FINAL WARNING: The Council on Foreign Relations
documents, 160 microfilms of secret reports, 800 pages of Russian
intelligence reports, plus the names of hundreds of Soviet agents in
American and Europe. State Department Security Officer, John Norpel,
Jr., testified before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee that the
information provided by Goleniewski was never proven to be
inaccurate, and Goleniewski was honored by the 88th Congress for his
efforts.
The documents indicated that after World War II, Russia established an
ODRA spy ring in Poland to infiltrate British and American intelligence.
The GZI, discovered that one communist agent, code-named ‘Bor,’ had
worked with another agent, Ernst Bosenhard (a clerk at the U.S.
Intelligence Headquarters in Oberammergau, Germany), who had been
sending secret documents to Moscow. Bosenhard was convicted of
espionage in 1951. ‘Bor’ returned to the United States, and was
secretly working with the CIA, while teaching at Harvard University.
‘Bor’ was identified as Sgt. Henry Alfred Kissinger.
Kissinger became a consultant on security matters during the
Administrations of Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson; and served as
Nelson Rockefeller’s chief advisor on foreign affairs. In his book White
House Years, he called Rockefeller, “the single most influential person
in my life.” His book, Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy, in 1957,
established him as the leading authority on U.S. strategic policy, and
he was the one who initiated the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
(SALT). There should be little doubt where his allegiances are in regard
to his support of one-world government.
This story took on additional meaning, when in 1965, former CIA Chief
of Research and Analysis, Herman E. Kimsey, used fingerprint, dental
and medical records, handwriting analysis, blood tests, and interviews
with childhood friends and relatives to reach a conclusion that
Goleniewski was actually Aleksei Romanoff, the son of Nicholas II,
who survived the alleged Communist massacre of the Russian Royal
family.
The Bolshevik government had claimed, that in the middle of the night,
July 16, 1918, they had captured the seven members of the Russian
Imperial family, which included the Czar Nicholas, his wife (Alexandra),