L. Fletcher Prouty Quote

In the August 7, 1971, issue of The New Republic, the Asian scholar Eugene G. Windchy says, What steered the nation into Vietnam was a series of tiny but powerful cabals. What he calls a sense of tiny but powerful conspiracies, this book puts all together as the actions of the Secret Team. That most valuable book by David Wise and Thomas B. Ross calls this power source The Invisible Government, and in the chapter on the various intelligence organizations in the United States they use the term Secret Elite. The CIA did not begin as a Secret Team, as a series of tiny but powerful cabals, as the invisible government, or as members of the secret elite. But before long it became a bit of all of these. President Truman was exactly right when he said that the CIA had been diverted from its original assignment. This diversion and the things that have happened as a result of it will be the subject of the remainder of this book.

L. Fletcher Prouty

In the August 7, 1971, issue of The New Republic, the Asian scholar Eugene G. Windchy says, What steered the nation into Vietnam was a series of tiny but powerful cabals. What he calls a sense of tiny but powerful conspiracies, this book puts all together as the actions of the Secret Team. That most valuable book by David Wise and Thomas B. Ross calls this power source The Invisible Government, and in the chapter on the various intelligence organizations in the United States they use the term Secret Elite. The CIA did not begin as a Secret Team, as a series of tiny but powerful cabals, as the invisible government, or as members of the secret elite. But before long it became a bit of all of these. President Truman was exactly right when he said that the CIA had been diverted from its original assignment. This diversion and the things that have happened as a result of it will be the subject of the remainder of this book.

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About L. Fletcher Prouty

Leroy Fletcher Prouty (January 24, 1917 – June 5, 2001) served as Chief of Special Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff under President John F. Kennedy. A colonel in the United States Air Force, he retired from military service to become a bank executive. He subsequently became a critic of U.S. foreign policy, particularly the covert activities of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), which he believed was working on behalf of a secret world elite.
Prouty's commentary on the Kennedy assassination circulated widely from the 1970s to 1990s, as a key source for conspiracy theories about it. He was the inspiration for the character "X" in Oliver Stone's film JFK.