Recent Posts

Recent Posts

Pages: 1 2 [3] 4 5 ... 10
21
TG:

All good but why am I mentioned this paragraph?

5. He went to Moscow in July 1961, expressly noting in his diary that he did so without police permission, although he had written the American embassy in February 1961 that he could not leave Minsk without permission and he did not think it appropriate to request permission. If there is some kind of document check before boarding train or plane in the USSR, and if it was waived in his case as it would have to have Ben, he must have known that the authorities at least concurred in his travel, if they were not actually sponsoring it. When Marina joined him in Moscow it was suddenly, on little or no notice, so presumably she too circumvented the permission requirement or obtained it immediately without delay.

It was my one and only "marked card."

I did it at the request of W. Niederhut at the so-called JFK Assassination Debate - Education Forum.
22
Benjamin:  His staff erred and they erred twice in that document. Paul Hoch found the other error. We know there is an error because there is no such thing as a "contract source."

Find me one CIA document that uses that terminology.

The segregated collection is online and there are no underlying documents that support MacDonald. Just the opposite -- there are many documents
that say Shaw was NOT paid.

fred
23
No.  I didn't "claim" that Haygood used the radio on the 3-wheeler.  I asked you, "Could it be that Haygood made the transmission he made at 12:35 from the circled 3-wheel motorcycle which he's walking towards? ", because at that time I didn't have access to his testimony.  Thanks for pointing out that he made the transmission after he returned to his own motorcycle. 

 J.C. Bowles is who transcribed channels 1 and 2 of the police recordings in 1964 for the WC.
He was the communications supervisor at the time.

 Haygood's call number was 142.

     I do not see a "Bowles" listed as having been sworn in by the WC or HSCA. Do you know why the person assigning names to 11/22/63 DPD radio transmissions was not sworn in/documented?   
24
FL--

Yes, I think Paul Hoch found an error in McDonald's report.

But the McDonald 1992 report prominently identified Clay Shaw as a "highly paid contract source" on a highly inflammatory topic---in a report commissioned by the CIA.

This is not some whack-job by lefties or Jeff Morley dog-whistling "Mossad did it."

You see McDonald's record. He was no stranger to national security-foreign affairs. 

Your position, that you have not seen the underlying documents, ergo McDonald is in error---will, just doesn't hold water.

Why don't you be honest? Say something like, "I have not looked through the 64 HSCA boxes of documents, microfilm that McDonald and his staff did. I have tried to review the materials online, and have not found the underlying documents that would justify NcDonald's assertion that Shaw was a 'highly paid contract source.' There it stands."

You need not add that McDonald was a highly regarded historian deeply familiar with national defense and security issues. Maybe he erred. Or maybe you are shooting in the dark?
25
I have no idea what you are talking about.

Benjamin: What about the mistake that Paul Hoch found in the Macdonald report?

fred
26
Please don't put words in my mouth. His staff prepared that report and they made a couple of mistakes. That's all.

That's quite an assumption for an agency that doesn't write it down.
Did you find any, "...hieroglyphics that only two people knew what they meant..."?
27
Please don't put words in my mouth. His staff prepared that report and they made a couple of mistakes. That's all.
28
Question for AI: J Kenneth McDonald, who was chief CIA historian in 1992, was he highly regarded?

J. Kenneth McDonald was highly regarded both within the CIA and among the broader historical community for his leadership in professionalizing the CIA’s History Staff and steering its "openness" initiatives in the 1990s.

His reputation is defined by several key contributions:

Pioneer of Transparency: As Chief Historian in 1992, he was a central figure in the CIA's transition toward greater public disclosure. He oversaw the "openness program" initiated by then-DCI Robert Gates, managing a staff of historians with complete access to agency files to identify and prepare documents for declassification.

Scholarly Rigor: Peers and successors have praised his work for its "rigorous and insightful critiques". He is credited with providing vital cooperation to the State Department’s Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS) series, helping to ensure a more complete documentary record of American foreign policy.

Editor of Foundational Works: He served as the Editor-in-Chief for the CIA Cold War Records series, which included high-profile publications such as CIA Documents on the Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962.

Academic Standing: Beyond his 14-year tenure as Chief Historian, he had a distinguished academic career and remained active in the field as an American academic, frequently appearing on platforms like C-SPAN to discuss Cold War intelligence.

---

J. Kenneth McDonald, who served as the Chief Historian of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from roughly 1980 to 1994, was affiliated with several academic institutions during his career, primarily focusing on history and maritime studies.

His primary academic affiliations included:

George Washington University: He served as a professor at the university.

U.S. Naval War College: He held the King Chair of Maritime History.
Oxford University: He earned a DPhil (Doctor of Philosophy) from Oxford.

While working as the CIA's Chief Historian, he also worked closely with the State Department's Office of the Historian in reviewing documents for the Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS) series.

---30---

But Fred Litwin and Tom Graves say McDonald committed unfathomable bungles, in prominently and unequivocally  identifying Clay Shaw as a "highly paid CIA contract source" in a 1992 report on the CIA---a report commissioned by the CIA.

Why? Litwin says he read all the underlying documents in the HSCA's 64 boxes of papers, microfilm, and ephemera---but he did it online. (No word on whether all the records are truly online. Beyond that, many documents are online but not digitized, meaning word searches are sometimes flummoxed.) So. nit finding the right documents, Litwin ventures McDonald erred.

Tom Graves suggests McDonald's work was "cobbled together."

Well, truth can be stranger than fiction, so perhaps the McDonald made an incredible bungle, and right in his own wheelhouse. I wouldn't take odds on that, rather quite the opposite, but each to his own.

However...Litwin's contention that that he never seen the "underlying documents" for McDonald's contention, and ergo McDonald erred...seems thinner than Karen Carpenter.

Maybe Litwin would better say, "I have not been able to locate the documents that grounded McDonald's work."

Maybe Litwin should try harder, or ask the CIA Public Affairs staff to retract the statement of the CIA historian, that Shaw was a "highly paid contract source."
29
Wowie zowie!

That proves it!

Clay Shaw was a "highly paid" CIA "contract source"!


Whatever that is.

What are you muttering now? 
Shouldn't you be under a bridge somewhere?
30
TG:

All good but why am I mentioned this paragraph?

5. He went to Moscow in July 1961, expressly noting in his diary that he did so without police permission, although he had written the American embassy in February 1961 that he could not leave Minsk without permission and he did not think it appropriate to request permission. If there is some kind of document check before boarding train or plane in the USSR, and if it was waived in his case as it would have do you have Ben, he must have known that the authorities at least concurred in his travel, if they were not actually sponsoring it. When Marina joined him in Moscow it was suddenly, on little or no notice, so presumably she too circumvented the permission requirement or obtained it immediately without delay.
Pages: 1 2 [3] 4 5 ... 10