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Maurice Greenberg The Head Of AIG
Maurice "Hank" Greenberg, once floated as a possible CIA Director
in 1995, is the CEO of AIG insurance (->), manager of the third
largest capital investment pool in the world. Maurice Raymond
Greenberg (AIG, Kroll, CFR) was born in New York City May 4, 1925, the
son of Jacob Greenberg and Ada (Rheingold) Greenberg. The young man
adopted the nickname "Hank" to make people think of a popular American
baseball player with the name, Hank Greenberg. Greenberg served in the
U.S. Army in the Korea conflict.
He joined the insurance firm, Continental Casualty Co., in 1952.
Continental executive J. Milburn Smith recommended Greenberg to the
C.V. Starr insurance/spy organization, which made Greenberg its vice
president in 1960, its president and CEO in 1967, and its chairman,
succeeding Starr, in 1969.
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Henry Kissinger Is An Associate
Maurice Greenberg was deeply involved in chinese trade in the
80s, where Henry Kissinger (->) was one of his representatives.
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Greenberg Connected To The Mossad
In the China trade, Greenberg became very close to Shaul
Eisenberg, the leader of the Asian section of the Israeli
intelligence service Mossad, and agent for the sales of
sophisticated military equipment to the Chinese military. From
1988 to 1995, Greenberg was a director of the New York Federal
Reserve bank - this branch of the system is the main
instrument through which Federal Reserve chiefs and the Bank
of England traditionally execute their U.S. political-economic
policy.
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Greenberg Was A Federal Reserve Official
Greenberg was deputy chairman of the New York Fed in
1992 and 1993, and New York Fed chairman in 1994 and 1995.
In 1993, Maurice Greenberg's American International Group
(AIG ->), became co-owner of the "private spy agency",
Kroll Associates (->), as a result of rescuing Kroll from
bankruptcy with a cash infusion. Kroll was notorious
during the 1980s as the "CIA of Wall Street" due to the
prevalence of former CIA, FBI, Scotland Yard, British
secret service and British Special Air Service men Kroll
employed for corporate espionage in takeover bids, as well
as for destabilization of foreign nations. During 1996,
while Greenberg was deputy chairman of the Council on
Foreign Relations (See Cfr), he chaired the CFR task force
on intelligence, which published "Making Intelligence
Smarter: The future of U.S. Intelligence." This report
mostly served to exhibit Greenberg's access to the
intelligence community; but he parlayed it into a
nomination by Senator Arlen Specter and others, for
Greenberg to be Director of the Cia.
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Greenberg has used his connections to covert intelligence,
supranational institutions, private bankers and speculators, and his huge
global cash inflow, to shape a unique personal empire. Since 1997, Frank
G. Wisner, Jr., has been a board member of Kroll , and is currently
Greenberg's Deputy Chairman for External Affairs. Wisner's father was a
founder of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, who killed himself over
the scandal from his being duped by British-Soviet masterspy Kim Philby.
Frank Wisner, Jr., is a director of the George Bush-linked energy giant
Enron (a client for whom AIG negotiated payments from Peru over
nationalization of Enron operations).
In the early 1990s, Miami-based private investigator Lou Polumbo joined
Kroll Associates. According to sources in the industry, Polumbo brought
with him a personal history of involvement with the Medallin and other
South American narcotics cartels; his business included helping relocate
some of the capabilities of these cartels out of Colombia. The deal to
bring Polumbo into Kroll was worked out by Avram Shalom, the former head
of Israel's Shin Beth secret police. Shalom went to work for Kroll; he had
been fired as Shin Beth boss due to a scandalous massacre of Palestinians
in the Israel-occupied territories by his Shin Beth agents.
Compare: AIG's long connection to CIA drug trafficking and covert
operations was mentioned in a two-part series of Copvcia.Com, that was
interrupted just prior to the attacks of September 11. AIG's stock has
bounced back remarkably well since the attacks. Source: http://www.copvcia.com/stories/part_2.html
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