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POSTED APRIL
23, 2007
© 2007 by
Jeffrey Steinberg
Satanic
subversion of the U.S. Military
by
Jeffrey Steinberg
On
February 5, 1999, in U.S. District Court in Lincoln,
Nebraska, an extraordinary hearing occurred in Paul A.
Bonacci v. Lawrence E. King, a civil action in which the
plaintiff charged that he had been ritualistically abused
by the defendant, as part of a nationwide pedophile ring
linked to powerful political figures in Washington and to
elements of the U.S. military and intelligence
establishment. Three weeks later, on February 27, Judge
Warren K. Urbom ordered King, who is currently in Federal
prison, to pay $1 million in damages to Bonacci, in what
Bonacci's attorney John DeCamp said was a clear signal that
"the evidence presented was credible."
During the
February 5 hearing, Noreen Gosch stunned the court with
sworn testimony linking U.S. Army Lt. Col. Michael Aquino
(ret.) to the nationwide pedophile ring. Her son, Johnny,
then 12 years old, was kidnapped off the streets of West
Des Moines, Iowa on September 5, 1982, while he was doing
his early-morning newspaper deliveries. Since his
kidnapping, she has devoted all of her time and resources
to finding her son, and to exposing the dangers that
millions of children in American face from this hideous,
literally Satanic underground of ritualistic deviants.
"We
have investigated, we have talked to so far 35 victims of
this said organization that took my son and is responsible
for what happened to Paul, and they can verify everything
that has happened," she told the court.
"What
this story involves is an elaborate function, I will say,
that was an offshoot of a government program. The MK-Ultra
program was developed in the 1950s by the CIA. It was used
to help spy on other countries during the Cold War because
they felt that the other countries were spying on us.
"It was
very successful. They could do it very well."
Then, the
Aquino bombshell: "Well, then there was a man by the
name of Michael Aquino. He was in the military. He had top
Pentagon clearances. He was a pedophile. He was a Satanist.
He's founded the Temple of Set. And he was a close friend
of Anton LaVey. The two of them were very active in
ritualistic sexual abuse. And they deferred funding from
this government program to use [in] this experimentation on
children.
"Where
they deliberately split off the personalities of these
children into multiples, so that when they're questioned or
put under oath or questioned under lie detector, that
unless the operator knows how to question a
multiple-personality disorder, they turn up with no
evidence."
She
continued: "They used these kids to sexually
compromise politicians or anyone else they wish to have
control of. This sounds so far out and so bizarre I had
trouble accepting it in the beginning myself until I was
presented with the data. We have the proof. In black and
white."
Under
questioning from DeCamp, Gosch reported: "I know that
Michael Aquino has been in Iowa. I know that Michael Aquino
has been to Offutt Air Force Base [a Strategic Air Command
base, near Omaha, which was linked to King's activities]. I
know that he has had contact with many of these
children."
Paul Bonacci,
who was simultaneously a victim and a member of the
nationwide pedophile crime syndicate, has subsequently
identified Aquino as the man who ordered the kidnapping of
Johnny Gosch. In his February 5 testimony, Bonacci referred
to the mastermind of the Gosch abduction as "the
Colonel."
A second
witness who testified at the February 5 hearing, Rusty
Nelson, was King's personal photographer. He later
described to EIR another incident which linked King to
Aquino, while the Army special forces officer was still on
active reserve duty. Some time in the late 1980s, Nelson
was with King at a posh hotel in downtown Minneapolis, when
he personally saw King turn over a suitcase full of cash
and bearer-bonds to "the Colonel," who he later
positively identified as Aquino. According to Nelson, King
told him that the suitcase of cash and bonds was earmarked
for the Nicaraguan Contras, and that "the
Colonel" was part of the covert Contra support
apparatus, otherwise associated with Lt. Col. Oliver North,
Vice President George Bush, and the "secret parallel
government" that they ran from the White House.
Just who is
Lt. Col. Michael Aquino (ret.), and what does the evidence
revealed in a Nebraska court hearing say about the current
state of affairs inside the U.S. military? Is the Aquino
case some kind of weird aberration that slipped off the
Pentagon radar screen?
Not in the
least.
Aquino,
Satan and the U.S. military
Throughout
much of the 1980s, Aquino was at the center of a
controversy involving the Pentagon's acquiescence to
outright Satanic practices inside the military services.
Aquino was also a prime suspect in a series of pedophile
scandals involving the sexual abuse of hundreds of
children, including the children of military personnel
serving at the Presidio U.S. Army station in the San
Francisco Bay Area. Furthermore, even as Aquino was being
investigated by Army Criminal Investigation Division
officers for involvement in the pedophile cases, he was
retaining highest-level security clearances, and was
involved in pioneering work in military psychological
operations ("psy-ops").
On August
14, 1987, San Francisco police raided Aquino's Russian Hill
home, which he shared with his wife Lilith. The raid was in
response to allegations that the house had been the scene
of a brutal rape of a four-year-old girl. The principal
suspect in the rape, a Baptist minister named Gary
Hambright, was indicted in September 1987 on charges that
he committed "lewd and lascivious acts" with six
boys and four girls, ranging in age from three to seven
years, during September-October 1986. At the time of the
alleged sex crimes, Hambright was employed at a child care
center on the U.S. Army base at Presidio. At the time of
Hambright's indictment, the San Francisco police charged
that he was involved in at least 58 separate incidents of
child sexual abuse.
According to
an article in the October 30, 1987 San Francisco Examiner,
one of the victims had identified Aquino and his wife as
participants in the child rape. According to the victim,
the Aquinos had filmed scenes of the child being fondled by
Hambright in a bathtub. The child's description of the
house, which was also the headquarters of Aquino's Satanic
Temple of Set, was so detailed, that police were able to
obtain a search warrant. During the raid, they confiscated
38 videotapes, photo negatives, and other evidence that the
home had been the hub of a pedophile ring, operating in and
around U.S. military bases.
Aquino and
his wife were never indicted in the incident. Aquino
claimed that he had been in Washington at the time,
enrolled in a year-long reserve officers course at the
National Defense University, although he did admit that he
made frequent visits back to the Bay Area and to his
church/home. The public flap over the Hambright indictment
did prompt the U.S. Army to transfer Aquino from the
Presidio, where he was the deputy director of reserve
training, to the U.S. Army Reserve Personnel Center in St.
Louis.
On April 19,
1988, the ten-count indictment against Hambright was
dropped by U.S. Attorney Joseph Russoniello, on the grounds
that, while there was clear evidence of child abuse (six of
the children contracted the venereal disease, chlamydia),
there was insufficient evidence to link Hambright (or the
Aquinos) to the crimes. Parents of several of the victims
charged that Russoniello's actions proved that "the
Federal system has broken down in not being able to protect
the rights of citizens age three to eight." |
Russoniello
would later be implicated in efforts to cover up the links
between the Nicaraguan Contras and South American
cocaine-trafficking organizations, raising deeper questions
about whether the decision not to prosecute Hambright and
Aquino had "national security implications."
Indeed, on
April 22, 1989, the U.S. Army sent letters to the parents
of at least 56 of the children believed to have been
molested by Hambright, urging them to have their children
tested for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), because
Hambright, a former daycare center worker, was reported to
be a carrier.
On May 13,
1989, the San Jose Mercury reported that Aquino and his
wife had been recently questioned by Army investigators
about charges of child molestation by the couple in two
northern California counties, Sonoma and Mendocino. A
9-year-old girl in Santa Rosa, California, and an
11-year-old boy in Fort Bragg, also in California,
separately identified Aquino as the rapist in a series of
1985 incidents, after they had seen him on television.
Softies
on Satan
When the San
Francisco Chronicle contacted Army officials at the
Presidio to find out if Aquino's security clearances had
been lifted as the result of the pedophile investigations,
the reporters were referred to the Pentagon, where Army
spokesman Maj. Greg Rixon told them, "The question is
whether he is trustworthy or can do the job. There is
nothing that would indicate in this case that there is any
problem we should be concerned about."
Indeed, the
Pentagon had already given its de facto blessings to
Aquino's long-standing public association with the Church
of Satan and his own successor "church," the
Temple of Set. This, despite the fact that Aquino's Satanic
activities involved overt support for neo-Nazi movements in
the United States and Europe. On October 10, 1983, while
traveling in West Germany on "official NATO
business," Aquino had staged a Satanic
"working" at the Wewelsburg Castle in Bavaria.
Aquino wrote a lengthy account of the ritual, in which he
invoked Nazi SS chief Heinrich Himmler: "As the
Wewelsburg was conceived by Heinrich Himmler to be the 'Mittelpunkt
der Welt' ('Middle of the World'), and as the focus of the
Hall of the Dead was to be the Gate of that Center, to
summon the Powers of Darkness at their most powerful
locus."
As early as
April 1978, the U.S. Army had circulated A Handbook for
Chaplains "to facilitate the provision of religious
activities." Both the Church of Satan and the Temple
of Set were listed among the "other" religions to
be tolerated inside the U.S. military. A section of the
handbook dealing with Satanism stated, "Often confused
with witchcraft, Satanism is the worship of Satan (also
known as Baphomet or Lucifer). Classical Satanism, often
involving 'black masses,' human sacrifices, and other
sacrilegious or illegal acts, is now rare. Modern Satanism
is based on both the knowledge of ritual magick and the
'anti-establishment' mood of the 1960s. It is related to
classical Satanism more in image than substance, and
generally focuses on 'rational self-interest with
ritualistic trappings.'
No so fast!
In 1982, the Temple of Set fissured over the issue of
Aquino's emphasis on Nazism. One leader, Ronald K. Barrett,
shortly after his expulsion, wrote that Aquino had
"taken the Temple of Set in an explicitly Satanic
direction, with strong overtones of German National
Socialist Nazi occultism ... One fatality has occurred
within the Temple membership during the period covered May
1982-July 1983."
The handbook
quoted "Nine Satanic Statements" from the Church
of Satan, without comment. "Statement Seven," as
quoted in the handbook, read, "Satan represents man as
just another animal, sometimes better, more often worse
than those that walk on all fours, who, because of his
'divine and intellectual development' has become the most
vicious animal of all."
From
'psy-ops' to 'mindwars'
Aquino's steady rise
up the hierarchy of the Satanic world closely paralleled
his career advances inside the U.S. military. According to
an official biography circulated by the Temple of Set,
"Dr. Aquino is High Priest and chief executive officer
of the Temple of Set, the nation's principal Satanic
church, in which he holds the degree of Ipissimus VI. He
joined the original Church of Satan in 1969, becoming one
of its chief officials by 1975 when the Temple of Set was
founded. In his secular profession he is a Lieutenant
Colonel, Military Intelligence, U.S. Army, and is qualified
as a Special-Forces officer, Civil Affairs officer, and
Defense Attaché. He is a graduate of the Command and
General Staff College, the National Defense University and
the Defense Intelligence College, and the State
Departments' Foreign Service Institute."
Indeed, a more
detailed curriculum vitae that Aquino provided to EIR,
dated March 1989, claimed that he had gotten his doctorate
at the University of California at Santa Barbara in 1980,
with his dissertation on "The Neutron Bomb." He
listed 16 separate military schools that he attended during
1968-87, including advanced courses in "Psychological
Operations" at the JFK Special Warfare Center at Fort
Bragg, North Carolina, and "Strategic
Intelligence" at the Defense Intelligence College, at
Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, D.C.
Aquino was deeply
involved in what has been called the "revolution in
military affairs" ("RMA"), the introduction
of the most kooky "Third Wave," "New
Age" ideas into military long-range planning, which
introduced such notions as "information warfare"
and "cyber-warfare" into the Pentagon's lexicon.
In the early 1980s,
at the same time that Heidi and Alvin Toffler were spinning
their Tavistock "Third Wave" utopian claptrap to
some top Air Force brass, Aquino and another U.S. Army
colonel, Paul Vallely, were co-authoring an article for
Military Review. Although the article was never published
in the journal, the piece was widely circulated among
military planners, and was distributed by Aquino's Temple
of Set. The article, titled "From PSYOP to Mindwar:
The Psychology of Victory," endorsed some of the ideas
published in a 1980 Military Review article by Lt. Col.
John Alexander, an affiliate of the Stanford Research
Institute, a hotbed of Tavistock Institute and Frankfurt
School "New Age" social engineering.
Aquino and Vallely
called for an explicitly Nietzschean form of warfare, which
they dubbed "mindwar." "Like the sword
Excalibur," they wrote, "we have but to reach out
and seize this tool; and it can transform the world for us
if we have but the courage and the integrity to guide
civilization with it. If we do not accept Excalibur, then
we relinquish our ability to inspire foreign cultures with
our morality. If they then devise moralities unsatisfactory
to us, we have no choice but to fight them on a more
brutish level."
And what is "mindwar?"
"The term is harsh and fear-inspiring," Aquino
wrote. "And it should be: It is a term of attack and
victory-not one of rationalization and coaxing and
conciliation. The enemy may be offended by it; that is
quite all right as long as he is defeated by it. A
definition is offered: Mindwar is the deliberate,
aggressive convincing of all participants in a war that we
will win that war."
For Aquino, "mindwar"
is a permanent state of strategic psychological warfare
against the populations of friend and foe nations alike.
"In its strategic context, mindwar must reach out to
friends, enemies and neutrals alike across the globe ...
through the media possessed by the United States which have
the capabilities to reach virtually all people on the face
of the Earth. These media are, of course, the electronic
media-television and radio. State of the art developments
in satellite communication, video recording techniques, and
laser and optical transmission of broadcasts make possible
a penetration of the minds of the world such as would have
been inconceivable just a few years ago." Above all
else, Aquino argues, mindwar must target the population of
the United States, "by denying enemy propaganda access
to our people, and by explaining and emphasizing to our
people the rationale for our national interest. ... Rather
it states a whole truth that, if it does not now exist,
will be forced into existence by the will of the United
States."
Satanic
subversion of the U.S. Military
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