- 'Los Crimenes De Los Buenos' by Joaquin Bochaca
Published January 1, 2001
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- An excerpt...
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- (Note: The translation of the passage below from
Joaquin Bochaca's book, "Los Crimenes De Los 'Buenos' " was prepared
by a participant on Liberty Forum who writes under the name of
"Mugwort." The Book by Bochaca, an Argentinian, appears to be a major
writing. I hope it soon becomes available in english translation. The
short passage below addresses the assassination of General
Patton.)
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- The abuses committed by the Forces of the Occupation
in Germany reached such bestial extremes that various people in the
Allied command structure opposed it--or tried to. ... Lindbergh
mentioned how the American soldiers burned the leftovers of their
meals to keep them from being scavenged by the [starving] Germans who
hung around the garbage barrels.
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- He also wrote: "In our homeland the public press
publishes articles on how we 'liberated' the oppressed peoples. Here,
our soldiers use the word 'liberate' to describe how they get their
hands on loot. Everything they grab from from a German house,
everything they take off a German is 'liberated' in the lingo of our
troops. Leica cameras are liberated, food, works of art, clothes are
liberated. A soldier who rapes a German girl is "liberating "
her.
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- "There are German children who gaze at us as we eat
... our cursed regulations forbid us to give tham anything to eat. I
remember the soldier Barnes, who was arrested for having given a
chocolate bar to a tattered little girl. It's hard to look these
children in the face. I feel ashamed. Ashamed of myself, my people, as
I eat and look at those children. How can we have gotten so inhumane?"
So wrote Colonel Lindbergh, national hero of the United States, who
was proposed as a candidate for the presidency of his country, who
fought in the air force of his country, who was not a nazi. Many
decent American and British citizens can see that.
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- General Patton, perhaps the most popular of the
American generals, immediately opposed the total or partial
application of the Morgenthau Plan in his sector of occupation. Soon,
he had a run-in with another general of higher rank: General
Eisenhower. It's well-known what extremely violent debates they had
about how the civilian population of Germany was to be treated. Patton
was SENTENCED TO DEATH by the directors of the scenario.
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- One day Patton's car was run into by a military
truck in what seemed like a very strange accident. The General was
taken by ambulance to a hospital, where he was observed to have
serious, but not life-threatening injuries. But some days later he
died of a heart attack.
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- Patton's death, in any event, was extremely
opportune. The General had annnounced that he was thinking of moving
to the United States, where he was going to denounce publicly what was
taking place in Germany. But he didn't have time. He had fought with
too many important people. General Eisenhower had had to pick up the
telephone and order that he be halted before he reached Berlin. At
Yalta the new "masters of the world" had agreed that the Soviets would
be the first to enter the German capital. Patton wanted to prevent the
Vandal-like entrance of the Red Army into the capital of the Reich,
and made an enemy of Eisenhower. A month before, he could have entered
Prague, but was also detained by Eisenhower, leaving him nailed to the
ground by an order.
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- Patton's difficulties with the WAR POWERS over the
occupation of Germany were so great that Eisenhower stripped him of
his position as Commander of the Third Army, and stuck him with the
command of a secondary unit. Patton knew he was in danger of death,
and confided as much to his family and close friends. He was feared
because of his prestige-he was the most renowned American General,
while Eisenhower was nothing more than a political soldier-and his
words could alert the public to the reality of what was happening in
Germany.
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- Thus the accident was set up, which was not by any
means the first. On the 21st of April 1945, his airplane on which he
was being transported to General Headquarters of the Third Army in
Feldfield (England) was attacked by what was assumed to be a German
fighter-bomber, but it turned out to be a "Spitfire" piloted by an
inexpert Polish pilot. Patton's plane was shot up, but was
miraculously able to land. On the 3rd of May, some days before the end
of the war, the General's jeep was charged by an ox-drawn cart,
leaving Patton with light injuries.
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- October 13, 1945 was when the collision with the
truck occurred. When Patton appeared to be getting better from the
accident, the "heart attack" occurred. The fact is that after October
13 only the doctors saw Patton, forbidding any other visitors.
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- Until recently, it was only speculation that Patton
had been assassinated. Now it is known for a fact. And it is know for
a very simple reason. Because an agent of the well-known OSS (Office
of Strategic Services) or American military spy, a certain Douglas
Bazata, a Jew of Lebanese origin, announced it in front of 450 invited
guests; high ranking, ex-members of the OSS, in the Hilton Hotel in
Washington, the 25th of September, 1979. Bazata said,
word-for-word:
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- "For divers political reasons, many extremely
high-ranking persons hated Patton. I know who killed him. Because I am
the one who was hired to do it. Ten thousand dollars. General William
Donovan himself, director of the O.S.S, entrusted me with the mission.
I set up the accident. Since he didn't die in the accident, he was
kept in isolation in the hospital, where he was killed with an
injection."
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- The tragic fate of Patton convinced other colleagues
and their honorable compatriots of the uselessness of fighting against
the WAR POWERS. And if any doubts remained, the "Morgan case" was
enough to dissipate them. (To be continued .)
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- http://www.vho.org/aaargh/fran/livres4/Bochaca-Crimines.pdf
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