Hillary Clinton and the
Amelia Earhart Cover-up
Review of Amelia
Earhart: The Truth at Last by Mike Campbell
Few things are more
unsettling,
From experience I know,
Than to feel a building
shaken
By quaking ground below.
But IÕve felt one
discomfiture
Of almost comparable
size,
Discovering that our ÒfreeÓ press
Purveys official lies.
Seventy-five
years ago this summer AmericaÕs ÒFirst Lady of Flight,Ó Amelia Earhart, along
with her navigator, Fred Noonan, disappeared—at least from public
view—in their two-engine Lockheed Electra, NR 16020, somewhere in the
South Pacific. They were on an ambitious round-the-world flight from a west
to east direction, and they had already completed a good part of it.
The voyage had begun in Burbank, California, on May 21, 1937. The
most dangerous leg of the journey was the 2,556-mile stretch from Lae, New Guinea, to tiny Howland Island, 1,900 miles
southwest of Honolulu. They were to arrive on July 2, but they never made
it. A massive search was launched involving seven ships and sixty-three
aircraft of the U.S. military. They searched 262,281 square miles of
ocean for sixteen days and found nothing, not even an oil slick or a particle
of debris. The Japanese, who controlled the Marshall Islands to the north
of Howland claimed that their seaplane tender, the Kamoi,
was also involved in the search. We learn from Campbell, though, that the
claim, like so much we have been told about the Earhart disappearance, is not
true.
The
official conclusion is that the Electra, experiencing inexplicably poor radio
communications with the Coast Guard vessel Itasca, which was supposed to
guide her into Howland, ran out of fuel, crashed, and sank into the depths of
the Pacific. If the testimony of a veritable host of witnesses has any
credibility at all, that claim is not true, either. That is to say that
it falls into the large and growing category of Òofficial lie.Ó It may
not be the most important one, but it would be hard to find one that is more
blatant or brazen. Now, it would it appear that the latest variation of
that lie has been bought into by no less an illustrious government personage
than Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.
The
first thing that one discovers when looking into the contrary eyewitness
evidence related to the Earhart disappearance is that Campbell sits at the peak
of a rather impressive pyramid of citizen evidence gatherers on the
subject. Beneath him on the pyramid, among others, are a number of veterans
of the U.S. military. Preeminent among them was the late Thomas E.
Devine, author of the 1987 book, Eyewitness: The Amelia Earhart
Incident. Devine, a twenty-eight-year-old Army sergeant at the time,
was among the troops who captured Saipan from the Japanese in July of
1944. While on Saipan he had a life-changing experience. He saw
what he is certain was Amelia EarhartÕs Lockheed Electra. He wrote down
the ÒNR 16020Ó written on the plane and remembers wondering what the ÒNRÓ
meant. He also witnessed the burning of the airplane upon the orders of
American government officials in civilian clothes. Devine died in 2003,
but not before granting a short interview that can be seen on Rich MartiniÕs
YouTube video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-tDEsTQwBVk.
That is a
clip from MartiniÕs film, ÒEyewitness Accounts of What Happened to Amelia
EarhartÕs Plane.Ó
Mike Campbell worked as a writer while on active duty in the
Navy and for the Department of Defense in a public affairs capacity until his
retirement in 2008. He collaborated with Devine on the 2002 book, With
Our Own Eyes: Eyewitnesses to the Final Days of Amelia Earhart, and with
his latest work shows himself to be more than capable of carrying DevineÕs
torch for truth.
An
absolutely key character in verifying DevineÕs claim that he saw Amelia
EarhartÕs airplane on Saipan, and he saw it burned, is Earskin
J. Nabers (who went by his middle name of ÒJuliousÓ as we see in the same video,
filmed in May 2003, in which Devine appears). Nabers,
who died in 2006, was ferreted out by Devine through a notice he placed in the
spring 1992 issue of Follow Me, the official publication of the 2nd
Marine Division Association, seeking Òany of the Marines, who, during the
invasion of Saipan, were placed on guard duty at Aslito
Field, to guard a padlocked hangar containing Amelia EarhartÕs airplane.Ó
Charles
W. Voyles, a veteran from Memphis, Tennessee, saw the
notice and wrote Devine about Nabers of Baldwyn,
Mississippi, the new secretary of the Mississippi chapter of 2nd
Division veterans. Voyles had heard through the
grapevine that Nabers had been Òaround the hangar at Aslito Field, which contained Amelia EarhartÕs plane,Ó Voyles wrote to Devine. Nabers,
too, had seen the notice, but it took the letter from Devine and months of
prodding by family and friends before he opened up and responded to Devine.
For
anyone who might try to dismiss the numerous veterans and residents of Saipan
and the Marshall Islands who have now come forward with first hand or very good
second hand knowledge of EarhartÕs capture by the Japanese, reading the various
accounts we find in CampbellÕs book shows the reticence of Nabers
to be more the rule than the exception. Jerrell
H. Chatham of Avinger, Texas, is fairly typical, ÒAll these years since my time
in the Marines,Ó he wrote to Devine, ÒI have been afraid to say very much about
this Amelia Earhart thing.Ó Chatham and other military witnesses on
Saipan had their Òchilling awakeningÓ long before this writer did.
What
Nabers had to say, though, stands out in its
importance. He was the clerk who decoded the orders first to fly the
plane and then to destroy it, and he heard it repeatedly explicitly identified
as Amelia EarhartÕs airplane. He also witnessed the carrying out of the
orders.
Crashed-and-sank
proponents, who dismiss eyewitness accounts out of hand for the most specious
of reasons, are invariably stopped in their tracks when confronted with NabersÕ reportÉ
Nabers offered them nothing to reinterpret or
deconstruct, because a Marine code clerk working in a high-security message
center on Saipan could not possibly misread, misunderstand, or imagine a series
of messages he received announcing the discovery of EarhartÕs plane, followed
by the plan to fly it, and finally, the order to destroy it. Faced with
the implacable nature of NabersÕ story, cynics have
only two choices: to flatly accuse Nabers of lying,
or to remain silent. Realizing the former option would reveal their
inherent dishonesty—or worse, their stupidity—they reluctantly
choose to withdraw or to change the subject. (Campbell, pp. 237-238)
Before
he had flushed out Nabers and the aforementioned
Chatham, who reported seeing EarhartÕs plane in the air on Saipan and being
ordered to transport two crates that he was told contained the remains of
Earhart and Noonan, Devine had concluded his 1987 Eyewitness book with a
call for others to come forward with information. That plea had attracted
the attention of number of Saipan veterans, among whom
was the other Marine who appears in the Martini video, Robert E. Wallack of Woodbridge, Connecticut. Wallack, who died in 2008 at age 83, is very clear here in
his recollection of the discovery of Amelia EarhartÕs briefcase in a safe that
he and some other Marines had blown open:
The
contents were official-looking papers all concerning Amelia Earhart:
maps, permits and reports apparently pertaining to her around-the-world
flight. I wanted to retain this as a souvenir, but my Marine buddies
insisted that it may be important and should be turned in. I went down to
the beach where I encountered a naval officer and told him of my
discovery. He gave me a receipt for the material, and stated that it
would be returned to me if it were not important. I have never seen the
material since.
I
wish to make a point here concerning the attachŽ case and the contents.
The case did not appear as if it had ever been immersed in water and the
contents were not blurred at all. Therefore these items could not have
been obtained from a plane that had been reported down at sea some seven years
prior to this event. (Campbell pp. 204-205)
Earlier Accounts of Earhart on Saipan
From
1944 when Saipan was captured to 1987 when Devine published his first book is
quite a long time. If Earhart, Noonan, and their airplane had all been on
Saipan one would expect that some word of it would have come out even if the
U.S. and Japanese governments wanted to suppress it. Indeed it had, and
very early, in 1944:
SAIPAN,
July 8 (Delayed) (INS) – The mystery of what happened to Amelia Earhart,
famous American aviatrix, popped up again today—this time on
Saipan. The discovery of an album filled with Amelia Earhart pictures
here on this battle-torn island revived the search for an answer to the seven-year
mystery of the fate of AmericaÕs number one woman flier. Some marines
reported finding the album filled with pictures of Amelia Earhart clothed in
sport togs. There were no other pictures in the album. (Campbell, p. 201)
That
little item appeared in newspapers across the country, but it bore no byline
and there was never a follow-up.
The
next mention in the United States of Earhart in Saipan came was by an assistant
English professor at the U.S. Air Force Academy, Captain Paul Briand, Jr., in
his 1960 book, Daughter of the Sky: The Story of Amelia Earhart. Josephine
Blanco Akiyama, a Saipan native, had worked for a U.S. Navy dentist in Saipan
and had told him of seeing, as an 11-year-old, Earhart and NoonanÕs arrival in Tanapag Harbor in what she described as a crash
landing. The dentist had passed the story along to Briand, who
interviewed Ms. Akiyama.
She
saw the American woman standing next to a tall man wearing a short-sleeved
sports shirt, and was surprised because the woman was not dressed as a woman
usually dressed. Instead of a dress, the American woman wore a manÕs
shirt and trousers; and instead of long hair, she wore her hair cut short, like
a man. The faces of the man and woman were white and drawn, as if they
were sick.
The
book received almost no attention, but in the meantime Ms. Akiyama had
immigrated to San Mateo, California, and told her story to San Mateo Times reporter
Linwood Day. The article that Day wrote came to the attention of a
newsman at KCBS radio in nearby San Francisco, Fred Goerner.
Goerner became a lifelong researcher of the case and
his work in uncovering witnesses, highlighted in his 1966 book, The Search
for Amelia Earhart, rivals that of Devine. Goerner
traveled to Saipan and found a number of witnesses who essentially corroborated
Ms. AkiyamaÕs account of Earhart and Noonan being held captives there.
Well before Devine, Goerner with his book also caused
a number of Saipan veterans to come forward and contact him concerning evidence
of EarhartÕs captivity that they had encountered there. CampbellÕs book
is replete with many detailed accounts from both island natives and U.S.
military veterans.
Crash in the Marshall Islands
GoernerÕs greatest contribution, though, one
gathers from Campbell, is his pursuit of evidence that the original crash site
of EarhartÕs Electra was not in Saipan but in the Marshall Islands some 800
miles to the north of Howland. Saipan, after all, is almost due north of
EarhartÕs departure point and Howland Island is some 2,500 miles to the east northeast. The Marshalls were also under control
of the Japanese and it is more readily believable that Earhart could have ended
up there, groping northward while thinking she had missed Howland to the south.
A
key witness that Goerner discovered in the Marshalls
was a Japanese medical corpsman who was sixteen years old at the time named Bilimon Amaron. Though born
in Japan, he spent most of his life in the Marshalls, where he became a
prosperous businessman. He said that in the summer of 1937 he was summoned
to a Japanese tender ship to treat the minor injuries of an American man with
dark hair and blue eyes, and a large silver plane with a broken-off wing was
being pulled in a sling behind the ship. Amaron
can be heard after the 2 minute 50 second mark in the Rich Martini video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eS3p6KQyKhE.
A
number of researchers have examined the Marshall Islands evidence through the
years, perhaps the most important of whom was former Air Force C-47 pilot
Vincent V. Loomis. His 1985 book, Amelia Earhart:
The Final Story was heavily praised in a review by Jeffrey Hart in the
October 18, 1985, National Review. Hart concluded flatly,
ÒThe mystery is a mystery no longer.Ó
Loomis
and others have reached the conclusion that the vessel upon which Amaron treated the two American fliers was the ÒsurveyingÓ
ship, the Koshu. These
researchers have also found many people who either corroborate AmaronÕs story or saw the two Americans independently.
The following account refers to a 1997 trip to the Marshalls by researcher Bill
Prymak.
During
the Majuro-to-Honolulu leg of his flight back to the United States, Prymak met the most powerful man in the Marshalls, Robert Reimers, founder of a small empire of hotels, shopping
centers, and commercial outlets in the islands. Reimers,
healthy and alert at eighty-eight, was forthcoming in answering PrymakÕs questions about events before World War II,
especially those about EarhartÕs alleged presence in the islands. Reimers said he knew Bilimon Amaron well, and vouched for his honesty.
ÒIt
was widely known throughout the islands by both Japanese and Marshallese that a
Japanese fishing boat first found them and their airplane near Mili [Atoll],Ó Reimers told Prymak. They then transferred them to a bigger
boat. They were brought to Jabor, where Bilimon treated them. Oscar deBrum
and the Carl Heine familyÉwere living there and knew of this. They were
then taken to Kwajalein and from there to Truk and
then Saipan. There was no mysteryÉeverybody knew it.Ó Asked why the
Japanese vehemently denied seeing Earhart and Noonan, Reimers
replied, ÒEven in 1937, an intrusion into these islands was a very serious
offense. And in the case of Earhart, a woman pilot, great cover and
secrecy was placedÉby the Japanese. But, of
course, these are our islands. And my people—even in their
fear—proved very resourceful in knowing such things.Ó (Campbell, pp.
174-175)
The
Reimers version of events, it would appear, is every
bit as much the established truth in the Marshall Islands as the
crashed-and-sank theory is the official truth in the United States. So
much is that the case that in 1987 the Marshallese government issued a set of four postage stamps commemorating Amelia EarhartÕs unfortunate
brush with the island. One of the stamps is titled, ÒCrash Landing at Mili Atoll July 2, 1937Ó and another depicts the ÒRecovery
of Electra by the Koshu.Ó (The stamps
are available for purchase at cyberstamps.com.)
Forrestal Not on Saipan
Although
they put out their 2002 book as a joint effort, Campbell parts company with
Thomas Devine on another Devine article of faith besides the initial crash site
of the Earhart airplane. Devine went to his grave maintaining that he had
seen Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal on Saipan directing the handling and
final destruction of EarhartÕs airplane. Campbell has meticulously
examined the record of ForrestalÕs official movements and has concluded that
there was no time for Forrestal to have traveled to Saipan and returned to
Washington. Rather, Campbell believes that the man Devine saw was alleged
intelligence agent James H. Nichols, who faintly resembled Forrestal and who
was identified by Nabers from photographs as the man
he saw directing the Electra destruction operation on Saipan.
DevineÕs
belief that he saw Forrestal on Saipan is part and parcel with his theory as to
why the Electra was destroyed and why EarhartÕs captivity and death at the
hands of the Japanese has been covered up. Campbell, one gathers,
believes that Devine has given his government too much credit. From
DevineÕs perspective, the discovery of the airplane and other Earhart artifacts
on Saipan was as much a surprise to his superiors as it was to him.
Devine correctly recognized Forrestal as an unusually farsighted and selfless statesman. Forrestal, Devine thought,
must have been looking ahead to the need for harmony with Japan after the warÕs
end, and he must have felt that news of what the Japanese had done to the
popular Earhart would have jeopardized that goal.
Why the Cover-up?
With
Forrestal not even on Saipan, that seriously strained theory is out the
window. Campbell is certain that from ForrestalÕs position in the chain
of command he knew about the cover-up, and like Devine, Campbell believes that
ForrestalÕs knowledge of what actually happened to Amelia Earhart was a factor
in ForrestalÕs almost certain murder. But according to
Campbell, the Earhart cover-up could only have been orchestrated by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was a horse of an entirely different color from Forrestal. Roosevelt,
according to long-time New York Times Washington correspondent Turner Catledge, Òwas a consummate manipulator, a man who misled,
deceived, lied outright when it was necessary to gain his ends.Ó One of
those ends, according to Hamilton Fish in FDR, The Other Side of the Coin:
How We Were Tricked into World War II (1976) was Òprovoking and forcing
Japan into warÉby ruse, trickery, and deception—by hiding the truth as
expertly as Lenin ever did.Ó (Fish, p. 10; the Catledge
quote is from p. 11)
Drawing
heavily upon the findings and theories of Goerner,
who was granted unusual access to documents and government officials during the
brief John Kennedy administration, Campbell suggests that the Earhart
expedition was heavily tied up with RooseveltÕs preparation for war with
Japan. What remains in question is only the extent to which she knew that
she was being used for that purpose. She might have known quite a lot and
the Japanese might well have been justified in regarding Earhart and Noonan as
spies.
Goerner interviewed Margot DeCarie,
EarhartÕs former secretary, by phone at her home in North Hollywood,
California, in the early 1960s. Despite claiming that she had Òpromised
secrecyÓ to an unknown party, DeCarrie gave Goerner plenty to consider. ÒDo you really think
Purdue University bought that plane for Amelia,Ó she asked, Òand do you think
that it was intended for some kind of vague experimentation? Second, if
the whole thing was a publicity stuntÉwhy did the government assign some of its
top experts to the flightÉand why did President Roosevelt have an airfield
built for her?Ó (Campbell, p. 331)
In
the Goerner scenario, the highest echelons of the
U.S. government knew all along that Earhart and Noonan had
been captured by the Japanese. Though his charge has never been
substantiated, Goerner told reporters in 1967 Òthat
Ôa most reliable sourceÕ informed him recently the Navy intercepted Japanese
messages at the time the fliers were lost which indicated they were in Japanese
hands.Ó It was a political bombshell that suggests we had already broken
the Japanese codes in 1937 and that on account of that,
we would have had prior knowledge of the Pearl Harbor attack. It came 33
years before Robert Stinnett made the broken-code claim in his 2000 book, Day of Deceit: The Truth about FDR and Pearl Harbor, but Goerner was generally ignored. This writer is of the
opinion that if we were in the process of breaking the Japanese codes,
listening in on how they dealt with Earhart would have provided an excellent
opportunity to nail down the process more completely.
As
an establishment newsman, Goerner at his most
influential was able to gain some high level audiences for his discoveries and
theories, including a number of Congressmen. He made the following
remarks before the National, State, and Relations Subcommittee of the
Republican Platform Committee in Miami, Florida, on July 29, 1968:
It
was well known within high ranking intelligence sources that Miss Earhart, at
the time of her disappearance, was under government instructions to fly over
and observe suspected Japanese military developments in the islands of the
Pacific. There were some serious blunders made by the Navy in their
attempt to provide Miss Earhart with proper guidance following the completion
of her observations and the Navy was determined to conceal their participation
and failure of this part of the operation. The concealment of errors is
congenital with the armed services and particularly so in connection with any
covert type of operation such as this was. The mission was not
specifically for the United States Navy, but rather was ordered at the request
of the highest echelons of the government. (Campbell, p. 331)
Goerner was later to back off his claim that
Earhart had explicit orders to fly over Japanese territory and report her
findings, but there is no better explanation for the obvious cover-up that has
taken place than that the government had more to do with EarhartÕs flight and
knew more about her disappearance from the beginning than what they have told
us. Under the larger Goerner scenario from
which he did not back off, the massive 16-day search operation for the missing
plane would have been nothing but a gigantic sham, aimed primarily at deceiving
the Japanese, because we knew all along that they had Earhart and Noonan in
custody, but to let the world know would be to tip off the Japanese as to how
we knew. One can imagine FDR laughing up his sleeve at his cleverness.
Then with the sham threatened with exposure when Saipan was taken, RooseveltÕs
only option, as he must have seen it, was to attempt to erase the evidence as
fast as it appeared.
Continued Media Misdirection
According
to Campbell, the contest between evidence revelation by independent,
truth-seeking American citizens on the one hand and establishment erasure and
misdirection on the other has continued—even intensified—with
respect to the Earhart disappearance right up to the present day. Through
the years some of the eyewitness testimony has even made it into the national
mainstream. The very genuine Robert Wallack
with his briefcase experience has been heard in 1990 on Unsolved Mysteries (along with Thomas
Devine), in 1994 on CBSÕs Eye to Eye with Connie Chung, and as late as
2006 in a special on Amelia Earhart on The National Geographic ChannelÕs Undercover
History. But the latter had the opportunity to use footage from the
code clerk, Nabers, which would have really nailed
down the story of the Electra destruction on Saipan, and they passed it up.
Now,
in the summer seventy-five years after EarhartÕs disappearance, the national
media have devoted their entire attention to an expedition by one Ric Gillespie of an organization called TIGHAR (The
International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery) to the vicinity of Gardner
Island (also known as Nikumaroro) in search of
possible evidence of EarhartÕs fate. We learn from Campbell that his May
14 to June 14, 2010, expedition was his ninth such trip.
ÒGillespie
offers nothing but the assorted refuse he continuously and unsuccessfully tries
to connect to the fliers or the Electra,Ó says Campbell, Òbut with a compliant,
supportive media and a strong establishment wind at his back, he continues to
receive untold hundreds of thousands of dollars from various donors, disclosed
and undisclosed, for his serial expeditions to Nikumaroro.Ó
(p. 382)
This
time, much of the establishment wind has come from Hillary Clinton:
Why
the US support for this effort? Well, for one thing, Clinton herself
is something of an Earhart aficionado. She said that when she was growing up
in Illinois her mother was an Earhart fan and filled her ears with
stories of the aviatrixÕs derring-do. This led Clinton to dream of herself
becoming an astronaut – so she wrote NASA when she was 13 to
ask whether she could qualify.
ÒNASA
wrote me back and said there would not be any women astronauts. And I was just
crestfallen,Ó she said in her speech.
A
second reason for todayÕs government involvement is that the US government was
heavily involved with EarhartÕs effort in the first place, in part due to its
demonstration of American skill and technology during the Great
Depression. State Department personnel arranged for visas and safe conduct for
Earhart and Noonan and helped shepherd them along the way. On the day she
disappeared, a US Coast Guard cutter, the Itasca, was in position off
Howland to aid in radio direction finding and resupply. (The Christian Science Monitor, March 20, 2012.)
Hillary
and Gillespie can be seen here being much ballyhooed on CNN.
If
the 1937 search was a sham, in light of the massive eyewitness testimony
brought forward in CampbellÕs book, how much more obvious a sham is this
repeated searching for EarhartÕs plane by Gillespie under the glare of the U.S.
news media! And what an affront it is to those members of Tom BrokawÕs
Ògreatest generationÓ who have had the courage to come forward and to tell us
frankly what they saw with their own eyes! When our leaders have no
further use for them, it would appear, they really
have no use for them.
As
we survey what has been told to the public by the American press this year
about the Earhart mystery, CBS, ABC, NBC, MSNBC, and The Washington Post, the only hint we get
that the latest Gillespie venture might be undermined by eyewitness testimony
is found in the left-liberal online Daily Beast. In The Daily BeastÕs article,
Earhart biographer Susan Butler praises Gillespie and disparages Goerner, echoing what she had to say in her 1997 book, East
to the Dawn. This is the same Susan Butler to whom Campbell devotes
pages 392-411 and gives the section the title, ÒAn Earhart BiographerÕs Serial
Misstatements.Ó
One
gets the impression that Butler would have hardly written anything different
had she been a paid propagandist for the Japanese military government.
ÒWould Butler have been so cavalier in advancing her unfounded allegations
against Goerner, who passed away five years before East
to the Dawn was published,Ó concludes Campbell, Òhad he been alive to
defend himself?Ó
DonÕt
expect any of our mainstream press to be directing you to CampbellÕs book,
though. If he is to be ignored, it will not be because the case he makes
for the capture of Earhart and Noonan by the Japanese is too weak. It
will be because it is too strong.
Oh
yes, we find in this July 23 item in the Huffington
Post
that
the latest big Pacific search that Hillary gave the big send-off to has come up
empty handed. What a surprise!
David
Martin
August
7, 2012
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