August 29, 2007 (LPAC) - The Italian magazine La Voce delle Voci published a three-page article on John Train and Lyndon LaRouche in its June issue, exposing the real story on the "Doge of Wall Street" and his campaign of defamation and persecution against LaRouche.
The article, written by Claudio Celani, introduces the secretive banker and intelligence operative John Train as involved in some form in the current strategic confrontation between London and Moscow, not only because of his connections to journalists Paul Klebnikov and Anna Politkovskaya, but as a member of "what President Eisenhower called the military-industrial complex."
The article is entitled "Train ad alta pericolosità", which is a pun on the expression "high speed Train", wherein "speed" is replaced with "dangerousness". The subtitle reads: "They call him the Doge of Wall Street: John Train, a CIA-connected international assault banker, married to a Venetian noblewoman who was a friend of Junio Valerio Borghese. His shadow is cast on the death of Russian journalist Paul Klebnikov, one of the many mysteries of recent Russian history. As Putin launches warnings and, here at home, many dossiers 'made by Mithrokyn' pop up again."
After a long and detailed profile of Train, including his family links and traditions, his devotion to Cyril Northcote Parkinson (and Heineken's scheme dictated by Parkinson) and his Parkinson Fund, a section entitled "Mud on LaRouche" reads:
"Maybe, the most important mission in Train's life is that of running a dirty operation in the attempt of eliminating an uncomfortable American politician, Lyndon LaRouche who, intending to revive the Roosevelt Democratic tradition, represented a threat to the power of the 'military industrial complex' and the neo-con faction in the United States. In 1983, when LaRouche started to gain electoral support in the Democratic Party and to gain influence in some factions of the U.S. establishment, Train mobilized huge resources and set up a real war-staff to coordinate a media slander campaign which lasted several years and approached absurd levels, such as the allegation that [LaRouche] had assassinated Olaf Palme. This gave the pretext to some prosecutors on Train's payroll to launch criminal investigations which, with ups and downs, ended up in 1989 with a blitz-trial in a Virginia court and a sentence of fifteen years in jail for `conspiracy and postal fraud. "
"The judge who issued the sentence was a former banker who had financed the Interarms firm, owned by the known international arms dealer Sam Cummings. Think about the fact that Cummings' representative in Monte Carlo was Enrico Frittoli, head of Licio Gelli's Monte Carlo Lodge."
"LaRouche, who was set free after Bill Clinton was inaugurated, after having spent five years in jail, is today a reference point for the Roosevelt faction in the Democratic Party, fighting for the impeachment of Cheney and Bush and against free-market policies; however, Train's slanders still circulate against him."
The article then reports on how the most recent examples of such slanders emerged in Italy in the context of the Litvinenko scandal, and were pushed by political figures belonging to networks still connected to secret freemasonic conspirator Licio Gelli.
The article concludes by asking whether, behind this new mud wave there is, again, John Train.
La Voce delle Voci is the national edition of a monthly magazine until now published only in Naples, called La Voce della Campania. The editors of La Voce gained notoriety recently, when it was revealed that Italian military intelligence, under cover of Cheney's international police state measures, had illegally spied on them and a few other independent journalists in Italy. The new, nationally-circulated La Voce delle Voci has enlisted many prominent writers, including former anti-terrorism prosecutors.