion of the

book will, therefore, be concerned with a

proposal to insure that the limits of the

U S . C o n s t i t u t i o n a r e r e s p e c t e d w i t h i n t h e

b o r d e r s o f t h e s o v e r e i g n s t a t e s .

I t w i l l b e s h o w n t h a t A m e r i c a n s c a n a c t

t o a v e r t t e r m i n a l p a s s a g e o f o u r C h r i s t i a n

nation into a Soviet twilight zone under

the United Nations banner .

O f c o u r s e , t h e P l a n n e r s t e l l u s t h a t t h e

United Nations is the hope of the world .

But we know that the United Nations is

not what U .N . p r o p a g a n d i s t s s a y i t i s .

We know that the United Nations is not

what U .N . supporters th ink it is .

T h e U n i t e d N a t i o n s i s w h a t t h e a r t i c l e s

of the U.N . C h arter say it is :

The United Nations is a n

agency for imposing a one-world

govern-ment on the nations of the

world ; by peaceful me ans if

possible ; by force and violence if

necessary .

The law of self-preservation demands

that Americans learn as much as possible

about this international organization ; an

agency which is geared for a take-over of

the United States . We must know its

o r i g i n s ; w e m u s t s t u d y i t s c h a r t e r , a n d w e

must examine its effect on our national

p o l i c y .

Our study will be a candid examination

of a new dimension in warfare . I t w i l l

show that the weapons employed by our

enemy are duplicity, subversion, and

treason .

However, before exploring the events

which placed our soldiers under U .N .

(continued on page 5)

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UNVEILING (continue d)

command, it may be pertinent to explain

why many army men have elected to

become personally involved in this

psycho-political war . Perhaps the most

d i r e c t m e a n s o f d e f i n i n g o u r p o s i t i o n i s t o

present the oath each officer takes upon

being commissioned into the United

States Army .

T h i s w a s , a n d i s t h e m i l i t a r y c r e e d :

" I , . . . , do solemnly swear that I will

s u p p o r t a n d d e f e n d t h e C o n s t i t u t i o n o f t h e

U n i t e d S t a t e s a g a i n s t a l l e n e m i e s , f o r e i g n

and domestic ; T h a t I w i l l b e a r t r u e f a i t h

and allegiance to the same ; That I take

t h i s o b l i g a t i o n f r e e l y , w i t h o u t a n y m e n t a l

reservation or purpose of evasion, and

that I will well and faithfully discharge

the duties of the office on which I am

a b o u t t o e n t e r . So help me, God . "

A personal reason for resistance to a

United Nations take-over lies in the fact

that my ancestors helped to establish in

this bountiful land, "the best form of

government ever devised by the hand of

man. "

We must not relinquish the heritage of

freedom so dearly won by the sweat and

b l o o d o f o u r f o r e f a t h e r s .

A n d , b e c a u s e r e s i s t a n c e t o c o l l e c t i v i s m

i s n o t a p o p u l a r p o s t u r e i n A m e r i c a t o d a y ,

I o f f e r m y c r e d e n t i a l s o f c i t i z e n s h i p .

My great-great-great-great grandfather

was William Roberts of North Carolina .

William initiated our family tradition of

army service during the American War for

Independence .

Private Roberts, who was born in

Connecticut, enlisted in Sharp's

Company, Tenth Regiment of NorthCarol ina i n Novem ber 10, 1778, and

served throughout the remainder of the

Revolutionary War .

This Colonial farmer, Continental

soldier, and American pioneer now lies

buried in Washington Presbyterian

Church Cemetery near Knoxville,

Tennessee

Another lineal ancesto r, John Brown

(sire to my great-great grandmother,

Alice) also served in the army of General

George Washington . Records of the

Tennessee Society, Daughters of the

American Revolutio n, show that John was

a Private First Class in Captain Shelby's

Company of North Carolina Volunteers .

A collateral ancestor, Josiah Roberts,

saw s ervice in th e War of 1812 . J o s i a h

enlisted from St . C l a i r C o u n t y , I l l i n o i s i n

1811 and ma rched w ith the f amous Tom

Benton Regiment . He was in manyengagements, including Horseshoe Bend

and Tippecanoe .

This United States soldier now lies in

Robert's Cemetery, Honey Bend( f o r m e r l y R o b e r t ' s L a n d i n g ) , I l l i n o i s .

My great-grandf ather, John Corwin

Roberts, was a veteran of both the

Mexican War and the Civil War .

John, who was born in MarionCounty, Tennessee, m ig ra ted to

Montgomery Count y, Illinois in 1842 .

He enlisted for the Mexican War on

August 11, 1847 at Hills boro, Ill inois

when seventeen years old and served

with Troop H, U.S. Regiment ofMounted Rifles .

John was wounded at Chapultepec,

Mexico and was subsequently discharged

at Jefferson Barracks, Missouri on

August 26, 1848 in the grade of sergeant .

Recalled to active duty on August 8,

1862, John served as First Sergeant,

Company F, 126th Regiment of Illinois

Volunteers throughout the Civil War . He

was discharged at Pine Bluff, Arkansas

on July 12, 1865 .

John Corwin Roberts, soldier, farmer,

preacher, now r e s t s in Hopewell

C e m e t e r y , L i t c h f i e l d , I l l i n o i s .

The father of my grandmother Anna

was less fortunate in the War Between

t h e S t a t e s . C h a r l e s E . L a n c as t e r , a pr i v a te

in Company E 118th Regiment ofPennsylvania Volunteers, was captured

by Confederate forces at Gainsville,

Georg ia on June 2, 1864 . He died the

following October at Andersonville

Prison and is buried in Plot Number

10548, Andersonvill e National

Cemetery .

T o b r i n g t h i s m i l i t a r y l i n e a g e q u i c k l y

to th e present, I will c onc lude th e Roberts'

s e r v i c e r e c o r d w i t h t h a t o f m y b r o t h e r , t h e

late Major Richard A . Roberts, United

S t a t e s A i r F o r c e , R e s e r v e .

Richard volunteered for the Army Air

Corps shortly after Pearl Harbor . Upon

g r a d u a t i o n f r o m p i l o t t r a i n i n g h e e l e c t e d

to fly combat missions with General

Chennault's Flying Tigers in China .

Lieutenant Roberts' P-40 was shot

down by Japanese Zero fire overJapanese-held China on his twenty-third

mission . Weeks later Chinese partisans

carried him back to his base at Chun

K i n g o n a l i t t e r .

He was discharged in the ra nk of

c a p t a i n u p o n t e r m i n a t i o n o f h o s t i l i t i e s -

sole survivor of his original volunteer

group .

This personal data may ser ve to

identify the origins of my political

convictions . . . One hundred eighty-five

years of army service is firm evidence

that members of my family are motivated

by no "ism" . . .except Americanism . Th is

family motivation also explains my

compelling reason to examine ani n t e r n a t i o n a l o r g a n i z a t i o n w h i c h d i r e c t l y

threatens the p r i n c i p l e s to which

generations of Americans have dedicated

th eir liv es, th eir fortunes, and th eir sac red

honor .

The U.N . C h a r t e r i s s u c h a f a n t a s t i c

5

d o c u m e n t t h a t i t m u s t b e o f f i r s t c o n c e r

to establish a criterion for credibilit

Perhaps this can best be done b

identifying the founding fathers of th

improbable organization .

Many prominent members of Ugovernment departments were involv

in the preparation of the United Natio

Charter . To mention a few :

Dean Acheson, Secretary of Stat

Acheson, on December 22, 1941, becaone of fourteen "intellectua l elit

selected by Secretary of State Cordel

Hull to serve on a Presidential Adviso

Committee on Post-War Foreign Poli

which was organized to prepare fo

e f f e c t i v e p a r t i c i p a t i o n i n t h e s o l u t i o n

"vast and complicated problems o

international relations which w i

confront" the United States and the wor

after "the final defeat of the forces

aggression . "

In a letter to President Franklin

R o o s e v e l t e x p l a i n i n g t h e r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e

of this United Na tio ns Pl ann i

Commission, Hull said, "I t ( t

Committee) will, accordingly, work in t

i n s e p a r a b l y i n t e r r e l a t e d f i e l d s o f g e n e r

security, limitation of armaments, soun

international economic relationships, a

o t h e r p h a s e s o f i n t e r n a t i o n a l c o o p e r a t i o

the implementation of which is essentia

to enduring world peace and to econom

progress . "

All research, interdepartment

government agency coordination, an

international cooperation was set up i

the Department of State "or under it

leadership . "

In addition to himself as chairman

Cordell Hull l i s t e d th e followi

members f o r h i s supra-governmen

" b r a i n t r u s t " :

Mr. Sumner Welles (Under-Secretary State) Vice Chairman

Mr. Norman H. Davis (President

Council on - Foreign Relations an

Chairman American Red Cross)

Mr. Myron C . T a y l o r

Mr. Dean Acheson (Assista nt Secretaro f S t a t e )

Mr. Hamilton Fish Armstrong (EditorForeign Affairs)

Mr. Adolf A. Berle, Jr . (Assista

S e c r e t a r y o f S t a t e )

Mr. Isaiah Bowma n (President, Joh

Hopkins University)

Mr . Benjamin V Cohen (Gener

Counsel, National Power Poli

Committee)

Mr. Herbert Feis (Department of StatAdvisor on International Economi

Relations)

Mr. Green N . Hackworth (Department o

State Legal Advisor)

Mr. Harry C. Hopkins (Chief of thDepartment of State Division o

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ONE-WORLD (continued)

Commercial Policy)

Mrs. Anne O'Hare McCormick (EditorialS t a f f , The New York Times)

Mr. Leo Pasvolsky (Special Assistant tothe Secretary of State and Chief of the

Department's Division of SpecialResearch)'

On or about December 28, 1941, the

President wrote on this letter: " I heartily

approve . F.D.R. "Mr. Adolf A . Berle, Jr. told the House

Committee on Un-American Activities on

August 30, 1948, that Acheson was," . . .head of the pro-Russian group in the

State Department." Acheson is credited

with mak ing important contributions to

the plans for the United Nations, and, "in

1945 worked successfully for Congress-

ional approval of the Bretton Woods

Monetary Agreement." Major General

Patrick Hurley, former Ambassador to

China, linked Acheson, in December,

1945, with a group in the "State

Department which wanted to arm theChinese Communists and bring about the

defeat of Chiang Kai-shek ." Because he

had been associated with Alger Hiss,

accused of communist affiliations by

Whittaker Chambers, Acheson wasobligated to undergo questioning by the

Senate Foreign Relations Committee as to

his connections with Donald and Alger

Hiss and h is law firm's activity in the

international field." Alger Hiss was the

principal assistant to Dean Acheson, who

came to the firm defense of Hiss during

Hiss's trial for espionage . '

Harry Dexter White, Assistant

Secretary of the Treasury . Records of the

Federal Bureau of Investigation show that

White was a member of the Perlo

Communist cell in Washington, D .C. and

an espionage agent for the Soviets . White

represented the Treasury Department on

eighteen inter-departmental and inter-

national bodies.' He was the chiefarchitect of the U.N. International

Monetary Fund at Bretton Woods and at

San Francisco. White, identified by

Whittaker Chambers as a Soviet

espionage agent, is cited extensively in

many U.S. Senate investigations and

reports dealing with Communist activity

and subversion in the United States .

Harold Glasser, Treasury Department .

This Soviet Agent was set by espionage

leader Bykov to "control" Harry Dexter

White . ' Glasser was the Treasury

Department spokesman on the affairs of

UNRRA* "throughout its w hole life" and

"Postwar Foreign Policy Preparation 1939-1945,"

Department o f State Publication #3580, General

Foreign Policy Series 15, Released February

1950, pages 63-64 .

2Current Biography, 1949, pages 3-5 .

The U.N. Record, Chesly Manly, page 106 .

he had a "predominant voice" in

determining which countries should

receive aid and which should not . Glasser

was a constant consultant to DeanAcheson on UNRRA problems' and was a

member of the Perlo Communist cell in

Washington .

Nathan Gregory Silvermaster, Treasury

Department, Elizabeth Bentley, for years a

top courier for the Rus sian Secret Police in

America, identified Silvermaster as th e

head of the "Silvermaster Soviet spy ring

in Washington, D.C . " He was as sociated

with Harry Dexter White at Bretton Woods

and is cited in the House Committee on

Un-American Activities hearings onEspionage . Silvermaster's testimony

before the USS Internal Security Sub-

committee regarding his espionage

activities in the United States comprises

175 pages of interrogation and exhibits . '

Virginius Frank Coe, Treasury Depart-

ment. Coe was technical secretary at theBretton Woods Conference in 1944 and

Secretary of the International Monetary

Fund establish ed by Harry Dexter White .

This former Director of the Division of

Monetary Research was named in the

original Berle notes from Chambers as

involved in the Communist underground .

He was a member of the Harold WareCommunist Cell. Coe was Secretary of the

international Monetary Fund from 1946 to

1952. He, also, took refuge in the Fifth

Amendment under questioning .

Victor Perlo, Treasury Department. A

"Ware" Communist cell member, Perlo

later headed the "Perlo" Communist cell in

Washington. He entered the Government

in 1938 via th e Department of Commerce .

His job was to accumulate and present

facts for basic economic decisions by

Secretary of Commerce Harry Hopkins .

Perlo later transferred to the Division of

Monetary Research wh ose directors were

Harry Dexter White, followed by V . Frank

Coe and Harold Glasser . He l e f t

government service in 1947 and authored

the book, American Imperialism .

William L. Ullman, Treasury Depart-

ment. Ullman was a member of theAmerican Delegation at the U.N. -

spawning San Francisco meeting, as an

"assistant to Mr. White . " He hadpreviously assisted Harry Dexter White at

Bretton Woods. Ullman was a perennial

house guest of Nathan Gregory

Silvermaster and was the chief

photographer of stolen government

documents for th e Silvermaster espionage

ring. Ullman, then a Major, Material and

° Witness, by Whittaker Chambers, page 430 .

* UNRRA (United Nations R elief and

Rehabilitation Administration) .

Report, USS Internal Security Subcommittee,

April 14, 1953 .

6"I nterlocking Subversion in Government

Departments," USS ISS, Part 3, April 16, 1953 .

6

Service Division, Army Air Corps,

Headquarters the Pentagon, passed date o

D-Day through Elizabeth Bentley, to the

Soviets . '

Irving Kaplan, Treasury Department

Kaplan was the chief advisor to the

Military Government of Germany onfinancial and economic matters. Hereceived an "E" rating from Harold

Glasser. He was associated with both the

Perlo and Silvermaster cells and was

employed by David Weintraub in theUnited Nations Division of Economic

Stability and Development from February,

1946 through November, 1952. TheFederal Bureau of Investigation has

submitted eighteen adverse reports on

Kaplan .

Laurence Duggan, Department of

State. Duggan was head of the LatinAmerican Division of the State

Department and was recruited into the

Soviet espionage apparatus by Hede

Massing . '

Noel Field . Department of State . Field

headed the Western European Division,

State Department . He, also, was recruited

into Soviet espionage work by Hede

Massing.' Field disappeared behind the

Iron Curtain during the Alger Hiss trial .

Henry Julian Wadleigh, Department of

State. Wadleigh was head of the Trades

Agreement Division, Department of State

During the Hiss Trial he confessed to

being a member of the Bykov-Chambers-

Hiss Soviet espionage group .

Joh n Carter Vincent, Department of

State. Vincent was Chief of the Chinese

Affairs Division . He was identified as a

Communist in hearings conducted by the

United States Senate Internal Security

Subcommittee." Vincent was a member of

the American Delegation at San Francisco

David Weintraub, Department of State

Weintraub was head of the Office of

Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation

Operations . He w as a k ey figure in the

1952 Senate investigations of communism

in the United Nations." Weintraub

occupied a unique position in setting up

the structure of Communist penetration in

governmental agencies by individuals

who have been identified by witnesses as

underground agents of the CommunistParty.

There are many more similar cases . A l l

of these Government Department

employees contributed to the authorship of

the United Nations Charter . And, all were

agents for International Communism .

Web of Subversion, by James Burnham, page

172

" "Institute of Pacific Relations," USS ISS, page

403"I PR," USS ISS, pages 235-237 .

" ' "I PR," USS ISS, page 403 .