Jack Anderson person
also: Colonel James Anderson, syndicated muckraker Jack Anderson, columnist Jack Anderson, Anderson, Jack Andersons
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Chilecountry · 8Richard Nixonperson · 6Seymour Hershperson · 5CIAintelligence service · 5Salvador Allendeperson · 4Ronald Ray Regaladoperson · 4Watergate scandalevent · 3United Statescountry · 3James Bo Gritzperson · 3Mafiaorganization · 2Cyrus Vanceperson · 2Ronald Ray Regalado's investment companyorganization · 2Robert Kennedy assassinationevent · 2E. Howard Huntperson · 2Bank of Americaorganization · 2John McConeperson · 2Jack Anderson Washington Post Article (1988)book · 2International Telephone and Telegraphorganization · 2Carlos Marcelloperson · 1Pete Brewtonperson · 1The Washington Postorganization · 1Vietnam Warevent · 1Joint Chiefs of Stafforganization · 1Alexander Haigperson · 1
Claims (4)
Jack Anderson exposed
RAND Corporation documented
“And and they're basically, you know, conspiring is part of this this coup plot. It winds up the all these internal IT&T memos, which are supposed to wind up in the shred bin, instead wind up on Jack Anderson's desk. And he publishes them on…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner The Devil’s Chessboard Part 19 @ 1:27:00
E. Howard Hunt ordered_assassination_of
Jack Anderson book_quoted
“That terrible event came at a high point in the Watergate affair. Then I had a phone call from Howard with whom I hadn't been in touch for several years. He startled me by telling me that he intended to disclose to me everything he knew abo…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner Twilight of the Shadow Government #9 @ 34:19
Richard Nixon ordered_assassination_of
Jack Anderson book_quoted
“was his saying that his dedication to the project had included a hypothetical agreement to contrive the assassination of syndicated muckraker Jack Anderson if the high command at the Nixon White House thought it was necessary. I also rememb…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner Twilight of the Shadow Government #9 @ 34:46
Jack Anderson exposed
International Telephone and Telegraph documented
“The journalist acquired copies of ITT memos and cablegrams, some of them cited earlier, demonstrating the multinational corporation had intervened with the Nixon White House and acted in concert with the CIA. On March 21, 1972, Anderson pub…”
▶ The Colonel's Safe for Democracy Part 37 (39) @ 2:55
Mentions (43)
▶ 2:01:50
worked at ITT before he joined the CIA and became the CIA director in 1961 to 65. And then he goes back and he becomes the chairman of ITT. And he's the guy who's referenced by Jack Anderson, you know, is trying to plot the Chilean coup, yo…
▶ 1:11:34
CIA's chaos plan. Allente could never move quick enough to satisfy his most radical supporters. The U.S. was engaged in a multi-layer campaign against him. The anti-Allente project had been underway for more than a year when the secrecy sur…
▶ 1:12:04
ITT memos that graphically detailed that what Anderson called the company's bizarre plot to stop the 1970 election of President Alente. They told of ITT's offer of $1 million to help the CIA prevent Alente from coming to power. Quote, no on…
▶ 4:21
And he spent a lot of his resources working on that image. Yeah. Okay, so he's a really sharp kid. He learns how to decode telegraphs just from listening it by ear. He memorized it as he's running around Pittsburgh. He knew all the business…
▶ 1:15:38
Together, and to basically corroborate stuff and basically draw the crimson thread all the way from, you know, you've got Seymour Hersh, Jack Anderson, you know, talking about, you know, Seymour Hersh talking about the drug trafficking in t…
▶ 1:02:53
that you're talking about besides the Thy Will Be Done? I don't know. They're out in my... I don't know the names of them off the top of my head. Ron, a good one might be the Anderson Papers by Jack Anderson and his coverage of the IT&T aff…
▶ 10:32
Those telling paragraphs were cut from a UPI story that moved later that afternoon. And from then on, most press reports uncritically accepted the government's denial of Grits and Weekly and were dismissed as commandos off on their own priv…
▶ 11:01
with at least initial support from the CIA and the Pentagon, unquote. Anderson based the conclusion on confidential court records filed in a federal fraud case in Honolulu, Hawaii, involving a polo-playing investment banker named Ronald Ray…
▶ 11:58
at his bank. Anderson put it more bluntly. Renault's investment firm was hip-deep in active or retired CIA employees. In other words, a money laundering place. In an affidavit, Renault said the CIA, quote, had originally committed its suppo…
▶ 12:27
According to Anderson, the bombshell of Renault's exhibits is a confidential letter to Gritz on official DIA stationery, instructing Gritz to pull together evidence to convince political skeptics that the POWs exist. As an aside, Renault al…
▶ 12:58
When Rinald told the CIA official that he had no one in his firm with experience in drug operations, the CIA man contradicted him and named a Rinald employee who had been a longtime CIA contract agent in Southeast Asia, which would surprise…
▶ 1:14:43
Colonel, you mentioned Bank of America, and you mentioned a couple of other places where they've come up. One that you didn't mention was Jack Anderson's ITT memo from 1970, where IT&T, this big corporation that just had their assets in Chi…
▶ 1:30:11
Yeah, I was just saying that even in 1776, we actually created economic destruction by plagiarizing. Hey, Simon, let me try and take you down and bring you back up because you're expanding really bad. Hang on. Okay. Just to back Simon up, I…
▶ 51:04
He also was corroborating quote-unquote authoritative reports in the New York Times that had happened a month earlier that had detailed maps of the things that didn't exist. So, earlier reports pinpointed General Wheeler and General Moore, …
▶ 1:10:10
You know, Jack Anderson and Seymour Hersh were kind of the exceptions that almost sort of proved the rule. You know, when we got, you know, Pete Bruton, I think, you know, he wasn't, I think the Houston Chronicle was the second biggest pape…
▶ 33:15
Vance may have complained, but no one thought of instituting any legal restrictions on any of this activity. Seymour Hersh, the New York Times reporters, Philip Tobin and Jeff Gerth, Washington Post reporter Patrick Tyler, columnist Jack An…
▶ 40:47
Some were freed quickly, other languished in Chilean hands for days and weeks. At least two Americans, Charles Horman and Frank Tarugi, died. They were tortured. They were killed, basically by the American government backing this coup. Taru…
▶ 1:27:00
And and they're basically, you know, conspiring is part of this this coup plot. It winds up the all these internal IT&T memos, which are supposed to wind up in the shred bin, instead wind up on Jack Anderson's desk. And he publishes them on…
▶ 1:27:24
It's one of those stories where you can basically, it's an easy way to say, hey, Trump had nothing to do with this. This isn't like Russian propaganda. This is Jack Anderson. He's the guy who gave the Washington Post his name for investigat…
▶ 56:42
you know, Shackley's memoirs, and you read it right after you read something by Seymour Hersh or even Jack Anderson, it's disheartening because you'll read through it and they'll just be so level-headed and, you know, talking at the high le…
▶ 1:05:47
I think it's a couple of points here. I think it's important to realize that those comments were mostly made, you know, about 40 years ago. I'm talking about the Jim Hohens of this earth and the Jack Andersons of this earth, etc. And to som…
▶ 1:06:16
I mean, yeah, Jack Anderson is control. I'll give you that. But he's still willing to say enough that contradicts the CIA's narrative. Right. I don't mean to suggest otherwise. I'm not simply overgeneralizing and saying he's only this or on…
▶ 34:46
was his saying that his dedication to the project had included a hypothetical agreement to contrive the assassination of syndicated muckraker Jack Anderson if the high command at the Nixon White House thought it was necessary. I also rememb…
▶ 35:41
such as his claim to have left the agency in 51, he still reveals some remarkable information. It's almost in passing that he let slip the hypothetical agreement to kill columnist Jack Anderson if his articles came too close to the truth. A…
▶ 58:03
You know, if you have to take a look at the context of this, too, this is 70. This is like 72, 73, 72 when the allegations are coming out, you know, about Watergate and everything. The natural person to have gone to at the Washington Post r…
▶ 58:29
You would have taken it to Jack Anderson because he had just exposed the whole ITT files thing. Yes. And he was he wrote the Washington merry-go-round. He was, you know, the he was like the Matt Taibbi of Washington, D.C. back in the 60s an…
▶ 58:53
He was all over exposing Nixon and all of this stuff. If this had been a natural story, he would have taken it to Jack Anderson. And, you know, he would have had, you know, Brit Hume, you know, helping him on this. And it would have just be…
▶ 59:19
No, and that is an excellent point that I didn't even think about. You are absolutely right. The problem with Jack Anderson is Jack Anderson was not going to necessarily slant and create the limited hangout, which is obviously what they wan…
▶ 1:02:32
You get Jack Anderson is mentioned in that relates also to another, you know, very, very core guy. Arguably, this guy is my only possible, you know, challenge to also pass the leading CIA dude, which would be Drew Pearson, who, you know, as…
▶ 1:03:58
What's the point here? Hold on. Let me connect these dots if possible. Basically, Jack Anderson is a very, very curious and intriguing figure. A lot of folks see him as kind of playing definitely a limited hangout role. His famous 1967 arti…
▶ 1:04:58
Like three months, right? Starting the day before the RFK assassination, it's just ripped out of his diaries. And the editor of volume two admits that they're just ripped out. And so also significantly about Drew Pearson is we're losing you…
▶ 1:05:26
earlier relationship with these key CIA figures is very significant if we are to evaluate, you know, what he says. I'm not vouching for any of the reporters, but I do think that Jack Anderson as Illini has a valid point that you would have …
▶ 1:05:54
um of the lap that half of the the century to a seasoned reporter it would not have went to somebody that you just brought on board unless the whole reason you brought yeah i agree i agree with that point yeah i agree with that point yeah a…
▶ 1:06:22
That was March 29th, 1972. And I think by April, the Senate is already holding the ITT hearings. And you've got the Nixon tapes where they're all panicking about it. And, you know, Jack Anderson is writing article after article after articl…
▶ 1:06:48
And like ITT probably should have brought like if ITT had happened to Trump today or this day of coups and stuff like that and false flags and everything else, that probably would have been, you know, that could have been the end of the Nix…
▶ 1:07:14
who was going after Nixon, who was willing to go after the CIA, and who was probably willing to go after the Cubans in all of this, if they had given him the Watergate scandal, I think that probably would have been a mistake through the hea…
▶ 1:13:47
Okay. Yeah, I just realized, you know, to be a CIA director, it's a hot seat. Be ready to vacate at any time based on the 10 years are so short. So short, which is interesting. My question is, I agree with Ilan on talking about Jack Anderso…
▶ 1:42:25
Everybody on the left knows about Allende and Chile. And I think that's a pretty good place to start because we have the documents on it. And we know how it happened. It started with a conversation between ITT and the revolving door with th…
▶ 24:54
The CIA supplying the incompetent burglars, the FBI pretending to do a serious investigation, it would appear we have our answer. But the false trail kept being laid with either the Cubans working with the mafia or the mafia working on its …
▶ 27:55
The CIA and the mafia sent in six assassination teams, all of which failed. We don't know why they failed. The claim is that Traficani had secretly made a deal with Castro over the CIA. Traficani then enlists the aid of two other mob godfat…
▶ 2:30
in which other political and national security developments, Watergate, Vietnam, the Phoenix program, Laos, revelations of CIA's use of private institutions had already eroded the credibility of official denials in the faith of the American…
▶ 2:55
The journalist acquired copies of ITT memos and cablegrams, some of them cited earlier, demonstrating the multinational corporation had intervened with the Nixon White House and acted in concert with the CIA. On March 21, 1972, Anderson pub…
▶ 4:19
Foreign Relations Committee, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and to many journalists, not just Jack Anderson. He used the documents for articles attacking Salvador Allende originally. What changed between 70 and 72 was the public pe…