CIA Contract Pilot Attended the School of Illusionary Warfare with Lee Harvey Oswald in ‘58
TrineDay Books releases memoire of Robert "Tosh" Plumlee, Deep Cover, Shallow Graves, a
covert contract pilot who claims to have participated in numerous
clandestine U.S. intelligence operations beginning in the early 1950s
and continuing through the Cold War. The book combines autobiography,
political history, and investigative narrative centered on Plumlee’s
involvement in covert aviation missions linked to U.S. intelligence
agencies, anti-Castro Cuban operations, organized crime figures, and
eventually the events surrounding the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy.
According
to former CIA officer and co-author of the book Cult of Intelligence,
Victor Marchetti, The School of Illusionary Warfare was considered a
top-secret government blacksite. It was located on an old World War II
submarine base on the Outer Banks of North Carolina and run by the
Office of Naval Intelligence, the oldest intelligence organization in
the United States. Marchetti wrote that no one outside of a tight circle
of instructors and recruits even knew about its existence.
The
School of Illusionary Warfare was an offshoot of MK-Ultra and used the
techniques developed by director Sidney Gottlieb to create a new type of
soldier – a super soldier, if you will, who was mentally strong and
psychologically prepared to fight the new brain warfare through a
combination of techniques known as psych ops.
CIA contact pilot
William “Tosh” Plumlee in his new book Deep Cover Shallow Graves
describes how he attend the School of Illusionary in the summer of 1958
with fifty-four other students including a young operative named Lee
Harvey Oswald. “All of us in my class were young, naive, patriotic and
the product of broken homes. In other words, we were impressionable,” he
reports.
While stationed in Miami and flying weapons for the
CIA to supply Fidel Castro and his rebels in the mountains Cuba,
Plumlee was approached by CIA official Wild Bill Harvey and told to
attend the school. He was later introduced to another CIA officer named
George Joannides who was running the psychology warfare program taught
at Nags Head – a program designed by the infamous Sidney Gottlieb,
director of the MK-Ultra Program under CIA director Allen Dulles. Dulles
and Gottlieb both believed there were ways to influence and control the
human mind that could lead to an advantage over our Soviet enemies in
the Cold War.
On April 10, 1953 Allen Dulles described the
impetus behind the psychological warfare program in a speech to the
alumni of Princeton University. “In the past few years we have become
accustomed to hearing much about the battle for men’s minds – the war of
ideologies,” he said. “I wonder, however, whether we clearly perceive
the magnitude of the problem, whether we realize how sinister the battle
for men’s minds has become in Soviet hands. We might call it, in its
new form, ‘brain warfare.’” Three weeks later as part of what Dulles
referred to as “brain warfare” he approved MK-Ultra, a top-secret CIA
program to control the human mind via electro-shock therapy, hypnosis,
polygraphs, radiation, and a variety of drugs, toxins, and chemicals.
The Nag Head Casino and two bungalows served as classrooms when Plumlee attended the School of Illusionary Warfare.
Psychological
programming was the main objective at Nags Head. It was performed (or
inflicted) on recruits who were taught how to use to it control other
people.
They learned how to infiltrate a foreign country and
capture a radio station to use it to broadcast propaganda. They were
taught that if they could control what was communicated to a population,
they could control their thinking and their actions. According to
Plumlee they also learned that if they lied well enough, people would
start to believe them.
Some Illusionary War training took place
at another secret ONI-CIA base 150 miles northwest of Nags Head known as
Point Harvey along the Albemarle Sound. Back then it was the site of
hardcore MK-Ultra drug experiments.
The base was also used to
train assassins and was where the 1stDemotions Section and the 101st
Airborne Division – known as the Filthy Thirteen – trained during World
War II. The Dirty Thirteen was the inspiration for the hit movie The
Dirty Dozen starring Ernest Borgnine, Charles Bronson and Jim Brown.
Students
were tested for abilities like remote viewing, the ability to plant an
idea in a subject’s mind and predicting future events. Those who showed
aptitude in those areas were selected for further training. They were
taught techniques to influence a subject’s decision-making.
Instructors
used sublimation to communicate directly to students’ subconscious
minds. According to Plumlee, they were hypnotized regularly. While under
hypnosis they were programmed with instructions – like, never
compromise a mission; complete your objective; yours is not to reason
why, it is simply to do, or die; the mission is more important than your
life.
As the 55 students progressed with the training, they were
separated into specialized groups. Students who went into MK-Ultra were
given drugs like LSD to manipulate their mental states, break down
their conscious minds and program their unconscious minds to perform
specific tasks. Plumlee contends that some of them later became
assassins and were dispatched to places like Haight Ashbury in San
Francisco and Vietnam.
In Lee Harvey Oswald’s case, he was placed
in advance Russian studies and was being groomed to defect to the
Soviet Union with another eight to ten other recruits, This is from an
interview former CIA officer Victor Marchetti did with author Anthony
Summers in the late ‘70s:
At the time, in 1959, the United States
was having real difficulty in acquiring information out of the Soviet
Union; the technical systems had, of course, not developed to the point
that they are at today, and we were resorting to all sorts of
activities. One of these activities was an ONI (Office of Naval
Intelligence) program which involved three dozen, maybe forty, young men
who were made to appear disenchanted, poor, American youths who had
become turned off and wanted to see what communism was all about. Some
of these people lasted only a few weeks. They were sent into the Soviet
Union, or into eastern Europe, with the specific intention the Soviets
would pick them up and “double” them if they suspected them of being US
agents, or recruit them as KGB
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