ISBN 1-904997-00-7 ____________ GB£10.29 / US$18.40

Contents (reduced to the main points)

Forewords

Key 1: Socialism, and fabian societies

Key 2: The Council on Foreign Relation (CFR)

Chapter I: The two sides of Henry Kissinger
A suspected staff sergeant in Oberammergau — A star at Harvard, then in the State Department — From Moscow or from Peking? — The ODRA network — The secret link with Hanoi and Peking — With the compliments of the Marxist analysts — Some strange subordinates and advisors — The Kissinger Associates agency.

Chapter II: The Rigging of a war against Iraq
The role of Abram Shulsky — the disseminators in the service of the OSP.

The advance to war against Iraq
The war against Iraq approaches — Iraqi opposition — The weapons of mass destruction which do not exist — History is faltering! — The Czechs discreetly... — For Tony Blair, getting rid of Saddam Hussein is a “moral act” — In Europe only one voter in five ‘chose’ war — The darker side of a ‘European’ resolution — A relocation of bases — The CFR rehabilitates the communists — The CFR attacks France — Iraq, Sharon and the Pentagon — The American Establishment against Iran — The jump into the unknown.

Chapter III: Who surrounds Bush and why?
Rigged reports and hidden truths
A “family” rift for the first time — The Bush team at the watershed of a term in office — The judeo-christian coalition is no longer a myth — Two internationalist mainstays around G.W.Bush - In Bush’s entourage a certain activism... — Elliot Abrams’ blunder reveals the discord in the CFR — Seymour Hersh: ‘J’accuse’ (Richard Perle)! — “Business” with the Saudis and Peking — The doctoring of Tony Blair’s reports — Return to misinformation on the subject of gassing the Kurds at Halabja — When Moscow was arming Saddam Hussein — The Ides of March and the “divine mission” of G.W.Bush.

Chapter IV: The Rockingham Operation

Appendices:
1 Kissinger & K.A. / 2 Gassing of the Kurds at Halabja: misinformation / 3 Report from the CIA obtained by Senator Robert Graham

Index

ISBN 1-904997-01-5 _____________ GB£ 10.29 / US$18.40

Contents (reduced to the main points)

Forewords

PART 1 – Key No. 3
The secret history of the Bilderberg Group
What was the Bilderberg Group, and what were its aims? - Congressman John Rarick revealed in 1971… - How to describe him as a person - Sensible advice from Maxim Litvinov - The part played by Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi - Members of the inner circle reveal themselves in July 1940 - The Assassination of General W. Sikorski - Western Europe, springboard of European Federalism (1945-1955) - Monnet, Inventor of the European Community - The Common Market gets under way - Organising step by step - The Left, in the shadow of the Cold War - Eisenhower and Juin meet in secret - An unpublished text by Robert Schuman - The Jean Monnet Committees are energised - Who financed Europe, from the Common Market to Maastricht?

PART 2
Media campaigns to dethrone a prince
The Lockheed Affair, screen for a well-organised campaign of blackmail - Understanding how things worked - First steps in a “Europeist” offensive - The techniques of infiltration.

PART 3
The advance of the Europe of the stateless
Names to conjure with in East-West “détente” - Détente with the USSR - Jean Monnet’s succession is assured - Invisible government - Jacques Delors, President of the EEC (1985-1995) - The path taken by a Europeist - Europe controlled by the Techno-democrats - The Euro deadlock - A repeat of the evasion of 1984? - The European clones of Funk, Schacht, Déat… - What an annual Bilderberg meeting is like - Warnings by Senator Jesse helms - The reason why the media kept quiet is revealed by David Rockefeller

PART 4
European deadlock
Tony Blair tries to find a way out - Jacques Chirac: “From now on the nation exists outside the State” - Michel Rocard: “Holding out against the new American Empire”? - The coming hegemony - The Neutralisation of Nato - Confirmation by the Inner Circle - Economic implantation in France.

Appendices

1 Declaration handed to Marshal Pétain on 7 July 1940
2 The American Godfathers of the Bilderberg Group
3 The Bilderberg Group Executive in 1977 and 1978
4 The Bilderberg Group 2001
5 The International Advisory Board of the CFR
6 The French Participants at Bilderberg (1955-62)
7 Executive Committee of the Fabian Society 1978-79
8 The Day General de Gaulle gave his Approval to the Idea of a World Government
••• The socialist origin of Europe
9 An open letter to a “certain kind of Europe”
10 “The Europe of the Regions
11 The French Section of the Trilateral Commission
12 The Rule of Silence
13 The Ambiguity of the Race to the American Presidency

Bibliography

Index

ISBN 1-904997-02-3 _____________ GB£ 15.95 / US$ 29.95

Table of Contents

Photographs and Documents between pages 33 and 38, 65 and 70, 97 and
100, 129 and 140, 161 and 164, 193 and 206, 225 and 228, 289 and 296,
410 and 411, 417 and 440

Preface by Vladimir Bukovsky

Introduction by General André Bach

Foreword

Chapter 1
1.1 - “Delius” and “Kent” tell the same story
1.2 - “Delius” and Operation Max.
1.3 - Müller organises “Sleepers” in March 1945
1.4 - Confirmation by a certain Mr Kent
1.5 - A Moscow trial in Paris

Chapter 2
2.1 - Key to a meteoric rise
2.2 - The curious “suicide” of Hitler’s niece
2.3 - In the shadow of Reinhard Heydrich
2.4 - Heydrich’s wife describes the “coup” of 9 March 1933

Chapter 3
3.1 - The rise of the Bavarians
3.2 - A frequently underrated situation
3.3 - Müller is challenged, but promoted
3.4 - The curious case of Colonel Walther Nicolai
3.5 - First steps towards the Pact of 1939

Chapter 4
4.1 - The police versus the army, in Berlin and Moscow
4.2 - Heydrich and Müller become forgers
4.3 - Massacre in the Soviet Union
4.4 - The dismissal of the German Army High Command
4.5 - Nicolai’s spy ring again

Chapter 5
5.1 - Soviet networks under Gestapo Müller’s nose
5.2 - A string of infiltrated agents
5.3 - The legal and illegal apparatus of the USSR in Germany
5.4 - Poland, first victim of the alliance

Chapter 6
6.1 - Manhunts and the Jewish question
6.2 - Joint Gestapo and NKVD units
6.3 - Müller and the Jewish question
6.4 - Some little-known facts
6.5 - Extension into France

Chapter 7
7.1 - Heinrich Müller and the Red Orchestra
7.2 - Who was protecting Greta Kuckhoff?
7.3 - A revealing analysis
7.4 - The game played by Himmler, Bormann and Kaltenbrunner
7.5 - An Austrian heads the administration

Chapter 8
8.1 - Playing a double game to serve the enemy
8.2 - The silence of the “expert”
8.3 - Behind Max and the others: General V.S. Abakumov
8.4 - The Sonderkommando confronts the Red Orchestra
8.5 - Mysterious breakouts, but the jailers go unpunished
8.6 - Interrogators give away more than their prisoners

Chapter 9
9.1 - Viktor Abakumov on the line
9.2 - The birth of Hacke
9.3 - Defector Michel Goleniewski’s testimony
9.4 - The Spetsburo intervenes
9.5 - “Pete” Bagley listens to Piotr Deriabin

Chapter 10
10.1 - The Red Three
10.2 - The strange motorcade to Moscow
10.3 - The Sonderkommando crosses into the East
10.4 - Viktor Abakumov at the controls
10.5 - The silence of Gestapo Müller
10.6 - The suspicions of the GRU in 1943
10.7 - Martin Bormann’s stenographers

Chapter 11
11.1 - The convulsions of summer 1944
11.2 - The Joseph Goebbels memorandum
11.3 - A true bureaucratic frenzy
11.4 - ... But Communist mistresses, too
11.5 - Müller and the Plot of 20 July 1944

Chapter 12
12.1 - Operation Survival
12.2 - The inventor of industrial espionage
12.3 - The art of camouflaging people
12.4 - A multi-layered treasury
12.5 - The Strasbourg conference, August 1944
12.6 - Networks concealing other networks

Chapter 13
13.1 - Escape from Berlin
13.2 - The inner circle know where to meet
13.3 - Heinrich Müller’s personal bunker
13.4 - The evacuation of the Führer bunker
13.5 - Bormann out in the open
13.6 - Gestapo Müller’s final arrangements
13.7 - The final meetings

Chapter 14
14.1 - Establishing their position
14.2 - TICOM demolishes illusions
14.3 - Confirmation from the archives
14.4 - Soviet sympathisers keep watch in Germany
14.5 - On the trail of a gamekeeper
14.6 - Müller plays his own game
14.7 - Kaltenbrunner’s luck runs out

Chapter 15
15.1 - The Saragossa Dossier
15.2 - A well-placed informant
15.3 - Direct Quotations
15.4 - The Bormann network’s South American activities
15.5 - French collaboration with Hacke
15.6 - Nostalgia for the idyllic days of the Pact
15.7 - The Risks taken by Ric

Chapter 16
16.1 - Freude puts through a call to Bormann in Argentina
16.2 - Confirmation from a Russian expert
16.3 - Under cover of Manuel de Falla’s coffin
16.4 - Operation Brandy
16.5 - K5 hangs on to information
16.6 - Evita Peron’s mission to Europe
16.7 - The future wife of Kirk Douglas
16.8 - Change of tack to the Middle East
16.9 - Death at the end of the trail

Chapter 17
17.1 - The Müller saga
17.2 - Laying it on thick...
17.3 - Abakumov dominates German affairs
17.4 - An East German springboard against the West
17.5 - Müller and Rattenhuber at the controls of a secret police force

Chapter 18
18.1 - Flight to South America
18.2 - Rattenhuber under the microscope
18.3 - The first agents sent into the West
18.4 - Panzinger and Pannwitz return to the West
18.5 - The end of Abakumov
18.6 - The flight of Gestapo Müller

Chapter 19
19.1 - Ivan Serov to Rudolf Barak, “Kidnap Müller!”
19.2 - Unlimited Sovietisation
19.3 - A superficial relaxation
19.4 - The approach and abduction
19.5 - The end of a “top policeman”
19.6 - Curious campaigns and loyal admirers

Chapter 20
20.1 - Sharing the loot in Adenauer’s shadow
20.2 - Schacht, Abs, Pferdmenges, Achenbach...
20.3 - A surprising symbiosis behind Konrad Adenauer
20.4 - Playing double and multiple games under cover of the Cold War
20.5 - The Gauleiter Circle in 1953
20.6 - Ernst Achenbach, lawyer and negotiator
20.7 - The Thyssen affair

Chapter 21
21.1 - Deafening silence in the East and in the West
21.2 - Mossad bans further operations
21.3 - Moscow’s silence

Appendix 1 - I G Farben, worldwide economic espionage and the “Zefis”

Appendix 2 - Bormann, the committees of bankers, the intermediaries

Appendix 3 - Karl Oberg and Helmut Knochen

Appendix 4 - A German-Soviet Medal from the year 1934

Appendix 5 - Olga Ivanovna Förster-Shkarina

Appendix 6 - Olga Chekhova

Appendix 7 - Secrets of an Immersion
Kommando 306 is hot on my heels
Target de Gaulle
In the Boulevard Suchet, Paris
Light is shed on an epoch
A helping hand from Gustave Bertrand
On the staff of the Governor of Württemberg
The Schnaufer communications route
Self-financing an adventure
Clear warnings

Index