Larouche
Larouche
Larouche
II
TIillInvestigation
x
tet
ny, Wolffsohn charged; and gf(UpS like the ADL and WJC
i
g of hard currency, gold,
diamonds, and other assets acrqss the Iron Curtain into safe
had abetted the Stasi, the KGB, and other East bloc secret
again.
some of them, are in place. Ampng the telltale signs are: the
against
Investigation
Jewish communities
EIR
1994 EIR News Service Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission strictly prohibited.
A complicated web
The players and events at the center of this story will be
unfamiliar to most readers; and the idea that Soviet bloc
secret police agencies successfully won the support of the
best-known Jewish "civil rights " groups in America clearly
contradicts almost everything reported in the major western
press.
Almost.
In January 1 993, a curious item in the San Francisco
Chronicle revealed that local police and the FBI had discov
ered that a long-time A DL official was spying on behalf of
the South African and Israeli secret services. A year-long
probe ensued, which revealed that the A DL had illegally
obtained confidential police files on tens of thousands of
American citizens and had been carrying out a campaign
of espionage and disruption against nearly 1 ,000 domestic
political, religious, and civil rights organizations. Among
the targets of the A DL dirty tricks were such civil rights
leaders as the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The A DL
domestic spying, it was revealed, traced back as far as World
War II.
But even these revelations about domestic spying and
collaboration with "friendly " foreign intelligence services
did little to prepare most people for the truth that the A DL
had been "sleeping with the enemy " throughout much of the
Cold War, inflicting grievous damages, including undoubt
edly the loss of lives, on U.S. national security.
East-West underground economy
For the past 1 6 years, EIR's counterintelligence staff has
kept the A DL's courtship of East Berlin and Moscow on a
wide range of strategic issues under scrutiny. Our investiga
tion began in 1 978 when Lyndon H. La Rouche, Jr., the
founding editor of EIR and a presidential candidate, request
ed a study which led to the publication of the book Dope,
Inc., the bestseller which uncovered the highest political and
financial levels behind international narcotics trafficking.
Beyond the politics, there has always been a strong "busi
ness " side to the A DL- Stasi-KGB friendship, La Rouche's
associates found.The A DL, as the traditional public relations
shield of the National Crime Syndicate founded by Meyer
Lansky during the 1 920s, has always had a major stake in the
illegal arms and narcotics underground economy stretching
across the East-West divide. This now has a turnover of an
estimated $1 trillion a year.
In the course of our investigation, we discovered one of
the least-publicized aspects of the Iran-Contra scandal: the
collusion between the "secret, parallel government " led by
then-Vice President George Bush and Marine Lt. Col. Ollie
ElK
51
ny. . . .
and seize the Suez Canal. During the early years of the State
of Israei.
in the West who were only tpo glad to take on the pro
titled "Nazi War Criminals in the U.S.A.," which had all the
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liaison.
On July 10, 1981, ADL official Bruce Einhorn, then a
the payroll and that the entire U.S. military scientific program
Five months after the Einhorn memo spelled out the polit
Rankled over the bad turn in the Rudolph case, Sher and
el, Sher met with top officials of the Israeli National Police
death threats
Holtzman.
Neal
Sher,
and Elizabeth
the first nor the last occasion hen the ADL and the Stasi
Counterintelligence
Prograrn
("Cointelpro")
targeted
that the FBI had encouraged BUreau "moles" inside the lead
Investigation
EIR
When
leaflets
and
newspapers
published
by
the
and his group was a "right-wing cult." The article was widely
cies associated with him from 1973 onward would come from
the poison pens of either the ADL, the Stasi, the KGB-or
all three.
fact that the general German public Ihas been willing since
all. The fact that Suall was a leading figure in the American
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secret services.
In September 1 985, one of the most important Stasi oper
ations ran into serious trouble as the result of a criminal raid
against the offices of a Swedish arms dealer in Malmo. On
Sept. 29, 1 985, Swedish auth0rities raided the offices of
Scandinavian Commodities AB, an import-export firm run
by Swedish businessman Karl-Erik "Bobbo " Schmitz. They
seized thousands of pages of documents revealing a vast
network of western and eastern European companies engaged
in funneling billions of dollars aI year in explosives and arms
to Iran, then at war with Iraq. ! The scandal was a serious
blow to Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme, who was then
heading a United Nations peace' commission on the war and
attempting to enforce a global arms embargo against the
belligerents. For Palme, the revtlation that Sweden's largest
industries, Bofors and Nobel, wtre among the leading suppli
ers of explosives to Iran, was ddvastating.
Among the documents seiztd at Schmitz's offices were
detailed transaction reports on arms shipments to Iran via an
obscure East German shipping 'firm, IME S GmbH, headed
by Alexander Schalck-Golodk0wski, a high-ranking Stasi
official. Incredibly, some of the Swedish arms shipments
handled by IME S were delivered to Iran via a circuitous
route aboard Santa Lucia Airlines cargo planes. Santa Lucia
Airlines was a CIA front company, used by Lt. Col. Oliver
North, Maj. Gen. Richard SecQrd, Albert Hakim, and other
players in covert U.S. programs to arm the Nicaraguan Con
tras and secretly arm Iran in txchange for the release of
American hostages in Lebanon.
The Malmo documents offeed Palme a trump in his deal
ings with both Moscow and Washington. But before Palme
could decide what to do with the evidence of massive East
West collusion in a multibillion-dollar illegal arms bazaar,
he was gunned down on the streets of Stockholm on Feb. 28,
1 986.
The Palme assassination bQried more than the Swedish
head of state. The entire Schtnitz- Schalck-North collusion
was immediately covered up. W1hen Schmitz eventually went
to trial in early 1 989, the case was reduced to a violation of
Swedish Customs procedures; ihe walked away by merely
paying a $1 ,000 fine.
Schalck-Golodkowski remained in business until the fall
of the Berlin Wall, at which point he packed up his business
files, "offered his services " to western intelligence, and
signed a secrecy deal with the Central Intelligence Agency.
Efforts by a West German parliamentary commission to
pierce the veil of Schalck's "cotnmercial " empire failed mis
erably, and to this day, this most critical Stasi operation is
still one of the best kept secrets lof the Cold War.
wife Lisbeth in
tions, the EAP had called Palme 'a raging animal , an axe
the selection of the EAP. First of all , the lack of proof could
tant events to fit our world view at that time. This approach
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