rivals in the State Department OPC, and sponsored for immigration by the Attorney General of the United States. Lebed’s SB ran an assassination program inside the Soviet Union during the Cold War. The Justice Department knowingly assisted the former Nazis of the SB with illegal entry into the United States.
Mykola Lebed’s CIA codename is QR/Plumb/2 (P/2) . Dick Sullivan is the Justice Department mole inside the CIA who tried to suppress any further investigation into Lebed’s past as one of the most wanted war criminals in the Soviet Union. To Sullivan’s dismay, his successors at Justice cut back the Lebed investigation, but did not stop it.
A CIA officer (who did not know of Lebed’s past as a war criminal) had discussions about closing down funding for Lebed’s Ukrainian propaganda business, codenamed QR/Plumb. Lebed complains that both Eisenhower and Bush have tried to cut him back before, and threatens “disastrous consequences.”
Three months after hearing that his Ukrainian propaganda organization might have its funding cut by the CIA, Lebed threatens the CIA officer with going public to reveal that the real mission of Lebed’s Prolog organization was to support Operation Redwood, for which many members spent 25 years in Soviet Prison Camps. The CIA officer clearly has no idea that Redwood was an assassination program run by CIA’s rival, OPC.
Dr. Mikalai Minkevich (left), who married Ostrowsky’s daughter, Melina (right).
The leadership council of the Byelorussian Self-Help Committee in Minsk, 1942. Seated at far left: Ivan Kosiak, later a provincial governor; seated fourth from left: Dr. Ivan Ennachenko; at far right: Vadlay Ivanousky, later mayor of Minsk; standing, second from right: Anton Adamovitch
Joachim Kipel, president of the Second All-Byelorussian Congress.
Jury Sobolewsky, vicepresident of the Byelorussian Central Council.
Emanuel Jasiuk, who as mayor of Kletsk directed the killing of 5,000 Jews in a single day, and was later minister of immigration in the Ostrowsky government-in-exile.
Left: Major Michael Vitushka, who was sent by Otto Skorzeny behind Soviet lines in the winter of 1944-45. He was purported to be the leader of a large underground army at a time when he was probably already dead. Right: Major Dimitri Kasmowich, the collaborationist police chief of the Smolensk region during World War II. Forces under his command burned entire cities and towns suspected of aiding the Soviets.
Father Mikalaj Lapitski, who forged baptismal certificates for Byelorussians in German DP camps after World War II. He is buried under a large monument in South River, N.J.
The official roster of the leadership of the Byelorussian Central Council at the time of the Minsk convention in 1944. The top listing includes R. Astrouski (Radoslaw Ostrowsky) (1) as president of the Council, Yu. Sabaleuski (Jury Sobolewsky) (3) as second vice president and social affairs minister, and Frantzishak (Franz) Kushel (7) as war minister. The first name on the bottom list is that of Stanislaw Stankievich, as representative of Baranovitche county.
Headquarters of the Byelorussian Central Council in Minsk in 1943.
Monument to Byelorussian war veterans in the White Ruthenian (Byelorussian) Orthodox Cemetery of St. Euphrosynia in South River, N.J. Inside the cross at the top is the emblem of the Belarus SS division. (Washington Post photograph by Bill Snead)
TrineDay Catalogue
The True Story of the Bilderberg Group
by Daniel Estulin
More than a center of influence, the Bilderberg Group is a shadow world government, hatching plans of domination at annual meetings … and under a cone of media silence.
THE TRUE STORY OF THE BILDERBERG Group goes inside the secret meetings and sheds light on why a group of politicians, businessmen, bankers and other mighty individuals formed the world’s most powerful society. As Benjamin Disraeli, one of England’s greatest