Victor Ostrovsky

Victor Ostrovsky was born on November 28, 1949 in Edmonton, Alberta. He left Canada as a child and went to Israel, where he became a Mossad officer. He is author of two books on the Mossad.

He grew up in Israel and joined the IDF (Israeli Defense Forces) just before turning eighteen. During his military service he got married. By the time he was recruited to the Mossad (Israel’s foreign intelligence service), Victor was a Lieutenant-Commander in charge of the Navy weapon testing department. Amongst other things, he introduced the Harpoon surface-to-surface missile to the Saar missile boats as well as the Vulcan “Phalanx” anti-missile defense system.

Former Mossad case officer Victor Ostrosvky became disillusioned with the political influence of Israel’s extreme right wing on the actions of the Intelligence service. After attempting to warn the powers to be for several years to no avail he wrote his first book. By Way Of Deception is an expose of the Mossad which even though it does not expose active officers or give real names points out the activity of the agency which is detrimental both to Israel and it’s allies.…

Christopher E. H. Story

Christopher E. H. Story FRSA, Managing and Operations Director, a former occasional adviser to Lady Thatcher, has over 35 years’ experience of specialist intelligence and financial publishing. Mr Story has testified on several occasions before US Congressional Committees on international affairs issues. He is a very well-known independent currency, economics, finance and current affairs specialist, and is also a conference speaker on dimensions of the World Revolution that are swamping and confusing the West.

Mr Story is now among the longest-serving editors of any publication in the world, having edited and published International Currency Review since quite shortly after it first appeared in 1969. This means that his experience of geofinancial and global economic analysis is virtually unparalleled. In addition, his exceptionally extensive knowledge and understanding of ‘hidden’ intelligence operations, policies and dimensions, derived from many years of deep analysis and intelligence community contacts, enables him to elaborate and explain financial, geopolitical and intelligence issues which ‘mainstream’ analysts may not understand, or even recognise to be issues requiring investigation. This long experience, and his editorship since 1991 of Soviet Analyst, enables Christopher Story to throw much penetrating light on contemporary …

Ancient space suit

THE DOGU ENIGMA: PRIMITIVE ARTIFACT OR SIX-THOUSAND-YEAR-OLD SPACE SUIT?

by Vaughn Greene

When I read of Kenneth Arnold’s sighting the world’s first modern UFOs on June 24, 1947, I was immediately interested. A few weeks after I wrote Arnold, two friendly F.B.I. agents came for a visit. Here was I, a 17-year-old punk, being interviewed by investigators who were not very sympathetic. This only whetted my appetite, and over the years I contacted some of the early flying saucer buffs, including Prof. Adamski, George Hunt Williamson, Kurt Von Zeissig, Yukio Matsumura, Zecharia Sitchin, Meade Layne and others.

When the Korean War came along, I went into the army. While stationed in Japan, I began studying early Shinto legends and ancient mythology. To my surprise, these early tomes were loaded with references to aerial battles, underwater castles, exotic weapons, TV, and flying dragons that flew 6,000 leagues a day. What really impressed me were some prehistoric statues called dogu.

From my previous experience with the diving and aircraft industries, I felt sure these things were depicting a diving suit, or a space suit, or a combination of both. Dogus were made …