Denmark country
also: Danish
Explore in graph → Export claims (CSV) ↓
Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Norwaycountry · 10Swedencountry · 9Greenlandcountry · 8Netherlandscountry · 7United Statescountry · 6West Germanycountry · 6Danish Federation of Trade Unionsorganization · 5Belgiumcountry · 5Irving Brownperson · 4Soviet Unioncountry · 3Francecountry · 3Greececountry · 3Social Democrats USAorganization · 3Spaincountry · 2U.S. State Departmentorganization · 2Snapfaneorganization · 2Canadacountry · 2Copenhagenplace · 2AFL-CIOorganization · 2French Communist Partyorganization · 2Argentinacountry · 2Switzerlandcountry · 2Operation Gladiooperation · 2Marshall Planoperation · 2
Claims (3)
Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed
Denmark book_quoted
“Shortly after this, one of our members of our group prepared the report was summonsed to the White House for a personal meeting with Roosevelt. Roosevelt was very interested in this. And he summoned the Danish minister and they signed an ag…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner The Invisible Government by Dan Smoot Part 2 @ 5:58
Denmark funded
Greenland documented
“So Denmark, it is basically a possession of Denmark, and they recognize Denmark as their... So Denmark gave them some autonomy about 20 years ago, much more autonomy than they had prior to that. But they still are responsible for the admini…”
▶ The Colonels Corner - Book Club about real history @ 1:34:28
Edward Schultz spied_on
Denmark speculative
“They showed off their knowledge in casual conversations. The results of this simple espionage was impressive. Schulte provided early warnings to the Allies of the German invasion of Poland in 1939 and of the Soviets in 1941. And perhaps, th…”
▶ The Colonels Corner The Splendid Blonde Beast Part 6 @ 21:28
Mentions (41)
▶ 54:17
networks throughout all of belgium yes that's the guy that's the guy yes yes yes yeah i we've talked about him stellar yes that's why i was like oh my gosh because i hadn't heard this other part of it and this one house that was built in th…
▶ 1:03:22
That's a quote from Ganser's book. So the Italian defense ministry knew that the SDECE, together with the CIA, was running the secret army. And one of the Italian ministers said the secret army existed in the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, D…
▶ 1:04:26
Resistance networks were organized in Great Britain, in France, Netherlands, Belgium, and probably also in Denmark and Norway. The French took extra precaution in order to ensure the secrecy of these units. A top-secret memorandum from the …
▶ 2:53
OK, when we get to that part. But let's move on just temporarily because we're going to spend a lot of time tomorrow night on Greenland. But let's just talk a little bit about it tonight. Do you think Greenland's a country? Yeah, I thought …
▶ 14:21
Because, again, they can't call it out because we've been doing it the entire time. Because if you start talking about taking Panama, well, isn't that how Panama became a country to begin with? So let's go ahead and have that conversation. …
▶ 5:19
In Greek, life were to be removed. Among these were many skirts, long hair, and foreign newspapers. Church attendance for the young would be compulsory. So brutal and so swift was the repression that by September, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, a…
▶ 12:57
had him expelled after it was discovered he was importing weapons into Sweden. And he had a huge presence in Denmark. And as far as putting some of the graduates and creating a spy ring, we won't go into that until we get to Denmark. But th…
▶ 39:22
Some of the names, our translation of those names that they called them. And they basically had, so it was Snapfang, it says, is a pejorative term that Swedes used to describe pro-Danish rebels back in the day. And that they used guerrilla …
▶ 39:53
And I'm just going to quote when it talks about where the word came from. Because the movement supported the Danish invasion during the Scandia War, Swedish authorities fought the Snapfans brutally, and if captured, these fighters would be …
▶ 35:43
Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and the Netherlands was before the European Commission of Human Rights accusing Greece of violating all of the Commission's conventions. Before the year was over, Amnesty International had sent representatives to Gr…
▶ 1:34:00
they were well connected down in that region. And so, but also you kind of brought up a good point that we've kind of decided that if we want someone's resources, we can just go take them. So have things changed where we're actually going t…
▶ 1:34:28
So Denmark, it is basically a possession of Denmark, and they recognize Denmark as their... So Denmark gave them some autonomy about 20 years ago, much more autonomy than they had prior to that. But they still are responsible for the admini…
▶ 17:33
terrorist attack in Italy, a scandal shocks Western Europe, the silencing of NATO, CIA, the silence, sorry, of NATO, CIA, and MI6, basically describing the network, the secret war in Great Britain, the secret war in the US, the secret war i…
▶ 18:04
And basically what he does is he goes through each of those areas and talks about these operations inside of those countries. And again, I was like, holy shit, how do we not know any of this crap? He talks about different terrorist attacks …
▶ 5:27
for transatlantic aviation and meteorological observation. The possibility must be considered that Denmark might be overrun by Germany. In such case, Greenland might be transferred by treaty to German sovereignty. It was also pointed out th…
▶ 5:58
Shortly after this, one of our members of our group prepared the report was summonsed to the White House for a personal meeting with Roosevelt. Roosevelt was very interested in this. And he summoned the Danish minister and they signed an ag…
▶ 6:29
On April 9th, 1941, an agreement was signed between the U.S. and Denmark, which provided for assistance by the U.S. to Greenland in the maintenance of its status and granted the U.S. the right to locate, construct, airfields, port facilitie…
▶ 8:05
Denmark, a European nation, colonized Greenland, proclaiming its sole sovereignty in 1921, a full 100 years later, without any hint of protest from the U.S. So it was fine for Denmark to colonize Greenland, even though the Monroe Doctrine s…
▶ 24:47
President Woodrow Wilson appointed Dulles' uncle, Bert Robert Lansing, as U.S. Secretary of State. Foster Dulles joined the State Department in 1917 as a specialist in political economic affairs. He soon undertook negotiating assignments fo…
▶ 23:12
so to speak. The clients would then turn around and sell the bonds to other U.S. banks and individual investors at retail rates, usually paying Dulles and Sullivan and Cromwell two to three percentage points of the overall value of the bond…
▶ 21:28
They showed off their knowledge in casual conversations. The results of this simple espionage was impressive. Schulte provided early warnings to the Allies of the German invasion of Poland in 1939 and of the Soviets in 1941. And perhaps, th…
▶ 2:31
and transnational anti-communist networks at the beginning of the Cold War. So they go back in this particular essay to November of 1945. It says that Irving Brown, an American, had shown up in Copenhagen. He was doing a major tour.…
▶ 3:30
Irving Brown, had been invited by the Danish Federation of Trade Unions. And he began working very closely with them. Brown's visit was basically just to look at what unions look like in the Nordic countries. And basically, he was conductin…
▶ 5:26
other countries. Basically, what he says is that they did observation, he wrote a two-page report that basically said that the Danish Social Democrats and the quote-unquote communists there had shifted due to a communist infiltration into D…
▶ 6:00
They had been occupied by Germany, which was anti-communist too. So the parliament elections of October 1945, they had a Denmark communist party receive 18 seats out of 149. So basically, not a lot.…
▶ 6:32
the Social Democrat Party had received somewhere in the same ballpark. Eiler Jensen, E-I-L-E-R, Jensen, J-E-N-S-E-N, was the president of the trade union there. And the trade union there was called DFTU. He informed Irving Brown.…
▶ 7:02
that the reason that there was a shift in vote was basically because of the repulsion that the residents in Denmark had to the occupation of Germany, and they associated that occupation with socialists, and that pushed people towards a part…
▶ 8:27
is workers' representation in what had been ran as basically an oligarch system where workers had no rights. In 1945, there was a unity negotiation between two of the Danish labor parties. But it basically ended up even worse than before th…
▶ 8:59
as many as 650,000 members out of a population of 4.2 million people that was in the trade union movement on the two opposing sides. The Social Democrats controlled the DFTU and the majority of the trade unions in the country. This Danish t…
▶ 21:32
and make use of front groups. After the war, Lovestone and Brown made use of their European contacts, including Danish ones, allied with leading figures in the trade union movement who had adopted an anti-communist attitude. So, I find that…
▶ 34:06
International Trade Secretariat held a Congress in Copenhagen. The leaders, including the Danish, began expressing displeasure with the WFTU and basically started questioning whether or not they wanted to be members. Irving Brown was the Am…
▶ 36:43
to have a completely unofficial conversation about how to proceed. So they end up having a meeting in January of 48, and leaders in the national organizations of Sweden, Norway, and Denmark all get together for a quote-unquote off-the-recor…
▶ 42:27
ICFTU meant that the Danish trade unions contributed towards Denmark's integration into the Western Alliance. And the same thing happened in other Nordic countries to include Sweden, even though officially, militarily, and politically they …
▶ 45:18
Brown's efforts in Denmark were supplemented by the U.S. State Department, which saw the Nordic countries as the strongest social democrat bulwark against communist influence. At least that's how they build it. The State Department consider…
▶ 51:38
Lovestone and Brown helped to compromise the very concepts of democracy by pretending to be democratic while they were basically setting up trade unions controlled by fascist oligarchs. In Denmark, the trade union movement was strong and th…
▶ 54:10
than they were willing to admit. American intervention was a result of some well-placed Danish officials, but also using them kind of as the front to get into Norway and Sweden. So then you have, it says that once you implement the Marshall…
▶ 23:03
Clandestine Planning Committee. Those two organizations basically take over the duties of everything that we're talking about here. In the Committee for Europe, there was a huge expansion under David's leadership. He worked towards the foun…
▶ 30:24
And see if these countries ring a bell. Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Venezuela, El Salvador, Ecuador, Peru, and Uruguay. Huh. Those are all the countries we cooed. That's really weird. Mexico, Canada, Lebanon, Japan, Turkey, the Phil…
▶ 40:29
indicates that there had been operational contact in the previous years. CIA's interest was focused on interdocs' involvement with the youth organizations, with East and West student exchanges and the use of Dutch base for book mailings to …
▶ 53:05
And in the 1970s, part of the O budget marked for psychological warfare was redirected to interdoc operations, meaning basically it's a fluid organization. It is noteworthy that William Colby became CIA director in 73, considering Colby's i…
▶ 14:12
Denmark Prime Minister. I have a lot of really important people here. Almost like this is much bigger than what we would think. Alan Tripp, educational centers, and Simon Target, who was the editor for the Financial Times, which is a total …