Difference between revisions of "Paul Henze"

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'''Paul B. Henze''' is a former CIA station chief in Turkey who became a National Security advisor to President Carter. After his retirement he became a terrorism expert and was one of a group of right-wing experts associated with the [[Center for Strategic and International Studies]] during the 1980s. <ref>see [[Center for Strategic and International Studies, extract from The "Terrorism" Industry]]</ref>
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'''Paul B. Henze''' is a former CIA station chief in Turkey who became a [[National Security advisor]] to [[President Carter]]. After his retirement he became a terrorism expert and was one of a group of right-wing experts associated with the [[Center for Strategic and International Studies]] during the 1980s. <ref>see [[Center for Strategic and International Studies, extract from The "Terrorism" Industry]]</ref>
  
 
==Career==
 
==Career==

Revision as of 00:11, 19 December 2014

Person.png Paul HenzeRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(spook)
Member ofAmerican Committee for Peace in Chechnya, Committee for the Free World
Interest ofUğur Mumcu

Paul B. Henze is a former CIA station chief in Turkey who became a National Security advisor to President Carter. After his retirement he became a terrorism expert and was one of a group of right-wing experts associated with the Center for Strategic and International Studies during the 1980s. [1]

Career

File:The Plot to Kill the Pope.jpg
Henze's 1984 book The Plot to Kill the Pope
1950 -- 1952: US Department of Defense, Foreign Affairs Advisor
1952 -- 1958: Radio Free Europe in Germany
1969: CIA Chief of Station Ethiopia
1974 - 1977: CIA Chief of Station Turkey
1977 - 1980:CIA representative to the NSC office in the White House [2]

Demonising the Soviet Bloc

According to Edward S. Herman and Frank Brodhead, Henze was one of the peddlers of a conspiracy theory attributing the attempted assassination of John Paul II to the Bulgarian secret service. along with the journalist Claire Sterling and the neoconservative Michael Ledeen. Herman and Brodhead write that: 'The most important investigative work -- or, we should say, creative writing -- in establishing the hypothesis of the Bulgarian Connection was done by Claire Sterling, Paul Henze, and Michael Ledeen.' [3]

Affiliations

Contact, References and Resources

Resources

List of RAND Corporation publications (Accessed: 16 January 2007)

Publications

  • Paul B. Henze, International Terrorism and the Drug Connection, Ankara - University Press, 1984.
  • Paul B. Henze, The Plot to Kill the Pope, Simon & Schuster, ISBN: 0684183579, 1985.

References

  1. see Center for Strategic and International Studies, extract from The "Terrorism" Industry
  2. Edward S. Herman and Frank Brodhead, The Rise and Fall of the Bulgarian Connection, Sheridan Square Publications, May 1986, p. 146.
  3. Edward S. Herman and Frank Brodhead, The Rise and Fall of the Bulgarian Connection, Sheridan Square Publications, May 1986.