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ALL INFORMATION CONTAINED
HEREIN IS UNCLASSIFIED EXCEPT
WHERE SHOWN OTHERWISE
APPROVED FOR
RELEASEL DATE:
14-Sep-2011
199M-AX-1363-1A2 FDPS page 1
C-O-N- - - - -
CentrA trMligence Agency
MEMORANDUM FOR: The Director
Federal Bureau of Investigation
ATTENTION: Criminal Investigation Division
SUBJECT: Jeffrey STEINBERG (U)
advised that Steinberg has attempted to contact CIA employees in
Columbia. Steinberg is reported to have twenty million dollars at
his disposal. 'tCL
and active duty personnel with a paramilitary background.
2 6 SEP 884
1. On 20 September 1984 a former Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) employee, Mr. telephonically advised a
current employee th t one __rzre -__inDerg is allegedly
attempting to recruit personnel to assassinate unnamed persons in
Bolivia and Columbia. Steinberg is reportedly attempting to
recruit Cuban nationals who worked for CIA as well as CIA retirees
2. Mr. advised that Steinberg is employed by
Presidentia can .date Lyndon La Rouche. Steinberg is listed as
the Counterintelligence Director for the Executive Intelligence
Review (attached) which was founded by La Rouche. His business
address is 304 W. 58th Street, New York, New York. He is reported
to use three telephone numbers: 689-1021, 703-435-8617 and
703-777-3342. rem
3. In a subsequent call to the same employee on 25 September
1984, Mr. advised that an unidentified U.S. Government
Installat on dealing in armaments may be targetted by a
La Rouche group. more specific information was not known.
4. The information concerning Steinberg's alleged recruiting (b)(3)
was verbally passed to Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) b6
Liaison Officer, on 21 September 1984. Mr. F
advised that a U. ena o d also passed the information to the b 7C
FBI and the White House.
WARNING NOTICE
INTELLIGENCE SOURCES Ei~11i1~`
`
5. Beyond identifying Mr. Steinberg with the Executive
Intelligence Review, this Agency has no substantive information
concerning Jeffrey Steinberg. Mr. is
currently employed at the Library of congress and should be
directly contacted by the FBI relative to this matter. 1-)-
OR METHODS INVOLVED Irk
_-
C-O-N-F- - -
199M-AX-1363-1A2 FDPS page 2
6. This information is being provided for your information
and action as deemed appropriate. It is requested that this
Agency be provided with a copy of any investigation; of this
matter. Please direct any inquiries or correspondence to the
Deputy Director of Security for Personnel Security and
Investigations, attention: -(-e}-
Direct lecurity
2
199M-AX-1363-1A2 FDPS page 3
Contents
Departments
15 Science & Technology
Widespread use of lasers will
begin to revolutionize
industrial processing.
48 Italy's War on Crime
The Black Nobility's
weapons smugglers.
49 Dateline Mexico
Washington's no to
debtors' cartel.
60 Congressional Closeup
64 Editorial
Dr. K.'scarcer
in economics.
Economics
4 Is Brazil planning
an escape from
creditors' blackmail?
11 e circumstances shapmgthe
Mexico-Brazil summit. .
7 Colombia's industry,
facing Chapter 11
The second largest company
in the country is bankrupt.
8 LaRouche-Rieman U.S. :
forecast: great possibilities
and dangers ahead . .
Im a climate of skewed credit
availability, and potential financial,
blowouts. no immediate rdowety is
projected; but the promise o(bean-
weaponry's economic spimffi
is cited.
12 MITI defends Japanese
poles' against post-
Industrialist attacks
The U.S. Comm= ce Department
says Japan's entire industrial policy
is the problem; Japanese leaders
explain its international beneSts.
16 Agriculture
The Heritage Foundation
dairy policy.
17 Domestic Credit
The recovery plot.
199M-AX-1363-1A2 FDPS page 5
-2-
Special Report.
Hurry r 9i she teetrae circuit al sdem Cot-
3egc in M; usachusaa act Inca bete realise judpa
tried m w s bpoeaa him, mad as iavwiptive domsia
m his out aipuraoims of Ninas adtoiaisuadm m.a-
tepc poll c ywassubmiadto Vice-fted&wGeotae
Hush. Pe r eudett of tha Smaae and foe- COA
20 Ki fissinger's treason laid
be Fore U.S. Senate
22 In 'vestigations into
int : licated withholding of
mi ormation vital to U.S.
nai ttional security by former
Na ,tional Security
Ad viser Kissinger
The documentation. circulating in
Wat hington. on bow Kissinger: in
his ulnae for an anti-technology
atnu t-control policy, deceived the
U.S. govt n cot and the public.
28 Ma snow's denunciations of
ABl14 defense belied by the
Soviet policy record
Yuri , tdropov et al. proclaim the
idea t) f strategic anti-missile defense
shocki itg and repulsive: but the
Soviet a have maintained such a
defeat a doctrine.
31 The '' ovtet ABMs
Kissi i tiger concealed
The Tit llinn system around the
U.S.S R.'s perimeter.
Volume 10 Number 17
International
32 Kissinger &fugitive
from Italian justice
A report from Rome on the
magistrates' attempts to subpoena
him, his escape to France, and his
reception there. The evidence of his
involvement in the 1978 Moro
assassination was the issue.
Documentation: Excerpts from
the Italian press.
35 Chain reaction in Mideast:
the Lavie, the Beirut
bombing, andthe
West Bank
Israeli policy is moving over the
edge toward disaster. with the help
of George Shultz.
38 `United States. can't
tell Andropov from
Ignatius Loyola'
The Central Amman conflict is not
an East-West arena. it has been set
up by the Jesuits.
41 London tries to rally NATO
members against Reagan's
beam-weapons policy
43 Bonn gets a chance to
defuse the Eu omicsfle
crisis and `green' riots
44 Lejeune undercuts right
to life movement
46 British protecting
drug-money flows
47 The Chinese attempt
to bleed Vietnam
50 International Intelligence
National
May 3. 1983
52 Harrimanites move to
regain military policy
control
Will the Reagan administration
allow itself to lose momentum
on the development of
beam-weapons defense?
55 Why Hayden's greenies lost
California election
The National Democratic Policy
Committee is making broad gains
against the Jam Foods-
Charles Muratt Democrats.
57 Harrison Williams's appeal
denied: court upholds
corrupt FBI tactics
Docameatridoo: New Yosk's
Second Cirquit Covet of Appeals
judges have1unsavory coo iecti s.
59 Kirkland boosts the FBI
and the IMF
62 National News
199M-AX-1363-1A2 FDPS p1ge 6
-3-
Founder and Contributing Editor
1 j Lynd n H. I.aRrmc he. Jr.
ditor-in-chre(: Criton Z( oe r
Editor. Nero Hamrrman
Managing Edit. r: Sitson Johnsen
Features Edits: Christina Nelson. Huff;
Art Director: Martllrr Zoller
Contributing Editors: Uwe Parann.
NancySpannaus, Christopher White
Special Services: Peter Ennis
INTELLIGENCE DIRECTORS:
Ati:icw Douglas DeGroor
Agriculture: Susan Brady
Asia: Daniel Sneider
Cmaeeritucfigenoe Jeffiry Steinberg
Economics: David Goldman
European Economics: Lawent Murawiec
Energy: William Engdahl
DOW: Vivian Frevre Zoak-os
Ibeto-America: Robyn Quijano.
Dennis Small
Law: Edward Spannaus
Middle East: Thierrr Lalever
Military Strategy: Steven Bardwell
Science and Technology:
Marsha Freeman
Soviet Union and Eastern Europe:
Rachel Douglas
United States: Graham Lowry
INTERNATIONAL BUREAUS:
Bogota: Carlos Coto Meta
Bom George Gregory, Rainer Apel
Chicago: Paul Greenberg
copeohagea: Lent Thomsen
Houma: Harley Schlarger.
Nkhdw F. Beaton
Los Angeles: Theodore Andromidas
Mexico City: Joseffna Merdndet
Milan: Mmco Fanitri, Stefanie Socchi
Maatestey: M. Luisa de Castro
New Debi: Paul Zvkofsky
Pates: Katherine Kanter.
Sophie Talapwa
Rome: Leonardo Servadio
Stockholm: Clifford Gaddy
United Nations: Peter Ennis
Washington. D.C.: Richard Cohen.
Lava Chasm. Susan Kakiada
.Wiesbaden: PhWpGolub. Mary Ldei*.
Barborospahn
lrecvtlve LMetl gmCe Review
(ISSN 0273-6314)
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MB
From the Managing Editor
Henry Kissinger's response to President Reagan's March 23 an-
nouncement of a policy of strategic defense that would end the era
of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) has been to term that his-
toric step irrelevant to present realities.
Kissinger proclaimed himself a British agent in his London speech
last May 10, stating that he had worked more closely with the British
Foreign Office than the U.S. administration As Secretary of State.
And as Lyndon LaRouche describes in this week's Special Report,
everything Kissinger did on arms control was to the benefit of the
Soviets at U. S. expense, whatever his motives'may have been. There
is no contradiction in .these actions on behalf of both London and
Moscow. Kissinger is a thug for an anti-American policy faction
with branches in both locations.
This network is deploying rapidly to attempt to keep President
Reagan from restoring America's military and economic strength.
Alexander Bovin, a Soviet member of the Anglo-Soviet Roundtable,
told the BBC in London April 20 that there could be "no constructive
dialogue" with the U.S. while Reagan was in office. The Foreign
Office's Simon Rifkind is going to Moscow for high-level talks.
Georgii Arbatov, in the United States for the 14th Dartmouth Con-
ference, attacked beam weapons as "a first-strike capability." And
Lord Solly Zuckerman, Britain's ranking peacenik, has published an
attack on beam weapons, suggesting that the world would be better
off without Mr. Reagan.
In this week's Special Report. we present the evidence submitted_
to the U.S. Senate in April of Kissinger's deliberate concea!r ' -
national security information which would have convinced President
Nixon and Congress not to conclude the SALT I arms control agree-
ment. Senate action on this matter is urgent, we conclude.
Subscribers will recall last week's Special Report, documenting
the role of the U.S.-based Jerusalem Temple Foundation in prompt-
ing bloodbaths and regional wars. Now, the Kach movement in Israel
led by Jewish Defense League fanatic Meir Kahane. has termed the
April 18 bombing of the U.S. embassy in Beirut "divine justice"
against America. Kahane is scheduled to meet with Jerusalem Tem-
ple Foundation chief Terry Risenhoover regarding the latter's fund-
ing for Kach. Kahane's April 20 statement onthe bombing provides
grounds for a second agenda item: having the foundation banned in
the United States as subversive and terrorist-linked.
199M-AX-1363-1A2 FDPS page 7