Terrorism experts
have obtained Spanish government documents indicating how the CIA
supplied sophisticated explosives to ETA terrorists during the
assassination of Admiral Luis Carrero Blanco in 1973. Police and
military information sources have stated that "Kissinger himself
gave the green light."

A JackBlood.com Special Report
By Mario Andrade
More than 30 years after the horrific assassination of Admiral Luis
Carrero Blanco in Spain, no one had known the exact details about
the attack. Government officials had only speculated that ETA was
behind the bombing that took his life. However, new revelations point out that ETA terrorists, assisted by the
CIA carried out the sophisticated bombing that ended the life of
Francisco Franco’s handpicked successor to power in
1973.
A few hours after the bombing, the initial
police reports indicated that the assassins had dug a tunnel under
the street where the admiral used to drive to and from church. The
explosives were detonated by remote control as his car was driving
over the tunnel. The admiral was on his way home from attending
church services. Suddenly, a massive explosion hurled his vehicle
more than 100 feet and landed on the second floor terrace of one
the church buildings. No one had admitted carrying out the attack
at that time. Police said the killers triggered the bomb from a
nearby basement in what appeared to be a very sophisticated
assassination.
But according to Journalists Enrique Montánchez and
Pedro Canales, their newspaper “La Razón” has
obtained secret government documents that tell the rest of the
story. “Previously, many different theories and
versions of the story didn’t fully explain the murder of
Admiral Carrero,” they say in one of their recent articles.
Finally, 30 years after the sophisticated assassination, they have
had access to secret government documents prepared and drafted
during Franco’s regime. These memos and reports point out to
the CIA’s involvement in assisting ETA in Carrero's
assassination plot in order to put an end to what was considered at
that time, a continuity of Franco’s government with Carrero
in power. One of the documents stated that the Americans brought
several mines from Fort Bliss, which they would later be issued to
Basque separatists.
The information comes from a government report submitted to
District Attorney Fernando Herrero Tejedor, in which the details of
the CIA’s involvement in the terrorist act were mentioned, as
well as an alleged American military participation. However,
District Attorney Herrero died under mysterious circumstances a
year and half later in a strange traffic accident, in which a large
truck hit his car on a highway between Madrid and La
Coruña.
The government report mentioned the
arrival of a shipment from Fort Bliss, containing 10 anti-tank
mines, delivered to the American Military Base of Torrejón,
in Madrid. At the time, these alleged mines were extremely
sophisticated. Although they were capable of being detonated by
remote control, they were wireless, unlike conventional explosives
requiring cables connected to a detonator. The report speculated
that the mines would potentially be used for political
assassinations, including a possible attempt to kill Franco
himself. But the intelligence analysts at the time never expected
they would’ve been used against Carrero, according to the
report.
After the Admiral's murder, Franco’s secret service came to
an official conclusion that at least one or two of the anti-tank
mines were placed in the tunnel the night before the bombing. The
entrance of the tunnel was located at 104 Claudio Coello Street in
Madrid, near the San Francisco de Borga Church, where Carrero
Blanco had just been attending mass. According to the report, CIA
operatives had been following the ETA terrorists, and it
wasn’t difficult for them to place the mines next to the
conventional explosives left by ETA inside the tunnel.
But not all of Franco’s intelligence services believed in
what was mentioned in the report. Some believed the information was
fabricated by French Counterintelligence in order to drive a
political wedge between the Franco Regime and the United States.
Therefore, France would destabilize the “government
transition project” proposed by Richard Nixon and accepted by
Franco himself.
In October of 1970, President Richard Nixon visited Spain and spoke
with Franco about finding a successor and form a new government in
what was known as “the Burgos talks,” named after the
town of Burgos. But surprisingly, two months later, there was a
trial in Burgos involving six alleged ETA terrorists that ended by
sentencing them to death. The trial created tensions between the
government and the Basque separatists. Nevertheless, Franco
commuted their death sentences. But interestingly enough, a few
days before Carrero’s murder in 1973, then secretary of State
Henry Kissinger made a visit to Madrid, where he supposedly met
with Spanish government officials. According to Franco’s
intelligence service and police reports, it was during that time
when Kissinger “gave the green light” for the bombing
to go forward. Apparently, the Admiral was too much of a
nationalist and a hard-liner, and he had to be taken out in order
to prevent what would’ve been considered “a continuity
of Franco’s government”. Prior to his assassination
Carrero Blanco became premier in June of 1973, shortly after Franco
stepped out of his duties of chief of state and head of government.
Carrero was known for his influence and contacts with monarchist
groups, his appointment was generally regarded as a step toward
Franco's planned restoration of the monarchy under Juan Carlos.
According to Journalists Enrique Montánchez and Pedro Canales,
ETA itself doesn’t provide many details about the mysterious
bombing. They always mention that the organization itself was under
the control of a ‘deep throat,’ a third man whose
identity was never known to them. They were
compartmentalized. They say that the
mystery man could have been working for both sides, since he
provided ETA with the exact details about Carrero’s daily
schedules and itineraries, which were crucial in the planning of
his assassination.
Note: Enrique Montánchez and Pedro Canales are the
authors of the book En el nombre de
Alá (In the Name of Allah). They are special
correspondents for the Spanish Newspaper ‘La
Razón.’ They are among Spain’s leading and most
respected terrorism and military analysts.
Mario Andrade is a highly
decorated Gulf War veteran, linguist, and a mine warfare
specialist. He has participated in hundreds of mine warfare and
mine countermeasures operations throughout the
world.
Sources:
http://www.solidaridad.net/vernoticia.asp?noticia=1426
http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/december/20/newsid_2539000/2539129.stm
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/C/CarreroB1.asp
links...
Madrid
Keys To A Conspiracy - 9-11 Review
Mustric, Kryder,
Carlyle Group, WTC's Reinsurer Swiss CIA
Fake Terror - 9-11
Review
Mamoun
Darkanzali - 9/11 Encyclopedia
General
Mahmud Ahmad - 9/11 Encyclopedia
911 investigation
video and photo analysis Pentagon and WTC
The Patriot Act REALLY sucks
|