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"I don't think I ought to answer that. Let's say there was a group which first sought to solve problems politically. If that didn't work, then there was another group which went in and tried to buy solutions. If that failed, then my group was sent in to be damned sure things were accomplished the way we wanted them to be." "So you were operational, and not research at all?" I asked. "No. I had been in the lab for a Jong time. The knowledge edge I developed was very valuable in an operational sense. I was put into the field because bf this knowledge." "You're talking about pretty sophisticated equipment, not com- mando stuff?" “Right. For example, I won't say the name of the country, but it was a South American country. We had a leader that we had sup- ported there who suddenly got the idea that he was going to go off on his own. They tried to reason, negotiate, buy off his affections. When all that failed, my team was sent in to correct the situation. "We went in very quietly and left very noisily. We went in as tourists, but the important material we brought in was the turning point. Let's say we couldn't reason with the man anymore. We were there about six days, and the problem disappeared. Not many bodies, just the important ones." The assassin was very specific telling about some of the jobs he'd accomplished. Several included actions taken against a well- known political figure—that, the assassin said, was the only assas~ sination he'd ever ‘blown’. His rifle malfunctioned at the critical moment when he had his target in the crosshairs of his sight. I cannot say that I had originally believed the assassin's claims, but after running the Psychological Stress Evaluator on all the crit- ical portions of his interview, and finding no areas which unex- pectedly or inexplicably produced stress, I believed that the assas- sin was telling the truth. The newspaper office he had mentioned was bombed when he said it was, but he could have gained knowl- edge of that from newspaper reports. The target of his unsuccess- ful hit was subsequently ‘taken care of in another way which did not cost him his life. The assassin concluded the interview with a chilling prophecy. Jimmy Carter was then a candidate for the presidency. "TIl tell you something right now," the assassin said. "You've got a man running for office that is expressing the same god- damned philosophy John Kennedy had. Now he could be saying this stuff just to get elected. Matter of fact, if you look into his background, you find that he was a good naval officer. He had top security clearance. He was trained by Admiral Rickover who, he said, had a strong influence on his life. Taking this into considera- tion, you can assume that he's a loyal member of the old boy net, so he probably will make a good figurehead President for those in power. "But if he ain't an old boy and if he does believe all those-things he's been telling the voters—if he tries to implement those reforms he's talking about, well, it's not a question of whether he's going to be snuffed, it's only a question of when or where." The assassin confirmed many of my own conclusions which had been based only on research: that an invisible coup d'état had taken place in the United States; that the CIA is only the tip of the cryptocracy iceberg; and that ultrasonic and electrical memory erasure was used to protect 'search-and-destroy' operators from their own memories. I had some indication that the cryptocracy had investigated such techniques (a 1951 CIA document had briefly cited the need for such research), but the assassin's disclo- sure that the cryptocracy had developed invisible forms of sonics and electronic stimulation of the brain for mind control sent me back to the libraries. ha APRIL - MAY 1995 NEXUS ¢ 43 a,