DEEP DIVES
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Deep Dive down the Rabbit Holes. Interactive channel for discussion of intel-past and present, Trump Comms, and The Q Key and maps.
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I’m going to mute the channel. Be on the look out for the shill(s) who keeps downvoting the presentation.
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Rostow apparently struggled with this question for the next month as the Watergate scandal continued to expand.

On June 25, 1973, John Dean delivered his blockbuster Senate testimony…claiming that Nixon was involved in the cover-up within days after the burglary that took place at the Democratic National Committee (June 1972).

Dean asserted that Watergate was part of a years-long program of political espionage directed by Nixon’s White House.
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The day after Dean’s explosive testimony, Rostow reached his conclusion about what to do with “The ‘X’ envelope.”

Rostow wrote a “Top Secret” note which read…

To be opened by the Director, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, not earlier than fifty (50) years from this date June 26, 1973.”
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☝️☝️

Friends…we hit the “50” year mark 5 months ago.

Did they open it?

WHAT
was
IN
THE
X
ENVELOPE??
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Ultimately, the LBJ Library didn’t wait that long.

On July 22, 1994…the envelope was opened and the process of declassifying the contents began.

What was in the unclassified files?

1. The outcome of the 1968 election.

2. The fate of a half million U.S. soldiers, then sitting in the Vietnam war zone.
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Prior to the 1968 election President Johnson thought a breakthrough regarding the Vietnam War was near.

This breakthrough was one that could have ended a war which had already claimed the lives of more than 30,000 American troops and countless Vietnamese.

Nixon, and his presidential candidate opponent, Hubert Humphrey, received briefings on the progress of the negotiations for peace.

There was considerable progress and momentum being made during this time in October 1968.

Johnson chose not to campaign for another term.
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Top Secret” reports from the National Security Agency informed President Johnson that South Vietnam’s President Nguyen Thieu was closely monitoring the political developments in the United States…with an eye toward helping Nixon win the Nov. 5th election.

Funny…next year’s election will be held on November 5th.
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On October 28th, 1968 South Vietnam President, Nguyen van Thieu said:

It appears that Mr. Nixon will be elected as the next president” and that any settlement with the Viet Cong should be put off until “the new president” was in place.
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☝️Keep track of those October 28th dates!

October 28th, 2017 is when Q started.
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The next day, on Oct. 29, Johnson’s National Security Advisor, Walt Rostow received the first indication that Nixon might actually be coordinating with South Vietnam President Nguyen Thieu to sabotage the peace talks.

Rostow’s brother, Eugene, wrote a memo about a tip he had revived from a “source” in New York.
Thissource” had spoken to a member of the banking community, who was “very close to Nixon.”
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The bankers were on a working lunch to assess likely market trends and to decide where to invest.

These bankers had been given inside information about the prospects for Vietnam peace…and were told that Nixon was going to obstruct that outcome.
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In other words, Nixon’s friends on Wall Street were placing their financial bets, based on some inside intel. They were told that Johnson’s “peace initiative” was doomed to fail.

It seems that America’s sons and daughters fighting in Vietnam were being used like meat.
But, for those banksters and other Cabal players, it was all about MONEY!!
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Walt Rostow identified who his brother’s source was that was providing “inside intel” for the bankers.

It was Alexander Sachs, who was then on the board of Lehman Brothers.
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A memo from Eugene Rostow (Walt’s brother) stated that Nixon “was trying to frustrate President Johnson, by inciting Saigon to step up its demands, and by letting Hanoi know that when he [Nixon] took office ‘he could accept anything and blame it on his predecessor.’”

In essence, Nixon was trying to convince both the South and North Vietnamese that they would get a better deal if they stalled Johnson on the peace deals.
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The White House soon learned that Anna Chennault, the anticommunist Chinese-born widow of Lt. Gen. Claire Chennault, and a member of Nixon’s campaign team, were holding curious meetings with South Vietnamese Ambassador to the United States, Bui Diem.

On Oct. 30th, 1968 an FBI intercept overheard Bui Diem tell Mrs. Chennault that something “is cooking” and asked her to come by the embassy.
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Johnson knew what Nixon was up to.

Johnson said regarding Nixon’s backroon maneuvering over Vietnam:

“I think it would shock America if a principal candidate was playing with a source like this on a matter of this importance (Vietnam).

I don’t want to do that [go public]. They ought to know that we know what they’re doing. I know who they’re talking to. I know what they’re saying.”
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President Johnson added:

“They’re contacting a foreign power in the middle of a war. It’s a damn bad mistake.
You just tell them that their people are messing around in this thing, and if they don’t want it on the front pages, they better quit it.”
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Johnson picked up the phone and talked to Nixon about what he knew from the FBI intercepts. He basically told Nixon not to go down this road…or else.
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Nixon insisted that he would do whatever President Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk wanted…including going to Paris (where the peace talks took place) himself if that would help.

“I’m not trying to interfere with your conduct of it; I’ll only do what you and Rusk want me to do,” Nixon said.

Nixon knew how close Johnson was to a peace deal.
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