Any
Assassination film festival should include the Parallax View and The Odessa
File, two major feature films developed from popular fictional novels, though
they come more close to actual reality than government reports, especially as
they reflect on the assassination of President Kennedy.
Both of
these films were recently aired together, back to back on a movie channel, and both feature movie stars who portray third rate reporters (like me), who take on
stories that are bigger than themselves.
In The
Odessa File John Voight plays a German journalist who made his mark by
reporting on the Beatles in Hamburg, before they were famous, and on the early
evening of November 22, 1963, pulls his sports car to the side of the road to
hear the news reports of President Kennedy’s assassination. He credits that to
fate, as he then chases an ambulance to the scene of the suicide of a
concentration camp survivor who killed himself after seeing his former Nazi
camp commandant living the high life.
In a
manuscript he left behind he describes the horrors of the holocaust, and Voight
takes on the challenge of locating the Nazi officer who avoided capture and the
trials of Nuremberg thanks to a shadowy secret society known as ODESSA, and the
story has a surprising twist at the end.
While
ODESSA was real, so was Project PAPERCLIP, the code name for the American
intelligence operation that brought hundreds of captured Nazi intelligence
officers and scientists to the United States.
Among
them were Nazi General Reinhard Gehlen, the head of German army intelligence on
the Eastern Front, who initiated Operation Wringer to obtain intelligence from
refugees fleeing communist countries in Europe, and later became head of the
East German intelligence agency, though it was compromised by the Soviets.
Then
there was W. Von Braun, the Nazi rocket scientist who developed the Saturn V
for NASA and increased the capability of the Air Force ICBMs, and his assistant
General Dornberger, who went to work for Bell Helicopter with Michael Paine,
the chief benefactor of the family of the accused assassin of the president Lee
Harvey Oswald.
The Nazi
scientist who invented the jet engine came to America to work for Collins
Radio, the company that controlled the Air Force One and Strategic Air Command
air plane radios.
Most
significant is Hans Bernd Gisivious, one of German agents Allen Dulles
controlled among those who plotted the unsuccessful attempt on the life of
Hilter, who Dulles and his assistant Mary Bancroft helped escape from Germany,
and who came to America to work for LTV, one of the companies that can name
among its founders as D. H. Byrd, the owner of the Texas School Book Depository
at the time of the assassination.
The
Parallax View on the other hand, is a movie that features Warren Beatty as an
intrepid reporter recruited by the Parallax Corporation, a human engineering company
that provides security personnel to major industrial manufacturers, as well as
assassins and stool pigeons who serve as patsies.
Beaty is
given a test in strapped on chair in which he is forced to watch a collage of a
film that incorporates family values with extreme violence, much like that
described by Lt. Commander Narut to the London Sunday Times reporter at a NATO
conference in Norway.
Narut: According
to Narut, “...combat readiness units…include men for commando-type operations
and...for insertion into U.S. embassies under cover,…ready to kill in those
countries should the need arise….U.S. Navy psychologists specially selected men
for these commando tasks, from submarine crews, paratroops, and some were
convicted murderers from military prisons...Research on those given awards for
valor in battle [ie. Audie Murphy] has shown….that the best killers are men
with ‘passive-aggressive’ personalities...Among the tests used is the Minnesota
Multiphasic Personality Inventory. This consists of hundreds of questions, and
rates personality on many traits including such things as hostility,
depression, psychopathy...” The Times reported that, “The men selected were
brought either to the Navy’s neuropsychiatric laboratory in San Diego, California
(which also trains spies in techniques to counter interrogation), or to the
laboratory where Narut works in the U.S. Naval Medical Center in Naples.”
“The
method, according to Dr Narut, was to show films specially designed to show
people being killed and injured in violent ways. By being acclimatised through these
films, the men eventually became able to dissociate any feelings from such a
situation.”
Narut
also said that the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory test they used
looked for candidates with a very specific “Passive-Aggressive” behavioral
pattern, as exhibited by Oswald according to Dr. Herzog, who gave the test to
Oswald as a delinquent in New York City.
The
novel The Parallax View was written by Loren Singer – a former OSS intelligence officer
during World War II who was interviewed by Len Osanic for Black Op Radio,
during which he acknowledged not being pleased with the Hollywood version of
his book. But Singer also said that the test sequence in the story was based on the
tests he was given in the course of his OSS training.
One of
the major differences between the novel
and the Hollywood movie is the end, where in the film the Warren Beaty
character is set up as the patsy in the assassination of a Senator at Dallas
Trade Mart luncheon situation similar to the one that President Kennedy was on his
way to before being killed at Dealey Plaza.
In the
book the protagonist is run off the road by a professional Parallax killer in a
car that is especially built as a demolition derby type vehicle, at a very
peculiar place – the salt marsh area between the New Jersey shore resort town
of Wildwood and Cape May.
When I
read the book I just happened to be living in Cape May and got in my car and
went for a drive to that spot where I discovered there was a high barbed wire
fence surrounding a very large but secluded are with a sign: US Navy Electronic
Engineering Test Center. So I drove a mile to the nearby Wildwood Crest Tavern
where I talked to the bartender and a few guys who worked on the base, who
explained that it was a Top Secret and high priority nuclear target because of
its mission was to communicate with nuclear submarines throughout the world.
Now I
had already had a list of such submarine connections to the assassination of
President Kennedy, and just added it to the list, that included the facts that
Clay Shaw, accused of conspiracy in the assassination by New Orleans District
Attorney Jim Garrison, had written a play about a submarine crew that was stuck
under the sea, and the accused assassin’s good friend George deMornschildts had
lived with a submarine commander in Washington during World War II.
Then
there’s the peculiar story of how deMohrenschildts tried to get a Oswald a job
at Collins Radio over lunch with Collins executive and former Navy Admiral
Chester Brouton, whose job at Collins was to develop radio communications with
Navy submarines.
Can you
imagine the world we would be living in if Oswald, the accused assassin of the
President, got a job with Collins Radio rather than at the Texas School Book
Depository, where he was put in a position to have the opportunity to kill the President, though he still lacked a means and motive?
Then, in
the course of reading the yearly Collins Radio reports to stock holders for
1962-64 I read where Collins was asked by the military to study the “parallax”
phenomena, which is described as “the effect whereby the position or direction
of an object appears to differ when viewed from different positions,” and
considered responsible for many pilot error plane crashes, including that of
John F. Kennedy, Jr.
1 comment:
Yes, there's a lot going on underneath the sea. Now, if there were bases 'down there', they probably lie at the least vulnerable spots. But not too deep.
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