The CIA is notorious in eliminating people who are perceived to bea threat to America . In that sense, it's not different from theunderworld. Just how ruthless the CIA can be can be appreciated fromthe shocking admittance of a CIA top gun in the below interview. Theman reveals how the CIA killed Dr Homi Bhabha, one of India 'sgreatest ever scientist, and Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri. Thearticle is spine-chilling.THE BACKGROUNDSOURCE: http://www.tbrnews.org/Archives/a2880.htm#004 Known as 'The Crow' within the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA),Robert T. Crowley ('Bob' Crowley) joined the CIA at its inception andspent his entire career in the Directorate of Plans, also know as the'Department of Dirty Tricks,' Crowley was one of the tallest man everto work at the CIA. Born in 1924 and raised in Chicago , Crowley grewto six and a half feet when he entered the U.S. Military Academy atWest Point in N.Y. as a cadet in 1943 in the class of 1946. He nevergraduated, having enlisted in the Army, serving in the Pacific duringWorld War II. He retired from the Army Reserve in 1986 as a lieutenantcolonel.Bob (Robert) Crowley first contacted journalist Gregory Douglas in1993 and they began a series of long and often very informativetelephone conversations that lasted for four years. In 1996, Crowleytold Douglas that he believed him to be the person that shouldultimately tell Crowley 's story but only after Crowley 's death.Douglas, for his part, became so entranced with some of the materialthat Crowley began to share with him that he secretly began to recordtheir conversations, later transcribing them word for word, planningto incorporate some, or all, of the material in later publications.In 1998, when Crowley was slated to go into the hospital forexploratory surgery, he had his son, Greg, ship two large foot lockersof documents to Douglas with the caveat that they were not to beopened until after Crowley 's death. These documents, totaled anastonishing 15,000 pages of CIA classified files involving many covertoperations, both foreign and domestic, during the Cold War.While CIA drug running, money-launderings and brutal assassinationsare very often strongly rumored and suspected, it has so far not beenpossible to actually pin them down but it is more than possible thatthe publication of the transcribed and detailed Crowley-Douglasconversations will do a great deal towards accomplishing this.These many transcribed conversations are relatively short becauseCrowley was a man who tired easily but they make excellent reading.There is an interesting admixture of shocking revelations on the partof the retired CIA official and often rampant anti-social (and veryentertaining) activities on the part of Douglas but readers of thisnew and on-going series are gently reminded to always look for thetruth in the jest!END OF BACKGROUNDConversations with 'the Crow' - Part 14Originally published in TBRNews.org â July 11, 2008SOURCE: http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?ID=8966 JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS (GD): I am a man of sorrows andacquainted with rage, Robert. How about the Company setting off asmall A-bomb in some hitherto harmless country and blaming it on mice.FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY (RTC): Now that's something wenever did. In fact, we prevented at least one nuclear disaster.JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: What? A humanitarian act? Why, I amastounded, Robert. Do tell me about this.FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: Now, now, Gregory, sometimeswe can discuss serious business. There were times when we preventedterrible catastrophes and tried to secure more peace. We had trouble,you know, with India back in the 60s when they got uppity and startedwork on an atomic bomb. Loud mouthed cow-lovers bragging about howclever they were and how they, too, were going to be a great power inthe world. The thing is, they were getting into bed with the Russians.Of course, Pakistan was in bed with the ****** so India had to findanother bed partner. And we did not want them to have any kind ofnuclear weaponry because God knows what they would have done with it.Probably strut their stuff like a Washington nigger with a brasswatch. Probably nuke the *****. They're all a bunch of neo-coonsanyway. Oh yes, and their head expert was fully capable of building abomb and we knew just what he was up to. He was warned several timesbut what an arrogant prick that one was. Told our people to **** offand then made it clear that no one would stop him and India fromgetting nuclear parity with the big boys. Loud mouths bring it alldown on themselves. Do you know about any of this?JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: Not my area of interest or expertise.Who is this joker, anyway?FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: Was, Gregory, let's use thepast tense if you please. Name was Homi Bhabha. That one wasdangerous, believe me. He had an unfortunate accident. He was flyingto Vienna to stir up more trouble when his BOEING 707 had a bomb gooff in the cargo hold and they all came down on a high mountain way upin the Alps . No real evidence and the world was much safer.JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: Was Bhabha alone on the plane?FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: No it was a commercial AirIndia flight.JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: How many people went down with him?FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: Ah, who knows and frankly, whocares?JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: I suppose if I had a relative on theflight I would care.FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: Did you?JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: No.FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: Then don't worry about it. Wecould have blown it up over Vienna but we decided the high mountainswere much better for the bits and pieces to come down on. I think apossible death or two among mountain goats is much preferable thanbringing down a huge plane right over a big city.JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: I think that there were more thangoats, Robert.FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: Well, aren't we being ableeding-heart today.JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: Now, now, it's not an observation thatis unexpected. Why not send him a box of poisoned candy? Shoot him inthe street? Blow up his car? I mean, why ace a whole plane full ofpeople?FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: Well, I call it as it see it.At the time, it was our best shot. And we nailed Shastri as well.Another cow-loving rag head. Gregory, you say you don't know aboutthese people. Believe me, they were close to getting a bomb and sowhat if they nuked their deadly **** enemies? So what? Too many peoplein both countries. Breed like rabbits and full of snake-worshippingtwits. I don't for the life of me see what the Brits wanted in India .And then threaten us? They were in the sack with the Russians, I toldyou. Maybe they could nuke the Panama Canal or Los Angeles . We don'tknow that for sure but it is not impossible.JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: Who was Shastri?FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: A political type who startedthe program in the first place. Bhabha was a genius and he could getthings done so we aced both of them. And we let certain people thereknow that there was more where that came from. We should have hit the****** too, while we were at it but they were a tougher target. Did Itell you about the idea to wipe out Asia 's rice crops? We developed adisease that would have wiped rice off the map there and it's theirstaple diet. The ******* rice growers here got wind of it and raisedsuch a stink we canned the whole thing. The theory was that thedisease could spread around and hurt their pocketbooks. If the Maopeople invade Alaska , we can tell the rice people it's all their fault.JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: I suppose we might make friends withthem.FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: With the likes of them? Not atall, Gregory. The only thing the Communists understand is brute force.India was quieter after Bhabha croaked. We could never get to Mao butat one time, the Russians and we were discussing the how and when ofthe project. Oh yes, sometimes we do business with the other side.Probably more than you realize.JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: Now that I know about. High levelamorality. They want secrets from us and you give them some of them inreturn for some of their secrets, doctored of course. That way, bothagencies get credit for being clever.FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: Well, you've been in that gameso why be so holy over a bunch of dead ragheads?JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: Were all the passengers Indian atomicscientists?FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: Who cares, Gregory? We got themain man and that was all that mattered. You ought not criticize whenyou don't have the whole story.JOURNALIST GREGORY DOUGLAS: Well, there were too many mountaingoats running around, anyway. Then might have gotten their hands onsome weapons from Atwood and invaded Switzerland .FORMER CIA OFFICER ROBERT T CROWLEY: You jest but there is truth inwhat you say. We had such a weight on us, protecting the Americanpeople, often from themselves I admit. Many of these stories can neverbe written, Gregory. And if you try, you had better get your wife tostart your car in the morning.# # # #Source: Homi J. Bhabha - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dr Homi Jehangir Bhabha died in the Air India Flight 101 airdisaster near Mont Blanc in 1966.[12] Conspiracy theories point to asabotage intended at impeding India 's nuclear program, but his deathstill remains a mystery. The reason for the conspiracy was primarilythe intense pressure by the US and Britain on India not to follow theChinese - who exploded in 1964 - in testing a nuclear weapon. Dr.Bhabha had the technical expertise but not the political backing to goahead with a test. His death was also very similar to the death ofEnrico Mattei - the Italian oil magnate who also started work on Italy's 1st nuclear reactor and was allegedly killed by the CIA - bysabotaging his private airplane.# # #Air India Flight 101From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaSource: Air India Flight 101 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Air India Flight 101 was a scheduled Air India passenger flightthat crashed into Mont Blanc in France on the morning of 24 January1966.AccidentOn the 24th of January 1966 at 0702 UTC, Air India Flight Number101, a Boeing 707-437 called 'Kanchenjunga' crashed on its regularroute from Mumbai ( Bombay ) to London via Delhi , Beirut and Geneva .The plane was carrying 106 passengers and 11 crew members. It crashedinto Glacier des Bossons (Bossons Glacier) on the South West face ofMont Blanc in France . At 4807 meters altitude, Mont Blanc is thehighest summit in Western Europe . There were no survivors. It wasquickly determined that the pilot had made a navigational error whiledescending for landing into Geneva .FLIGHT 101 â 2nd of two similar accidents: It was the second timesuch an air disaster had occurred on that part of the mountain, bothcrashes involving aircraft operated by Air India. Earlier on 3rd ofNovember 1950 Air India Super Constellation called the 'MalabarPrincess,' carrying 48 passengers and crew had crashed in almostexactly the same spot killing all on board.Sequence of EventsThe flight to and takeoff from Beirut were routine, except for afailure of the no. 2 VOR ( VHF Omni-directional Radio Range ). At07:00 GMT the pilot reported reaching FL190 to Geneva . He was told tomaintain that flight level 'unless able to descend VMC (Visualmeteorological conditions) one thousand on top'. The pilot confirmedthis and added that they were passing abeam Mont Blanc . Thecontroller noted that the flight wasn't abeam Mont Blanc yet andradioed 'you have 5 miles to the Mont Blanc ', to which the pilotanswered with 'Roger.' Flight 101 then started to descend from FL190until it struck the Mont Blanc at an elevation of 15585 feet.PassengersThe victims consisted of 106 passengers and 11 crew. One of thevictims included chairman of the Indian Atomic Energy Commission DrHomi Jehangir Bhabha, who was on his way to Vienna. The remainingpassengers were Indian nationals, 46 of whom were sailors and 6 wereBritish citizens.InvestigationThe captain of the Air India Boeing 707, who was one of theairline's most experienced pilots, had radioed the control tower a fewminutes earlier to report that his instruments were working fine andthe aircraft was flying at 19,000ft (5,791 metres) - at least 3,000 ft(914 metres) higher than the Mont Blanc summit.'The commission concluded that the most likely hypothesis was thefollowing:a) The pilot-in-command, who knew on leaving Beirut that one of theVORs was unserviceable, miscalculated his position in relation to MontBlanc and reported his own estimate of this position to thecontroller; the radar controller noted the error, determined theposition of the aircraft correctly and passed a communication to theaircraft which, he believed, would enable it to correct its position.;b) For want of a sufficiently precise phraseology, the correctionwas mis-understood by the pilot who, under the mistaken impressionthat he had passed the ridge leading to the summit and was still at aflight level which afforded sufficient safety clearance over the topof Mont Blanc, continued his descent.'