232 results found.
... . He also fell in with Opus Dei, which may explain some of what followed. In 1951 he was approached by Antoine Pinay, who was a cabinet minister at that point. On behalf of some Swiss lawyer Pinay sought to clear up the matter of a Geneva-based firm that had seen its factory in Germany seized by the Nazis during the war. Violet resolved the problem and Pinay was so satisfied he recommend him to the new French intelligence organization, SDECE. Violet duly became an SDECE operative, utilizing a global network of contacts to assist that agency in its work.(2 ) Violet's early post-war deeds also featured a Roman Catholic priest, Father ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 15 - 01 Oct 1989 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue18/lob18-04.htm
... . Then, as Thurlow puts it: 'This resistance was overridden by the implications of the Tyler Kent affair. ' Tyler Kent was a cypher clerk in the American Embassy in London. He had been under MI5 surveillance for some 7 months during which he had made contact with members of the Right Club, the hard-core pro-Nazis in London lead by the dotty Tory MP Captain Ramsay. Kent was arrested on 20th May 1940. It was very convenient for Churchill. The received view is that after Kent's arrest Churchill/MI5 used the Kent-Captain Ramsay connection as evidence of a more organised conspiracy than really existed - a pretext - and the whole lot of ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 14 - 01 Nov 1988 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue17/lob17-12.htm
... West Midlands and the 'Black Liberation Front' claimed responsibility. The Independent (8th April) reported that 'BLF' were responsible for a series of violent actions going back to March 1987. The paper also reported that black leaders in Wolverhampton, where these events are said to have taken place, believed the 'BLF' to be a neo-Nazi provocation. Meanwhile, another 'Black Liberation Front', apparently based in London, and apparently an off-shoot of the Black Panthers (sic), disowned the Wolverhampton version. (Sunday Times 31 July 1988) The final important link was made in the August edition of Special Forces which told of an IRA 'alliance with the London ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 13 - 01 Nov 1988 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue17/lob17-10.htm
... flesh-presser?) wants a return to the Gold standard; and Jesse Jackson's 'Rainbow Coalition' is described as a "motley assortment of gays, lesbians, nuclear freezeniks, Qaddafi and Hitler admirers, ecology freaks, prototerrorists and other perverts .. .. a mass movement, modelled on the SA, the left wing of the Nazi movement, and their modern-day heirs, the Soviet controlled Greens of West Germany" I could go on but mocking this delusional system of belief is too easy to be much fun. The LaRouche nonsense is only interesting to those who collect conspiracy theories. Since the John Birch Society's reworking of Nesta Webster, there have been very ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 25 - 01 Jun 1988 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue16/lob16-13.htm
... officers, friends of Rothschild and Philby. In September 1963 de Courcy wrote a remarkable series of letters. (24) "I am, alas correct in my fears. An entire network of Russian agents has (illegible) since the thirties. Rothschild played a major role in recruiting them in the belief that Russia was necessary to defeat Nazi Germany - or rather it was his belated excuse because Hitler had not risen to power when Rothschild started. I suppose he would argue he saw it coming. His puppets were Burgess and co .. .. . My prime concern is its (the cases) connection with the pro-Russian group of which I have knowledge and ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 12 - 01 Jun 1988 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue16/lob16-01.htm
... of Grenada and a trio of odds and ends, including Moser's 'Towards a theory of anti-Communist insurgency'. As research, these essays are about as reliable as Stalinist history. They are all loaded in the same way. The account of the war in the Ukraine forbears to mention the widespread collaboration between the Ukrainian nationalists and the Nazis; Nicaragua - no mention of the CIA; Angola - no mention of the CIA; Mozambique - no RENAMO atrocities, nothing on its origins in Rhodesian Intelligence; and so on. The only value this volume has is as a demonstration of how the right produces propaganda, and who it uses as sources. In the essay on ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 5 - 01 Jun 1988 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue16/lob16-05.htm
... likely due to other sources. Comparatively little is known about these MI6 operations. The only books so far on the subject have been E. H. Cookridge's book on Gehlen, based largely on Soviet publications, and Bethel's flawed book on the Albanian episode. Neither book takes on board the fact that the emigres used were largely ex-nazi collaborators, or how MI6 came to be involved with such people. The big secret that Philby and the other defectors took with them was the involvement of MI6, through Ellis and Menzies, with these proto-fascists before, during and after the Second World War. Cavendish's minor account of the anti-Bolshevik campaigns will help those ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 6 - 01 Feb 1988 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue15/lob15-01.htm
... were they all anti-Semites to begin with?) None of which would be of more than minor historical interest were it not for the fact that the anti-Semite network of today is thoroughly integrated into the World Anti Communist League (WACL), and WACL does matter. WACL is a brilliant operation in which hard-core nazis, anti-Semites, war criminals from WW2 and the death-squad politicians of today's Central and South America are able to associate publicly with the respectable right-wing of the world's democracies. In Lobster 12 I listed some of the Tory MPs recently associated with the WACL. A similar process has happened in New Zealand where half ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 90 - 01 Apr 1987 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue13/lob13-07.htm
... .uk (Issue 13) April 1987 Last | Contents | Next Issue 13 Articles Jackboots and Sporran: the strange world of Robert Gayre Kevin Koogan in ANARCHY No.38 (Box A 84b Whitechapel High St., London E1 7QX) This is fascinating stuff, the history of some of the more obscure corners in the neo-nazi American/European right-wing since WW2. But it has an odd feel to it, as if it were slightly out of focus. In tracing the connections between Robert Gayre (in current UK Who's Who), Roger Pearson and the upsurge of Euro-fascism since the 1950s, Koogan takes in WACL, Permindex, Freemasonry ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 66 - 01 Apr 1987 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue13/lob13-16.htm
... acquittal of the Bulgarians last March was lucky to hit the back pages. The real plot against the Pope - by Ali Agca and his Grey Wolves comrades - is clearly visible within the context of their politics. Likewise their motives. For the last 50 years Turkish fascism has laid claim to vast portions of the USSR. In WW2 the Nazis recruited 100,000 Soviet POWs from Soviet republics such as Turkestan. Pan Turkish plans to attack the Soviet Union were only abandoned after Stalingrad and support was switched to the Allies - a move heralded by the banning of the pro-Nazi party. By the 1970s however, the fascist NAP and its Grey Wolves 'youth wing' were ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 37 - 01 Apr 1987 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue13/lob13-10.htm