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JointThskForce - 6

Subversion of,the Thfud Amendment


-byWilliam Sheppard

Actions DO Reflect
Values
As lhis issue was going to Wss we ftceived the Iollo,trittg report frctn Z.B. Vance (Wutunon), a soute clo# to BATE me in/omtation conloiked in lhis rcpott is rav data, Md

ment is due, laqely, to it6 $ording

gence. The conteft of the message is epoduced as ,eceived. This mateial it utedited. The $tce of this inlor molion is rated A2. Ediro.

fot rcporting paryoses onbt This has not been analwd, and k not Jinally evaluoted intelliis

lnlomation

founders' rcogdtion lhat goimment is institutionalized force; thal a gwemment's inslrument olforce is a and
Patrick Heffv afli

On lhe surhce, th prohibition against quartedng troops in ho|l6r seens tirnrly arrchored in the lSth cantury, and apparently inlolves none oflhe imdancntal iss.le6 of irdividual librty inherent in the other amendrnntE. In fac! the philosophical premis of the Third Amendoent q,a6 firn y gounded in tho

rrDRrNcr Cummins ((BEAI TY)); s$ject was ATF SAC in Nashvillc, TN. He was having child lornography deliired to his office. He also rvas having viritors come to his ofrce blie!d to be homocexual paflnerr, although it
is unclear whelher actual homosexual acls toot placs at lhe ofiice or at another location. What is clear is that (@EAnY)) war $arching kddie porn movies in his offic with the door closed and his pnts open, firasturhating as he *?1chd. Apparcntly,

control ofboth standing and militia forcet under Article I, seclion 8, oftlle propoed conslitution, when he s{aled: Toinniaa on pase 9

Zonaiir,A

on pase tt-

Post Office Box 47095, Kansas City, Missouri, 64188


dt,trr
rq
by

Copy-0421 of1250CopG
@!,^Rsr, r.ccd,t )nr,.'ldh6m

r. esrsEi ru Fhrtu. Fdd r lodb

ndi D^ p^r!

FtJuuo,

The RESISTER

Open Letters to Our Readers


OnMilitia
to discuss our degree ofcoolEration with the various patriot and miliria or ganizations. The operations omcer was direqed to cohpbte a 6hff study. and lo presnt his advisc no later than 0l October 1993. On that date, during the quarterly conmrand atrd sla.f meelin& we made the

Reality
r,^xDrsrNr publirhing in
volves certain inscapable realities that some ofour less
expedenced readers fail to recognize and account for when .questing infomation or publications from us. The majority ofpople who request

II

dcisionll

in psrt on my intelligence offi@l's assessmnt

infonnation about th Special Forcs

Urde.groun4 or desirc !o subscribe


!o conlaminate the seq.rity of our orvn organization, This is not an indictmetrt ofth utroryanized militias whicl! in oul view, are xercising their common lsw ard consritutional righli of self defe$e and voluntary associalion. It ir a simple slatement offact. fbwever, the very opmess of most militia group6-{heir careless rcruitmant method! and inherent lack of rudimeotary pe$onnel screning and operational security rnasues-lesves lhese groups oFn to infltmtion, srbve.sion and nunipulati

?lr iEsIsrER,

are acqrstomed

meeling, howver, the idea of The RESIST-

to Pmmpt responses and srvices fiom th busimsss lhey deal with. This is a rasonable expectation $hen dealing wili a businss. Ho$ver, Special Forces Underground is not a business. It is a resistance movement. Trr. RESLS?'X is the omcial publicstion of that resistance movrncol, Taue, by vinu of publishing frs nEStSrE4 and rhe occasional book, rr are engaged itr

The inherent we3kness ofatry underground organization is its limited ability to communicaae its rneSsage in a non-permissive envirotrment to a potential support bas ad thGreby genente sympalhizers, adherenls, and rccruitl.Ifthe spial Forcs Undergound consisted of homo6e\uals, Marxists, new age di(worshipeE, ard New World Order Quisling6, and $ had simply let it be knowtr that we wer bci[g reprssed by so<alled right-wing "exfemi6ls" in the military eslablishmenl we could have genented no end of support from th ouinstre3m media and their Mrrxist support apparatus. lt is ven possibl wB could have received the tacit blessing ofour mililary chain ofcommand fo. our "prcgressive" sla[d on cl|rrent issues. We are lgle of tfto6 things.

businessJike aclivity- But l,hat eiryone who desires to subscTibe to SISIER or obtain oul othet publications must unde.sta[d is lhat by virtue ofbeing a clandostine orga-

ftsR

nizalio& and by vinue ofpublishing


clandstimly, we cannot reasonably be held to convenlional standards of prcmpt servicWhn conducting business lvith us Dr ask you to rake lh following facls into account:

l.
only securc way to communicat our the mililary b by dre historically provn noans ofclandstine publishing. Thus

We do not have a business

ofiicc wilh secrctaries procssing


orahIs.

fhe RESISTER.

One ucontrollable consequence of publishing fre XESTSr'R was ils spread outside Spcial Forces into th patriot movement. This put the Spcial Forcls Underground in indirct contact with the militia mo!ment which, by conscious policy, r otiginally eoded to avoid. (If this sounds contradictory you need to re-cxamine yo|ll premises r6gardinS clandedtine organizations and

2. We do nol naintain stocks. When you orde. somelhing from us it has to tte rEproduced from a master 3. We camot adhere to rigid produclion schdules. We must assmble those personnl who have volunteered to assist in that quaner at one place, at one tinr, io commence

prcduction. This is not


scur, as

as easy,

or

Socialists argue that the necessity for an unorganized militia has bn negated by the de facto slect militia, the National Guard. '[te $tablishmeot of the National Guard itr l9l? was a delibemte effon on the pan of socialisls (then called "progressives") to subven bo$ the lelter and intent of tlrc Uniform Mili. da Act of 1792, and the Second Amendment. The National Guard is th very Continued on pase 18

4.

il

sounds.

W6 cannot adhere to rigid dis-

tdbution scheduls. Cfhe oppooition $ould lovs that).

5. lncoming nuil

passes down a

ToniiueA
Vol.

on

paQ;t

I, No. 4

Ttte RESISTER

EDITORIALS
Anti-capitalist Tieaties.
GATT have exaclly nothing to do *ith "free trade." Thaq are delibmte assaults on th last remaining v$ti8es ofcapitaltreaties^ND ism. The deg.ee 10 which lhe American public at large has, lhrough its wilm indolence and ignorance, accepled th unconscionable socialist premise that the purpo6e of gorrnment is lo "prcmoG the genetal Wefarq" is reflected in fact thrt, at no thre during the dbates on NAFTA atd GAII, did a singl *conservative," eithq ilr prinl on televisio[ or on mdiq main-s$eam media poinr out two simple hc$. Fira. dut ary 8ormnreol conttol, legislatio[ rcgulatron, or manipuladon of an economy, is soctalisn , Second. tbat go!mment rcgotiated'fre lrade" treaties musl by dfitritio\ give govemment control of that trad. The federal government has accomplishd witlr two scraF of pspr what they could not accomplish in two centuds of compmmising away tho ideal ofcapitalism; socialism by international trcaty. The economy ofthe United States is norv ti4 by default, to the ecommies ofquasi-communist Mexico, socialist Canada and the socialisl economic block oftlrc EEC. The prEamble io the Conraitution povides for the federal government to "...promote the geneml Welfarc..." of the Unitd States. In objective terns specifically related b rhe economy tlrc phras "...promorc the general Welfare..." can mean nothing less dlalr simply laving the conomy alone. Holrerr, lhe

Tie R.ESI,9IER Targeted

AI'IA

nE

/Slrl

"arasonous alld disloy-

al." He, (or COL Lambn, it is unclear which), funher stated that h inten&d to, "lind each and eveq/ on of tho6e digloFl (individuals) in-

vohd wilh

'tlut'

publication." Tbo

queslions come irunedially 1o mind. 'Trason," against shat? "Disloyal," to whom? Anicb nI, section 3 oflhe Constitution ddines trson thus: "Trasoo against Lh Uniaed States, shall consist otrly in lerying War against ther4 or in adheriDg to their Enemies, giving thcm Aid and

Comfort-

iooally $b}rcd by altruids, rocialmeaning oflhis provision has bn ists, alld Msrxistr within the govcmrnent, to eGlave the me3ns ofwalth creation in seFice to domestic and intemational pararites. During the ratification debsles antifdemlists pointed out that fi$ claure must, as a logcal consequence ofits vagu esE must ineiitably rsult in despotism and tyramy. Io 1787, Samuel Bryan red6ted: ...alld moreovr, the absolute controul orcr the conmerce oflhe Uoited all objecls of&vnuq such as ur imited impocts upon imports, (Congress) are to be vsted with every spciFof intemal lar.a&!. tion;-whatever taxaq duties a[d excises that tlley may deem rquisite for l\e genercl weqarc, ...dictribnted througlEl3ry distdct iD America; and tlrc collection lrould be enforced by lhe standiry amry, honrr grievous or imprcper they may be. The Coryress nay corstue every Frpooe for which the slale legislafirres now lay laxes, !o b for thg genenl *clfate, and therefore seize upon every object of rewoue.
States and

also infring that publicly adhring to oul sacred oalh to rhfend the Consti.

tution'...againslall enemies, foreign and domestic,"---against the inherently evil forces ofdernocracy, socialbm, and communism---aotrstituts disloyalty? Apparendy, since lte did

-lhrt

"Centirel" t,Independent Gazetter,5

&t

1787

As mentioned elsewhere in this issr, the nDTiad unconstinrdonal federal l6w enforcement and rcgulalory agencies bave trecome the "stardi4 amy" the antifederalbts wan*d against. Tl|se agencies are now, by defadt ofthe NAFTA and GA'IT treatis, oryans of the World Trade O.ganization. 'Itere is no such thing as a '\rorld economy." The very notion of such is the fabrication ofone-*orld socialirts. Since tlrc end of World Wa.II, internationalists have been passing economic legislation which has no olier gool than lhe conrersion thc United States into a slar nation in the srvice of Oe pathetic Tftird World irrclevanciec that rnake up the body of th Unitd Nations. Better tensd-millions ofThird World savags live in abject poverty and slrrve, as a logical result of their socialist govenmeni policios, than e sin8le America[ bosiness b smalgamatd into a "vorld e@nony" rnanagEd by Men" can, Congole.se, and French bueaucrats. John Smilie

Special Watare, the A'my'sotrrcial publication of spcial operations

Ilol.

I, No. 4

The RESISTER
forces. is rntplici y Marxisr in polirical philosophy and cxplicirly pro United Natiora.

tff Ifr mli

Official Policy Yields


Desired Results
s RBPoRrs

Reality
Continued f,on page 2

of these imagine is most popular within Sp-

cial Forces? Which ofthes publications, Genral Davis, do you imagine thousnds of patriotic AmericansAmericans who have come to fear their olln govemment and what it
has come to stand for-srrbscribe to, or rerd bootleg copies oI? This incident, and its implications, raises an issue that is ofdadly impo(ance to the futule of this nafion. Omcers do not become seniot ofiicers by adhering to pinciple and never compromising their prsonal

continue to filter

ftom our observers in Haiti,

in it

is apparent that th ofticial U.S. policy of disarming lhe Haitiat middle and uppr class is beginning to pay offwith the desired results.

rat-linc slatred by an auxiliary comprised of borh willing volunteers and unwitting accomplices. It is now 29 March 1995. We are srill receivinp marl posunarked in February. Our security is more imFrorlrnt than a direct rll"ilins address. 6. OutgoinS distribution musl be smug8led to an auxiliary volunreer All lhis rakes time. Six week on
averag

Middle and upper class business pople, former FAd'H ofiicials, and cwrent memben of the Interim Police Security Force (IPSF), are being targeled for murder by the dmocracy

lovin& conmunisl Orpnization


Populair lavalas (OPL). Th United States Army, under the direct control of the Unitd Nations, deliberately set about to disarm $e very segment ofHaitian society which codd have pulled that country back from the brink of African savagery. As a result of this policy of population disarmament, the communisls, deliberately placd into power in ttaiti by the federal govemmnt and the Unitd Slates Army, hav bgun a systematic campaign of terror and murder to cement tlrcir hold on that country. As United States forces revert to the direct otEralional control of lhe United Nations you can expct more of the same.The only people who are
safe and seaure in llaiti are the communists. This is becaus the United States Army, adhering to dliberat

integrity. Thq will jump on each political bandwagon, regardless of which direction it is headed rhat will nrther their carers. Who, exectlt is
being treasonous and disloyal?

RESLtfEn, and its uncompromising


support and defense of ihe Constitution, or those adherents ofsocialism, Marxism and one-wotld govmment rrho are shredding the Constitution? At least oul words and our actions are consistent with our bliefs. J.F.A. Davidson

fre

Special Forces Underground and conducts its busioess honestly. Those who have overpaid for requested publicalions have receird cash reftnds wilh lheir order Thos who have underpaid have received what &ey asked for along lrith an order blank. Almosl wiihout exception, compensation has been retumed (lhere is always that l% $ho are lhieves). On rare occasions some-

fre nESrSftR

thing "slips through the cracks." Sometims that is due to mail<rossing, sometimes to mistakes on out part. Ilave patienc with our opentional constraints. lfyou have a complaint let us know, and we will make
good on your request,

I(c U(hrBrcud ed lrz dE /,tltn is srai8l fdwt(t individxd righb, rLi.I ostiurimli.r\
The

phil@phy ofih. spcirl

No undeagound oagnization or resislrnco movement can conduct its

limir.d Cove|rjlM|, ieldi@i&r\ hise-aiire W. oppd.:

activities wilhout a reasonably $ecure source ofincome. Our firm belief,


based on our considerable experience,

crpil,lilnr dd .epubli.&im; in .hqt tlF Ftuipla upon which rh! rution {s fo!nd!d. de!m6ct, plll potdca,
Ord6i in

lib*.li$r.lt!is,

ddira @i.lirll olLdivi3nrt


inr,omalid.li$! iribllisn|,

sM, ilF id@lo8is of .11 ltunnid. olI phil@pbiol Cm.slt ! obj&rivis Ch. r.ridll nMlity of &lf inLftd Riric,h remi L[.). Olr politicd philo.plry i!

!d

rn.

N4 Wqld

policy dictated by the United Nations, disarmed everyone who would oppos @mmunism,

tlnt resistance movements which rc5ort to crime to suppon fteir activities Oant robberies, drug dealing, etc.), were never anything olher than
is

Samrcl Nasson

criminal organizations to begin wilh.


The Special Forcs Underg.round will not raise nony for its activities by any me3ns olher than honomble
means, and the voluntary conlribu-

srcudd in th. wd*r 6f lbc Foundina FrtheE of lhis Elim ud Aub.@ Heften Gov@nr a ery!$ Nt mrld-*fiici nn{ Ub.rlt).

onection
lnfomantt, w dlcd rhlr md.r@tr oFrdiv 0d infor''AeenE

h dr vOLlNo.3

mrtr ofc.rl Magd, Ludwis m Mirn and r|.try ltulin (OE gu.etor of ndivi.brl isl r, lailg-frn. c.pitaliG*hich n.c;

our @mio phil@phy i! grcurd.d in tlE

Pbwatew

C{i ..

1995),.i.t

$r

anzl

mnrl, ifdir..rly .!ked mud i&nriry

6.n-

Colmil inlw3 $ ihh tul true. In hi.


m infm.rt 6 ud.r6v6 rsnt his ofrcial pditio'! ,nd h. li.l, infmalid he garhd WILL BE {nnisihle. An

all

...ontnry to populu h.lief, ifone

udtrovq
e.
lhy

6NECd
as
ouB

.senl cAN li., &d ml mly 16 do .o. h{t tiEy

liml

sol

&e

Republic.

sowm'

dcf.Eel nizled, rluckl.d .rd


codnud

r*ld.tim of dE cmliluOur lin tu lo se lrE fedfll

muld

gel

nowhq. silhoul dplior

Th. dor

$l.ly, od w r.k
TheSbrf

tions ofour supportercThe blood that precipit ted rhe first American Revolution was ink, The Spcial Forces Underground pays homage to dut tradition via RESrSf,'n and its ancillary publications. Together we will wrest our constitutional republic away from the democmcy worshipping mob; and we will pry our livs, liberty, and prcperty from lhe death grip of Marxisl

lre

usurpers.

casl back inlo ils

The Sta_tr

I/o/.

I, No. 4

TI:e RESISTER

CORRESPONDEI..{CE
rHoRoucHLY enjoyed your last issue (Winter, 1995, \tl.I, No.3)-

The FmmeIs produced that ttter


idea in th Constituhon. Tom Paine USAJFKSWCS
You

While I wholehea(edly agree with your editorial "Exproprialion of an ldeal," I liod I must disagree with your rhetoric about "Civil Affairs and
Psychological Operations social workers." FiNl you're right. Bronze Bruce was ddicated to Special Forces soldiers killed in th3 Republic of Vret Nam (and other wars). He belongs in lhe plaza. LTG Scott displayed overweening hubris. No
arSument.

arc correci Gueniua ,tarfare

and pstchological varlarc are inseparable. Indeed, ther arc a continuu"t. Hovevea \jhen gued a varfa,e and

lat

Wchological *atarc arc divided by

However, as you are well aware, Psychological Operations soldiers arn't Civil Affairs or social workers. PSYOP (or PSYWAR as it nBs then) is a primary progenitor ofArmy Sp-

cial Forcs and is closely woven ioto the classic SF mission, guerrilla rvarfare.
Students of resisla[ce movements and undergrounds realgniz that these are wars of ideas. The first phase of any resistance movement is pFychological operations to build Oe movemnt create resistance poten(ial and attract recruils. lndee4 just killing resiste.s is inefrchve in the long run (they bcome martyrs), unless you discredit or subsum drcir idea.

in Haiti blurting such lilth as "Rejoice, denoctucy is hete," over a

CA as "social wo&ers" is g,ounded in our policy oI judsins aclions. 19 learald kids driving arond a town

into separute comnands they ate both rcnde,ed inpotent. We have Iong held that the PSYOP course shouA be ,nade Phase IV ol the Q Corrse. Ou elerence to PSIOP and

the course of the conversation he informed mc that the ATT personnel he had worked with had told him about the plan for a general disarmament of the civil population, and thal they were sure fiey could pull it ofr. Further, he seemed to bc in agreement. He told me. "Civiliansdonl ned 'lftos l)?s' of guns anlvay." It is a di(y shame that so many of our nation's young men arc dad asleep on their feet- Our enemy has already won a great ba(le in our public educalion system. Ilardly anyone I talk to has ever read lhe Declamtion of Indepeodence or the Constitution The cornmon perceplion seems to be lfiat n can't really know what the Founders had in mind, because we wercn'l lhere, and thos old documents werc *Titten in another time and lhe words mern difirent

things now
Reference your article about Haiti: everyone I talk to sals the same thing firs!; "Mao, dut *hole opemtiofi was f_d-up." I am encouraged tlEt at least some saw the reality ofoccupation and disannament. kst summer I altended a DCM clinic and ordered an Ml rifl. What I saw at the range was heartning. Mon and Da4 Jr and Sis, all showed-up with militia grade weapons. Tlrere were Ml'E Ml carbines,

loubpealer is social wo*, not psychological warfarc. The RESISTER


is

pswhological walare and

beuer idea is that ofthe

Fftt

ov

e6.

The Editor

You for all vour efrons alrd may God blis you and our counlry we are netnorking with the Council on Domestic Relalions to get Ihe loth Amendment

tTtr^Nk

SKS', MlAs, ARl5's, MAK90's,


and just about every suilable military firearm made during tfus century

I I

Any rue patriot nould

be

lvell

advisd to find a copy of the cunent PSYOP manuals (FM l3-l &

3l-ll)

resolution adopted in Norlh Carolina. It will be a monunental lask. but a number of legislators are enthusiastic
about it.
Please keep rle XESISrE'R coming. Just the fact that you a'dst en-

and read them. The leftist'compassion fascist" socialist media is already demonizing and tdvializing the conslilutionalist rcsistance lo their New World Order agenda. We need to mploy effective, rdh+ase4 organized PSYOP to counter their propaganda and reach the lrirfirg electorate and other key communicators. Non of this even suggests that PSYOP soldiers ar Special Forces or lhat Brcnze Bruce represenls anyone but Spcial Forc6. P.ather, it is a remindr to this conmunity that the war of the fle3 is won through having a beller ide! than (he opposilion and by getting that idea across.

courages those of us who arc across tfte country

*lrking

The Liberty S,entinel


PO Box t 188 Libeny, NC 27298

Rf,crNrLY had a conversation with a ?th SFCA soldier who hadjust rturned from a -ITF-Six nission ln lhe process ofpicking his brain I elicited a response to the etrct of, "Oh, I guess you're one ofthose nuls who's woried about GARDEN PLOT

T I I

and CABLESPLICE, aren't you?"

ln

The re{lity is that lhe militia is well amed. The question is, can the population oflhis country reEist lhe immoral premis that registntion and liceNing is the way to prevent crime? No man will convince me to trade my righls for Dermission. The last time I looked licens mant; ' Permission to do that *hich would otherwise be illegal." Nor wiu the validity of my rights be determined by the aclions ofcriminals. Gun control ofany kind has nothing to do with crime-it is only about power HCI and their Marxist suppon apparatus arc ifielevant idiots rlho possess only the credibility we give them. Finally. we musl claw our way out of the qugmire of perFtual patemalism into which \Ye have sold ourselves. The ancient Hebrcws found themselves in an identical situation and found moml couraSe in their faith. Wq on lhe other hand, *hile

Vol.

I, No. 4

Tlte RESISTER
drawing moral courage from the same source, musl nol wait for a
Our ancestors gave us an instrument wilh which we can sale ourselves- It iB lhe Constilution. It is
defended with a rifle. resident John Kennedy, in his 196l inauguml addrcss said,"ln

Bruce Ft. Jackson- SC

the long history ofthe world. only a few geoerations have been granted the role ofdefending freedom in the hour naximum danger...The energy, the faith, the devotion, which we bring to this endeavor will light our country and all who srve it, and Oe glow from that fire can truly lieht
the world."

am wdting you in regard to the

articl "First Amendment Police" (Vol.I, No.3). The nun that you
wrote about is a srgeant on my stalf I snt him to find out any information h could on your mail drop and prsonnel picking up items al th post ofiice, and to find out who was operating in our back yard. we found that your operation was not as secure as we thought it might be- It only took our nun about an hour and we knew nanes and addrcsss of all involved. I l}oirld have used a man with less of a criminal background to sign lor lhe box. As far as surveillance goes we nevr put any on lhe post odice or the young gendemarl no damage cootrol was needed by your slafr

Over two hundred years ago a genration of Americns successfu lly ddended fredom and created 6 s]stem
a darkened world. They proved that a nation can firnction mo6t efiicintly with a sverely limitd governmont, and tlut only govemment of, by and for the people can

lighl in

ofgolqnment lhat was rr ya

pany, lOth SFGA from l98l-19E3. While a member of the active duty mililary I wasjusl an ordinary American doiog what I believed at the time lras an impoflaol job. Like you, I am deeply distressed at th direction taken by our freedomtrasbing govemment. Th former Special Forces men involved in the political process here in the Gmnirc St te are dedicsted. resourcefirl and resolulB. We do not intend to loose, The Founding Fathrs who built this republic during the late lSth cenlury *orked diligendy lo cran a govemment which would respct lhe rights of free men. No glib, slick librals are going to disrnantl the fleedom and librty which so many Americans have surreldred thefu li]s to prc-

provide abundant life, librty, happiness and security. Even in the precent 'New World Ordefl darkness, lradition causes people of olher mtions 1o lool (o Amedca for leadership in rstoring fredom. As thy watch our nation being taken over by enemies from witftin, they also see the rise of runislers and patriot leaders who are too honorable to do less than risk their llves in opposing lhis evil wo d
system. Perhaps it is ouI exanple that is causing the people ofchechnya to take up arms and cast ofr Soviet slavery There was even a Rursian geneml who refused to move his tar*s against these pople who or y desire

Ifyou or youN should ever ned help or assistance when in (CENSORED, ed.), do not hesilat to call
or $rite. Mention (CENSORED, d.) to let me klrow rrho lh caller or

$riter might b. I will endeavor to ofer a bd, a meal or a rest stop, whatever is n*ded.
Many citizns on the oubide of the

The lst Battaliotr, lst Light Infantry Rogirnnt-Ibxas Reserve Militia invited your young gndman to our meeting in December and (w) would like to work with youi group U the
Please accept our spolog/ and

milihry arc scard that your organization has been st up by the Army ,nd the administration to smoke-out dissnt. I think no! given what I have read in your publication. I hav never been afraid to stand finr y for what is moral, righl andjust. I am
completely and unequivoclly uncotrcerned about how (the govemment) r.gards me. Ifthey fear free Amricans that's thir probleq not mine.

(*e)

fteadom,
One principle our enemies are using against us is "divide and con-

hop that you now feel seqrre in your operation alld kep up the good work.

Caplain,

lst

M. Snirlr Texas Light lnfantry

quer" They forced intgmtion upon


us to get black and whits to hate e3ch other We darc not hate each other becaus th6r are pople oI all mces workiog together io ftee our

Christopher

Texas Reserve

Militia

\brmont
As long as Thc RESISTER rct,mins a clatdestine publication

Hov very curious. For the rccord: )) Yob seryeant foun.l *hot he vas supposed to Jind, which vas etactly

nation. I'hey're uying to slir up halred of Jews, but there are Jews work-

n-

ingjus!

as hald a Christians,

nothing; 2) no e ofou autiliary had, or haw, cri,,tinal ,ecords; 3) ve


detennine when da, age contml is nee.led and when it is not; 4) our cut-out was not inyited by anybod! lo any neeting: 5) feeling secae has nothing to do trith secu ty: 6) ve keep np the good *ork. Do not bulls,t us. lYe do this for

defending their rieht to believe as


they choos.

,,brs ate going to circulate that we arc a lalse Jlag operation. These ru',tort a,e probably sprcad by the
sarne people who belieye the

wi

All lru Americans must get involved in lhis slruggle. We must preserve what off forefatheN entrusted to us.
Chuck A. Monlana
leas add me to the

vorld is n n by avizened oA nan sitling in a


windowless Non devoid offumiture less a chab and table, vhon, sitting beneath a ba,e light bulb hdnging trom the ceiling , chain smoking Lucky Strike cigarcttes, instructs his ninions, "Nov, destabilize the Associate Editor

vi

E.Hinchley C2, Security

RES,SrE,R. I served proodly in various units of the 9th lnfantry Division from 1977-1981 and then in the MI Comlist for

lre

distribution

Toiiii

Aon

paten

Vol.

I, No. 4

Tlte RESISTER

PERINTREP
From Russia, With Love
N

Et tu, Air Force?

Posnrre Statement

22 X'iBRU nY 1995- Colonel

ril

1994 oDmoN of the

Urited

Vladimir P Malakhov, of the


Russian army's Ceneral Department of International Military Cooperation toured Fort Bragg, North Carolina with Sen. Tony Ran4 (D. NC). LTG HuEh Shelton, cltnrnander, Xvlll Aiftorn Corps, and MG Mike Steele, comrnander 82nd Airbome Divisio& hostd Colonel Malakhov and 12 members of his slaff Colonel Malallrcv's mission at Fort Bragg was to gather information relating to the formation of6 Russian Mobility Forcs Conunand tailoted affer the U.S. Army's Rapid Deployment Force, which is the X\tlll Airborne Corps. Malakhov and his staf aho tourcd Pop Air Forc Bare in order to get an appreciation for lhe airlin and air support ne.essary to support ar RDF. The Russian Mobility Forcs Comrnand will consist of approxinately 100,000 soldiers including paratroopers, naval infantry, SPETZNAZ, motorized infantry, as $ell as an air transport division. Colonel Malakhov emphasized that the force mix of the Mobility Forcs Comnand would be sinilar to lhat usd in th atlack on Chechnya. colonel Malakhov emphrsized lh6 benefits of the joint U.S. Russia[ peace-nforcemeot lraining conducF ed in Totskoye Russia last September, by tbe U.S. lst Brigade, 3d lnfantry Division and the Russian 27th Motorized Inlantry Division (which "enforced the peace" in scessionist Moldavia). commenting on the recentjoint U.S. Russian trainin& which included establishing population control checkpoinls and riot control, and his visit to Fort Bragg, Colonel Malakhov remarked; 'Russian and American troops will *ork logethr in peace-keeping, rescueand humanitarian missions. Nov we re looking to rrrle.' (Emphasis addcd).

States Special Operations

Force Postue Slalenena, a glossy 100 page magazine publishcd by dle Depanmnt ofDefense *hich defrnes the rols, missions and capabilities of tJ.S. Special Opration Forces, and which is the joint ofiicial policf statement ofH. A.llen Holmes, Assislanl Secretary of Defense for

Awanon lleek and Snace Tech I zologv. conui nea a ri anicle enlitled, "Weapons, Avionics UF grades ExpandB-lB Options." The a(icle discussd recent modilicatioos lo B-lB bombr weapons delivery systens, enabling the aircmn to carry thirty I,0001b Tactical Munitions Dispnsrs, each capable of holding
eboul 722 individurl bomblettes. (The adcle claims 'dozens" of bomblettes per Tactical Munitions DisFnser. We did some homework al|d 722 is our
best estinllte- That's 21,660

7Tl I

Hr lJ [[BRU^RY 1995.

issue

of

Sp.cial Operations ard Low Intensity

personnel bomblettes per

Conflicl and GEN Wayne A. Downing, Connunder in Chief, U.S. Special Operations Comrna.n4 is
dedicated to the "...commitment to pace." Cor thos ofyou old enough lo remember, being 'committd to pace' used to be the bromide exchanged among thos who were dedicated to one-world communism).

antiB-lB). Brigadi. Ceneral James M. Rich-

lndee4 Chapter I, entitled 'A Ordei' begns: "Frcm the ashes of the cold war, a Ne* World Order has emerged. National Boundaries and political alliances have
New World shiffed apparently

ards, directo. of long-range power projection programs, who is assigned to lhe ofiice of lhe U.S. Air Force Assistant Secretary for Acquisition, claimed lhe wqpons upgrade $?s necessary to expand the Air Force's epability, "(against ex-Soviet) systems as well as Oc 'Blue/G.ey' tkeals we wony atoul today."

Care to etplain that rcma*, Jim?

overdghl and fonner adwrsaries have become partners in tho quest for global security
and stability." Deeper into lhis slick sales brochure Mr. Holmes and GEN Downing mmn about the "fail re oldemocratic refonns" and that correcling this alleged catastrophe commilr spcial opemtions forcs to, "greater emphasis...on multinational and

Be Scared
rIER clearing Oe Departmenl ofDfens Police desk at the new combined headquarters building for lhe United States Army Special Operations Connand and the United State6 Army Special Forces Command (Ai6ome), located al the intersection of Reilly Road and Yadkio Extension on Fort Bragg, No(h Carolina, proc4ed through the scurily stils !o the elevalors for a lift to the second floot Ulron exiting the elevator lum dght, then bn. and proced down the hallway until it ends. Tum right.You have now entercd th waiting room of Rudolph M. Jones, Jr, Colonel, ceneral Stafr, Deputy Comlnardet USASFC(A). The first flag you see, the orl), flag in th waiting room, is lh United Nations flag-

collective peaca opentions." Yet more chilling is rhe omcial dedicalion of special operations forces to "ofrer lraining and suppon !o other

Mtions 1o prsrv their biodiversity and ecology..." This is intended to


promole "global pqce."

Multinational; collectivq global


peace. Sounds familiar, doesn'(

it

comrades?
We have one qrcstion, Wayne. Hov do the arned Io.ces of a nation lounded on the principles o/ constitutional republicanism cone to be chee eaders Ior denpcracy?

Vol.

I, No. 4

The RESISTER

Civilian Inmate Labor Program


MILTTARY Mf,MOR.{NDUM CON-

cerning the use of civilian inmate labor and lhe establishmenl of prison camps on Army among the various pat ot and militia organizations. This memorandum is in fact the transmittal letter for rhe drafi ola new Army regulation. We llave a copy of the drajl rgulation. The draff rcgulation is entitld; AR s-Xj{, Civilian In,nate Labor Pr?g/aD. (5 means it is a maiagement documenl, XX mens the published regulation will carry a two numberdesignation). The transmittal

ment of prison camps on Army inslallations is to utilize the residenr inmate labor pool to perform valid requiremenls-" (Pam- 3-l). The regulation prohibits army personnel from becoming involved in any rnanner with prison camp operations (Para. 35.e.).

counterintelligcnce functions into onc organization (NACIPB is the organiation, NACIC is its tool), which feports directly to lhe president, it
becomes, de facto, a political instrument. Second, the follow-up PDD-25,

which subordinated America's national defense cornmand and control


to the United Nations, efrectively gives the United Nations a direct conduit into the combined counterintel ligenc services of this nation's intelligence coomunity via its military channels.

installations has been circulaling

Th drall regulation dra$s ils authority from l8 USC 4125(a), 9o,,,eming services federal civilian inmates can perform for DOD agencies, and Excutive Order 11755, govem-

ing use of non-federal civiliao inrnates on fedral contmcts-

The Garrison Factor

The Opposition
Restructufes
N

letter is datd 27 July 1994, with a suspense date of29 August 1994, lor

rcvie*ing a8encies to forward proposed changeg additions or deletions

3 M^Y t994- President

to the aclion agency on the appropriate forms. The Summary pamgraph on the regulation cover letter states: "This regulation provides guidance for establishing and managing civilian inmate labor prograns on Army installations/activities. It provides guidance on stablishing prison camps on AImy iGlallationvactivites. It addresss recordkeeping (sic) and rcporting incidents related to the civilian inmate labor program and./or

Clinton signed PDDNSC-24


which created a new national
Countedntelligence (CI) structure and two new CI orSanizations. The stated purpose was lq "imprcve national-lerel counteriotelligence policy

everal nll placed sources have reported llut Major Gneral William Garrison, Comnander, United Srates Army John F. Kenndy Special Warfare Center and School. intends to implemenl a new command policy designed to create a 'politically slerile" work environ-

development coordination, and cooF eration."


The first of thes new organizatiom is the Nationrl CI Policy Board

prison camp administration."


The Applicability paragraph *This regulation states: applies to the Active Army, tlrc U.S. Army Reserve, and the Army National Guard. This regulation applies during full mobili-

(NACIPB). Its rnandate is to review alrd foamulate counterintelligence policf. It meets monthly and is chaired by Mr Keilh HaI, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defnse fo.
Intelligenc and Securig. The NACIPB reports to the president. The scond l|ew organization is
the National Counleriniolligence

MG Garrison has stated to his Special Staffdut his new policy will not tolente any political exFession, oppinion, dissen! satire, or discussion in the lvorkplace. Prohibited also will be the display of signs, posters, quotes, cartoons, stickers, pins or
badges carrying a political mas6age.

Specifically prohibited from the *orkplace will bc panisan political publications. Political disc.ussion of topical issues wiU be baoned, as will
discussions of more broadly based

political philocophy.

zatron."
Paragraph l-1, Purpose, states: 'This regulation provides Amy policy and guidance for establishing civilian inmate labor progmms and civilian prison camp6 on Army installations Sourcs of civilian inmate labor are limited lo fedml corections facilities and state"/local corrections facilities operdting from on-post prison camps. State./local inmate labor from oll-post corections facililies is curenlly xcluded from this

program..." Although the Army cannot solicit


(he establishment of pdsoo camps on installations corrections oficials nray request the lease of land and facilities. "However, the Army's primary purpose for allowing the cstablish-

Crnler (NACIC), established under the authority of Ihe NACIPB. The NACIC 'managcs" threats to oational and economic security, monitors lhe efrectiveness of the national CI p.ogram, controls inteogency cI programs, efrecls integration ofcl community data bases, and coordinales sec-urity countermeasurcs proglams. Mr. Michael Waguespack, a snior FBI counterintelligerrce executive, is the director ofNACIC. The NACIC is collocatd with the CIA CI Center The Army has three billets in tftis oryanizaton. The Justice Depa(ment no$ confols all counteriolelligence.

Explici y prohibited will be the


posse,s.sion,

distribution, and dissmi-

nation of 7X nESISTEI, and discussion ofits contents. (MG carrison ic the individual responsibl for the confiscation of Urd ntSISfER from the Marqual Memorial Libmry, 6nd supponer of rnandalory homosxual sensitivity training in USAJFKSWCS, in August 1994).

Bill,letbface it: you've leaned nothing dwing your Special Forces


We su(gest ]ou begin teur study of counteinsuryency scrutch. On one hand, ve coau re you wherc and ho\e to be4in, which misht belun. On the other hand, we \aould haye to send ]ou a bi . J.F.A. Davidson

corcer

fon

The significance of PDD/NSC-24


is lwo-Iold- First, by consolidating all

Vo/.

I, Nq 4

The RESISTER

JTF-6
Continuedlmn pag.

F.om

llld

drug laws. The prevailing argumenb


cr lhc p.$a8o

of

wer ttrofold. First. the iovolvement of federal armed forces in law enforcement violated the lelter and

intent of lhe Posse Comitatus Act.


To me thb apptB t v.ry darming powc., wh.n ufllimillcd. Thy e not only io rais., but to supporl lmiest md ihi3 suppon is ro 8o to lh. utrnosr Nbiliii3 of lhG Scond, placing fedeml anned forces

ces tnd und.r suoh circumstlnc6 rs swh .dploym.ol of $id foE mly bG dprcasly aulhoriz.d
by

in clo6e proximity to tlle dnrg tradq becaus of its Foposd enforcement


dutie6, lvould ultinately lead to cor-

Unild Strtc!. If ConSr.s shtll sry, thot lhc 8.ndd wclftF rc-

th. Constit'rtion or

by

.cl of

ruption within the milirary. Both objections to military iNobment in law enforcement ha\,t since proven

quir6 it, ihcy may kccp rmie3 conlinudly on fool. Thc|E b no oonloul on congrc3s in mbins !d stalionin8 th.m. Thcy my billqt lhcm oo thc pcopl rt pla-

in fact a tefledion ofthe i ent ofthe fourders. lt i6 notewonhy thal, for


The Po6s Comitall|s Act l,as, over 100 year6, tftis acl sdrd to constmin fedeml govemme use of its amed forces in lew enforceme .

Duringtl{lwhile beiog orgaIn-tlwas

tlue,

surc.-1t-

nize4 a compromise sar reached. l4 during th execution ofnonnal train-

thc powq ofth poplc in r fr -I-Fo,

ttr-t--r-ii

ing, a membr of the amed forces rvitnessed activitis that coold be rasonably conslrued to indicate ac-

Govommenl, id suppos.d lo bc p.ramount to th. ditting Powr.

ficking, it Eas his duty to report it through his chain ofconrman4 for

aivities involving drugE or drug lraf-

Vlrgiria Convention, 1788

fon@rding to the appropriate lalf, enforcement agncies. On face valu, this compromise was rEither rmreasonable nor onelous. The cotrs+ quences ofthis compmmise $re.

agencies hav no purpose othr thatr on lhe fact ftal, at th titrr, srading amries were u!d domSicaly to enforce mpopular laws ad kep Ole

eoforcemenl of arbitrary, undefi ne4 whim+ard federal

"laws.'-

tIIItIhFincipal focus i6 securing military

Operation Alliance rsponds to rque6ts for oFmtio0al support ffom all law enforcement agencies in lhe
suDpon

-D
The quarGring of troops was simply the exprssion of that premisThe Reconrtructiotr Acls imposd on the rcbel states after the Civil War, and Oeir martial law enforcenrcnl arnply demoostrated earlier antifederalist fesm ofunchecked federal us armed forcs 1o onforce arbitrary law. (How clarcd and wagd jecls has yet to be is tpical socialist

rrt-.
war can be deon iruninate obdtermitred; but it

tom

its coordination ceaier locatd on Fon Bliss, Texrs" adjacent

tC

fsignifi crnl

developmcnt

itr the rlationship between Operation Alliance .rd IIF{ is tha! prior to 1993, tlrc IIT4 miariol rr"s to provide dirtcl support to only 'Drug Law Enforcennt

Only the pqssage ofdre Po6se Comilatus Act in l8?8 ended thes outrages, Th Posse Comilatus Act stated,

in pan: Vol.

rheloric.) Dbate on the use offdeml arrned forcos in this'war" and the assislance tlEy could provide to la$ enforcement bega! soon therafter. Signifi cantly, ther was oppo6ition in the Dp6rtmen( of DefeNe, particularly within the Armt to tl|e obvio$ implications of using activ duty forces to entorce

Allia[ce's primary firnction is to bring togdher staie and


local law enforoexnnt agencier, and their supporting Activg Re6erve, and National Guard forceq wifi federal agncies to provid coordinated suP, port to counterdrug operations along

I, No. 4

The RESISTER
,nnt ageftcies operating in TexaE New Mexico, A.izonr, and Califorria. Intelligence support io law enforcenent agencies consisls of providing the teahniqus, systems aM proceduies that facilitate the anal]siq firsioq and sharing ofdrug related intelligence in response to specific rcquests from law enforcernent agencies. Intellignce suppo.t is provided by seconding DOD in3clli gence Frsonnl to law enfor@ment agencies-specificauy to the FBI and

ages both lhe

intenutional and do-

mestic counterdng firnctions of

all

support includes sensors, lislening posts, obseN?tion posIq ground srr ,cillance rada4 and ground potrols, Aerial recoDraissance support includes Forrrrd Loking Infrarcd (FLIR), Side-looking Airborne Radar (SI-AR), photographic irnagery and Renorely Piloted r,bhicles (RPVS).

ffiffissance

round

DEA, by aerial irmgery tuclligence


insfucdorB. and tanslators-

lllllTraining pstrolling,

suppon includes helicoptsr insertionr ard extactions, striping, operaEPIC provides


to lhe law enforcement community. lt has its owtr prcprietsry database. as

tions and intelligence, ad Ad!"nced Military Operatiors on Utanizd

Terrain (AMOIJT). (AMOUT cannot be tumrionally ditrerentiated frcm


local law enforceme agercies,
Close
less of nit+ickilg oficial attempts to do so. Ofrcially, CQC deals with linar tarSels-pl8,res, tains, busges.

Qu

ter Combsr (CQC) regard-

wll as acc6s to other propdetary intelligencc dalabases. EPIC provides infonnation to authorized DOD,
fedral ard state law enforcement agencis. EPIC iB a full srvice htelligence operationF centet, whose primrry nission is !o provide tactiaal intelligence erpport to federal, stat and locsl law enforcement agencis l'ith infonnation related to napons, drugs atld aliers. In addition to DEA eleven other federal agercis arc
memb.s ofEPIC.

The t"aining and oprational techniques of AMOUT and CQC are ide ical. BORIAC is spcincaly

ad gqmd
ofthis support is io
assist law enforcenent agenciG in lheir mi8sio[ to dtect, deter, and

includs engineer projecls and

ait

tra$portation. Etrgner

projocls include bqrrier erccrion, road rpai4 and iatrgc conshuction. Air transportation ilcludes MH.60 ad CH-47 helicopters, as well as tle provision for fue support ftom helicoplBr gun-ship6. Ground tlansporta.

tion qrppon irclods loans

of

militafy vehicles, ard the

us6

Fighting \Ybhicle6-BIFVs), upon

cal vehicles (such as Bmdlsy

l!&firy

oflactitiotr has ben oploited by federal, stote and local law enforcement agen. cies to militarize the forces at lheir dirpocal. Ide.4 giler the nahrral proclivitis of ahe mlriad u[cotrs1itudg!41 federal law enforcetnent agencies,

applicatiotr. Lagistical slpport slso irrclude6 loans of $tveillance quip and intelligerre suppon o Operation Alliance. Operatioml supporl is provided using 'lotal force" suppon

men! prfuurily passive and thcrrnal

packagd dra$n Ircm

variety

of

sources and guided by prio.ities established by Operation Alli-

nilitaiy

IIE-T' .r-E-

night observation devices, and day optics.

Opoatior Alliance' .rd JTF{


i

srppon of this

nregration,S

volvs dentilytng atrd demonstratlng -rllllDrhisinfchnologes appropriate to oombin-

;E;[IGEjoina active duiy militrry -

ing military and law enforcement capabilitis ald operaiiotrs. .nF-6 also provides exteBive intelligence suppon to Opration Alliance. JTF{ provides fused and amlyzcd data fiom DOD and law enforcmgnt soulces to DOD forcas deployed in support of law enforce-

10

trffi
Therc is no singlc atrccity that

Tlte RESISTER
Nashville ofiice because the fenules io lhe ollice had been "extremely lraumatized." PLJNISHMENT: ASAC
Message toffic indicates lhat the operatioftrl parameters of lhis assault

were known to the Special Forces unit involved as e3rly as December 1992. Operation Allianc6, inan attempl to secure DOD support and training prior to the raid, foru:arded a completely fictilious report through mililary chamels that there was a
suspcted methamplFtamine lab at dr Waco compound. This $s nough for JTF{ to s4re the commitment of Special Forcs ODA 381 (then attached to Co.C), to provide pre-mission trai ng to BAIF forces dedicated to the attack.

serious about Oe "thrt to national securily" posed by Oe drug trade; the fderal govrnment was serious about "interdictine" the dlug trade into the United States: il would invaded, reducd to rubble, and occupied as subject colonies, the d.ug

if

((RuDElg) lo6t his supervisory slalus and was tmnsf[d to an AIF omce in Bowling Green, KY But he was not forced to movq so he commutes from his home in Nashville. AIF managemenl felt they coold nol puni$h ((RUDEN)) too harshly or h *ould 'spill lhe bsns" about ((BEAnY))'s exile to his home state of Alabana. (MCGAW)) .nade a
statement that ((BEAT'nO) had a tough lif with a "history ofmenlal

trafficking states of Mexico, Columbia, Peru, and Bolivia. It causes you wonder who is bene-

problems and related incidnts slanning eight years." ATF respondd by creating a job for ((BEATTY)) at Fort Mcl-ellan, AL, wh6re AIF runs its acsdemy for Special RespoNe

Teams-the sanre SRT'S responsible for Mt. Camel. The po6ition ((BEHf Mosr note*orthy aesult of active duty mililary integration into the so-clled '\?ar on drugs," has been the abject pewersion of lhe once honorat{e Judge Advocate Geneml Corps

other front in the socialist war on the

Constitution?

JAC
!o specilic missions psrameters relatd to the employment of federal troops in support ofoperation Allia&6 and JTF{ are given notice by military liaison ofrcN to OAJCG that lheir objeclions are "...not career

ATF Values
Continuedfmn page

ATTIO) holds at Ft. Mcclellar is unsupervised. lsol'e errbelishes his rcpo at his point with references to u n s upe rv i se d h omosena I se n I o r lederal lafl enlorcenent agents retaining their badget and guns while availing rctitenent. Souce b language vas mprintable. Fd'itor'1. ((MCCAW)) told a reponer aner tlle 23 March Seflaie subconmittee hearing on Waco: 'lf I didn'l want ((BEAITID) ro have a badge altd a gun,
he wouldn't bave a badge and a gun."

enhancing," Prior to october 1989- counterdrug enforcement belonged exclusively to law enforcernent agencies. The Deparlrnent of Defns provided limited assistaoce to involved agencies but did not become direc{y involved in police functiols.

a secretary unintentionally walked-in on him. Wher sh did ro, ((BEATTY-)) mad no atlempt to hide himref

-h ffrnxNcE: William M rnEP EcE)): fonner head of " I\n'I.Fi aviation operations,
was namd as chief suspect in dl

and , in fact exposd himsef to her She complained snd the Office of Inspector General (OIG) got invohd. The OIG'S suweillance repon-much ofwhich was omitted from the IG's final rpon-stated dul ((BEA'ITl4) was obsftd "...hanging around a child's playgroud...' and olher "unsavory" places.

alleged embzzlemed of $l-5 million

through falsified travel vouchers.

(REECE)) was allowd to retire


as part oia deal to protect supervisors who had allowed ((REECE))'$ deds to go unpunished. Thes supervisors were subsequendy promoted by Undenec. retary ofth Trcasury Roo ((NO. BLE)I (GEECB)'6 imnediate supervisor at lhe time ras Margart

wilhout punirhment

l-ince

the establishnint ofopration Alliance and JTF6, law enforcement agencies at all levels hav6 usd th incrcasingly insuppo4able prete,\t of "drug8" to secur increasing levels ofdirect mililary

The upshot was: ((BEATTY)) was confionted ad his Assistant Special Agent in Charg (ASAC) Jerry ((RUDEN)) also got in touble when il was dete.mined that he knew of ((BEAlTy))'s proclivities and had not reported $em to Hadquarlers. John ((MCGAW)) commented on this semi-publicity, although not mentioning any names, by saying that h had to appoint a Gnul SAC for lhe

((MOORE)).
Refercnce: Margaret ((MOORE));
she is now SAC in Baltimore, MD. ((MOORE)) was recently iovsligared for pistol-whipping her live-in homosexual lover at their Baldmor area

apa(ment, A Orert was communicated by ((MOORE)) to he. victin, who is an area supenisor for ATF, over eonnnueAnn pase2A

I/ol.

No.

11

Tbe RESISTER

CORRESPONDENCE
Continuedlmn page 6
read aboul your publication io

cialty and lhe desire lo excel- Any-

thing less becoms a promolion system based on quotas, not merit. The lalest fallacy thal is circulating is that ifwomen are not allowed into the combat arms carer fields then they will not be able to compete

correcl doesn't mean anything \{hcn you rc at the reciving end oI the
Isaac Hutl USASFCA

Soldier of tbrtme map;azine I like your synopsis and philosophy lt's something l truly believ in. Dilemna:How far can republicanism go with "G_d's Law" The Bible calls for death for so maoy transgressions. The Suprcme Court stated that, "Treson is thc ultimale crime and death is the ultimate puni6hment." Also, the Founding Fathers wre not wholly Cfuistians. There were Dists, agnostics, as wgll as atheists. Now' hoiv is the Declaration of Indpendence and the Constitution biblically inspired? What can I do to help the resislance? I want my republic restored.
James

etrectively for the higher level prcmohons. Basd on what the 'Spin Doclors' al the five sided wind tunnel in Washington tell us, this cannot be true since all MOS'or Branches compte against personnel in lheir same career field for promotion and school slots. What are the womeo sayiog her? Are they saying that lhey canno( compet itl the carer fields that they are Fesently ir! so they now want lo be allo*ed lo compte in more fields? Does that really make
any snse?

Report to the
Sergeants

Major

h recent controverq/ sur rounding the Militia ofMon lana and the Frcemen in

Roundup, Montara, has surfaced a distuding trend in tbe pauiot movement. As lhe details ofthis incident continue lo unfold we cannot help but notice the incrcasing tendency to engage in petty squabbles. This is most apparcnt on Wodd Wide Christian Radio (WWCR), 5.065 SW WWCR for tfte presenl, is a laissz faire market of ideas. The editorial fonnat of each prognm is unique. All programs tend to specialize in one or more relatd subjecls. Some are sensational. Some are objective. The degree of one'6 rationality determines to which progmm (and ils related publication, it il has one), one chooses to subscribe. Eventually, without outside interferEnce. the more ratioMl and objective prograns will predominate and the rest will dwindle in direct relation to their demonstrated velacity. This is as it should be. Contmry to the established premis of de@nstructionism, one's ideas and actions are coincident, and lhey direclly reflect one's wlues. there is contrsdiction betwen one's words and one's actions it will be exposed immdiately upon examination of the logical outcome of bolh In a Iaissez faire market of ideas one is free to question lhe philGophical and ideological premiss of one's competitors. Holiever. when one carclessly airs unproven accusations con@ming the personal (and therefore private) conduct of a competitor, this says nolhing 6bout the accused, but speak volumes about the a@user The patriot movement is oot a

The misconception about equal

Carmichael. CA PS. How many of these "militias" are an excuse for armed h@ligans to conduct race war? ls America that divided and disunited?

opponunity is that it is equal and that it is opportunity. Maybe it's lime to


remind everyone concemed that there are no prolected classes in our mililary today other than Negroes and females- lt would be refreshing if
lhese protectd tribs would cease

their rclisious beliefs, ot lack olthem, petty t,ulch to themselves. So do we. I{ovewr, on extensive rcading ofthe
The Founding Fotherc kept

blaming their personal inadequacy and incompetence in certain career fi9lds on lheir race or sex and face
the music when they are behind the promotion power curve (iust like the rsl of us do). Th Hispanics and Asia$ in our mililrry havq for the mosl pafl, remained silnt. Could it be that they believe that they are re.eiving fair treatment in regard to promotions and assignments without lhe blaoket coverage of "equal opportunity?" These ridiculous nrles and regulationE have bn thftst upon us by politically motivated elected opportunists and endorsed (read eoforcgd) by packs ofsycophants at the higher levels ofour chain ofcommand, It *ould appr that this same group of senior leaders would rather have a force tlut is balancd both ncially and sexually thnugh mandate by some politically corect group dut is unconcerned about the ability ofour armed forces to fight and win our in the defense of our nation. What thes leaders fail or refuse to recognize is that politically correct groups mandated by politicians and civilians do not win wars. Only highly trained and highly molivaled soldiers win wars. Bcing politically

vorks of the Founding Fathe$ yi.lds little literary evidence oI b iblical inspirution. Their prine tover was r.aso[. not religion. Reason is our

Sa.lly, therc are sone soaalled nilitiaswho ase pahiotistn to con oullage their rucisn andolher irrationalist/ilth. The! arc no dwrcnt than our Afarxist enenties.

lf

The

Staf

McrsM and sexual hamssmnt

as prevalent in our military today as the sycophanls at highr levels

lead you lo believe? I, for on, do not

think

so.

Soldiers, regardless of race or sex, can operate ellectively and have the opportunity of unlimitd advancement as long as they mect or exceed the promotion requisiles. It isnl right for any one segment of thc military 1o have an advantage over anyonc else based solely on race or sx.
Advantages come from lurd work, dedication to one's occupational spe-

gym-floor rumble. We are engaged in an ideological war to l,resde the minds of the American public from lhe deadly grip ofMarxism. Grolr up. Commaod Sergeants Major, SFU

t2

Vo/.

I, No. 4

Tbe RESISTER

RESISTANCE
Principles of Clandestine Communications
-btMichad Bateman
MEEnxcs. conducled scretly between opemlronal persorinel. are known as clandesline meetings. Such meetings are employed frequenl ly in rhe tieldr chrefly wrth regard lo nunaSement and admiruslrauve functions. ln general, the advantages ofclandestine meetings are l) they save time, 2) they are usd as a countermeasure against some forms ofsvesdropping, 3) lhey otrer a masure of@flainty, and 4) they provide a means of exercising control. The strcss and delicacy of saret work nake hufiran conlact between an agent and his handler imprative, if an operation o. organizalion is 10 suwivo and function eflectively. The disadvantages of clandestine metings reflect concrns of security. Participants may be under visual slrveillance and the link btwen them may tte discovered by direct or indirect betrayal. Accidental obsrvation is also a consideralioq as are snap searches, In cass where something physical is being pass4 apFhension of the participff{s will provide direct evidence of clandesine aclivity. Clandestine meetings are, for our purposes, divided inlo fou categories: l) meetings betwen unacquainted operatives; 2) meetings between acquainted opratives; 3) meetings tetl*en operatives and outsidrsi 4) silent meetings, or brush contaclsMeetings between unacquainted opemtives require scure prearmnged identification signals and special briefing. The general description and distinguishing featuros of each oprative must be stablished and accordrng to operational ncessity known to one or both. The security problerDs inhercnt in the meeting must b atlalyzed. There rnay be risk in prmitting crtain operatives lhe ability to extensively describ othrs they are to meet. There rnay be liabilities in denying this knowldge. Th dscription most preclude the possibility of accidental recogrnition of legitimate partie6 whojust happen to be at the meeting site. One approach to the problem of providing descriplions is ihe us ofartificial description points, innocuous in themslves, which ofrer operatives merns of recognition. This technique is sometimes called "showing the flag." Examples, which should not be confitsed rvith safty signals, described treloq include the time-worn flower in a buttonhole or uoiquely folded newspaper, familiar enough to readers of fiction. Aflificial points are oflen given in lieu of physical de.scriF tions involving height, wight, color of hair and color of eyes. They must be obvious enough to spur recoSnition yet common enough not to attract unwarranted nohce. Thes points rnay also be nade to msh with prcananged dialogue. Unique objects, such as consecutively numbered currcncJ or two halves of llre same bank-note, werc once used as means of identification and this practice was continued professionally as larc as World War L Expcrience shows, howevr, lhat this technique should not be employed due to obvious liability in case of search or arrest. Once initial recognilion is achieved, the operatives must approach one another At this junclure identification is made aod a method onen employed is that of a preananged dialogue. This is sometimes known as use of paroles, or 'scret conversation-" For exampl: essume that the a.rtificial descriptrve poinl is a volumc of Bronte, One operative offen, "I have never rd Bronte." The orher replies, "Do you moan Charlotte or Emilyf This is the first exchangc. First

cxchanges arc usually followed for safety's sake by a second oxchange unrelated lo lhe first. Again, by way ofexample: "I did not know there
was a difierencq as for me I am a gardner." The reply, "lt is difiicull to keep a garden in this climate." Such harmless dialogue must be structured

to prevnt accidental conversations

with legilimate characters and must


leave no question Inarks. Mtings btween acquainted opeBtives obviously do not require prearanged idenlilicalion Bignals. ln svry othr respecl they do not and should not materially dner from

flAc[-ro-FAcE

H I

other O?esMeetings behreen operatives and outsiders are in pmctice avoided but sometims become necessary In case wherc obvious risks are weighed and found to be tolerable, such metings will be attempted subject to extensive security precautions, A classic xample is the strargr who approaches a member ofthe Resistance, asking to join. Is he sincere, or an agent provocateur? In practice, if subsequent metings are decided upon lhese will be handled by the operative fi$t approached. The mling assumption in slch cases is that if th stranger is in facl an agent prcv@ateu then lhe operative firs1 approached is already

"blorvn."
The manner by which federal agencies approach undergrcund operatives merits funher atention, to serve lhe iotercsts of lhose readers who are faced with th task of identi$ing individuals who have been introduced into thir groups. Recent fedeml instructional material cover. ing this topic reads:

people,lhe agent wi hate to detelnine how he canjoin theD. This can


be done with the assistance of an

"...ifthe objective is a gnup of

informant eho is in the gvup


is a larye

ot if it

vith /omalized Dtentbership such as a club or '\eing" o,Zanization, the direct appftmch of applyinslor nenbenhip nay sufiice. ".--i/the objective is to investigate a particular yiolation occurring at a specilc location or to acquirc gener-

$)ry

al intelligence infomation. the appoach could be acconplished merely


JieqtlentinA the area and estabIishinA the assumed mle. (U S. Depo(ment ofTreasury)
by

I/ol.

I, No. 4

13

TI:e RESISTER
The above, while suirable for investigalions oflimited scopc, does nol acknowledge all-impo(ant queslions of resistaoc counlermeasurs Recruits must not be fully accepted until their past and prsnt rccords of family life,jobs, political activities, and
closc associates hav been investigaled and found salisfactory The usual praclice is to restrict the recruit's contact to one member ot the organization and to places other than lhc

Spccial melings tal(e place in respolsc to spcial signals or requests, typically when the matler is of
some urgency. Such meetings may or may not be supponed by fatl-backs. Conlrol metings are functionally a combimtion of both rcgular and spcial merings and are usd in instances wher a communication link has bn broken or losl. In such cases, the oprative must come 1o a prearranged site at a pre3ffanged

easier

ifhe kno$s

the

ar's normal

organization's regular meeting placc.


Countermeasures include l) loyalty tests, in which polential group membeB are subject to mock capturc and intenogation, 2) a sudden summons to meet wilh secuity prsonnel under ominous circumstances designed to reveal signs of nnousness,

lime to le.establish contact. Another sort of conlrol meeting involves the


use of "places of conspiracy." Placs of conspiracy ar utilizd in emergency circumslances when an operative llas been isolated through the capture or compromis of his immediale superior. ln this case, the operative kno$s to visit a predetermioed site at a particlrlar time of day, showing certain recognition signals. A rpresentative of th clandestine group takes not of the time and rcognition signals, and ifthes are corect makes the approach. Because of th representativ's vulnerable position as a contact for prsons in dangt he is limited to this one duB and knows lit{e about olher aspects of the orga-

Sites selected musr actually exist, and musr be accessiblc to both pa(ies at lhe time set for thc meeting. If audio survcillanc is a faclor the sile should prosent pafucipants wilh a measur of safety. Obviously the site and fie cover must be closelv intertwined. An example of this is use ofa doclor's or dentist's office- or a motion picture theater There must be plausibl cover for every meeling and each opemtive must be fully aware of the details of rhis covr rHE cas! or special meetings, requests are necessarv. These are Laccomplished in any one of several ways- Distinctive arrangemnts of objects, chalk marks, and classified advedisements have all ben used to signal requests. A common method is the use of'\rrong numbe6" in tele-

TN

3) "lerks" purporting lo inform the .ecruit that he has been blown and is rnarked for execulion, and 4) a particularly efrective technique involving
change ofmeeting places. ln fte latter inslance, potential members are kpt unwitting of a change in site for a clandestine meeting at which they are expected to attend. countersufvillants are posted to discover if the recruit is followed, or if surveillanct perconnel ar in place a1 the sirc prior to his ar val- Assuming the recruit passs lhis tesl he i6 approached and told that the meeting is off, or alternately, informed of the oew meeling site.

rlJM MEsnNcs, nonnally called


brush contacls, are arguably not meelings at all. Orthodox silent meetings are conducted according to the rules of clandestine meeting practice and are normally used solely to
pass something physical. EMmples are exchanSes of identical briefcases

in a crowded airport, or lhe xchange of folded newspaprs during a momentary pause on a park bench. Clandestine meetings are fu(her catego zed in lerms of their irequency. There are l) regular meetings, 2) special meetings, and 3) control melings. Regular meelings take place according to a prearanged schedule
and frequenlly involve the same sile or siles. Such meetings will also b supporcd by "fall{acks," or allernalive meeting times and siles, in cas th regular meting is misscd for any

Meetings are held in t$e opel\ in public placs or conveyances, under safe circumstances (safe-houses), and at a variety ofother sites. Meeting sites should be selected on the basis of lhe ease wilh which countersurveillance may be practicrd. They musi be nunageable. Deserted areas, for example, are ideal ftom a countersurvillance point ofview, but assuming hostil surveillance lhe appearance ofone operative in proximity to arDther in such an area may tle cause for contamination. Granting lhis, morc public places, such as parks, museums, parking lots, and a host of other locations are ofien used.
Such places, unless solected

phonic communication. Th request. dials. and when the line is answered asks for "Joe," or someone else who is not at that number This is the signal that a meeting is being requested. Upon learning that, "There's nobody by that name herq" the reqoester asks, "Is this 555-1613?" The Nmber is a code which gives the datq time, and plac. (In our example, 5 could refer 10 a plac, 16 could refer to a day, and 13 could refer to 1300 hours). Following this the requester is informd he has reached a

wilh

@nsiderable care, can be unnanageable due !o lhe volume oI fmt lrallic and surrounding vantage points. A worlhwhile practice is th selection of pre-surveyed sites *here ordioary trafiic and activity have been observed over a long period of lime.
Some practitioners hav selected

convoy operators (countersurveillants) on the basis of thir familiarity wilh the meeting site, acting on the principle that the convoy's job will b

wrong numter and rings of. lf an oFErative discovrs ot susp.ls he is being follo*d I a meeting site it becomes incumbent upon him to inform his contact ofimpending danger To provide for this contingency safety signals evolved. Used in addition to recognition signals, safety signals silently advise meeting pa(icipanls l) it is it safe to approach for the secret conversatioq 2) if $rveillanc is suspcted, and 3) if a fallback meeting is feasible. To again follow our example of an operative with a volume of Bronte. lel us assumo the meeting is to take place in a public library. The oprative is seled, and apart frcm seNing as a recognition point, his book also bcomes a safety siSnal. lf drc book is placed on his righl it is safe to approach; on his left, there is danger the book lies open and face down this informs that a fall-back will take

If

14

Vol.

I, No. 4

TbC
place.

RESISTER
cale key beneath an aulomobilc bumpcr, arc oflcn usad as porlable drops. Mobile drops are locatcd conveyances, popularly the lavatories

Vigorous, oftcn claborate and time consuming countetsurveillancc is practiccd by both participants on the way 10 and fronr meeting sites. convoys or counrcrsurrillants af oflen used lo guard participants going to and from meetings. Guards are also usd in the vicinity of the site itslf. Another tcchniqu frequently employed is th staggered anival. Participants arive scpaaately at intervals, somelimes as long as tbirty minutes or more, hking special ellort to obsrve signs of hostile aclivity.

documents or full sized copicst or, alternately, reduced reproductions on

film. Film is usually undevcloped.


Documenls nray be in cipher or clr text. As stated abov, drops are also used to (mnsmit money or supplies, Examples ofthe latter include weapons, mdical equipmenl or other technical apparatus. Drops are ofNro principle types: l) "live" drops, and 2) dead dmps. Live drops may be witting or un*ilting, id esl, they may or may not operate witi knowledge ofthe clandestine purpos. Live drops are not encumberd by any orianizatronal forms and do not require a spcial cover or camoullage. Thy are located in stores, reslaurants, offlces, or small shops such as those mainlained by news st nds or tobacconisls, These and placed in "trapped" conlainers.

ir

on trains, buses, or aircraft. Ulban drops are fiose located in public or otherwis freely accessible places and are l]pically used for extrmely sho( term lransmitlals. Runl drops, as the term implies, are located in rustic or rural places, Rural drops ar used for either sho( or long

I-/personi

r\ noPs known rariouslv as 'letI }e. a'oos' are aennedas a


ptace, con"eyance, o,

lerm tnnsmiltals. Advisory signals and indicators are used to exprcss l) what particular drop is lo be serviced, 2) safety or danger, 3) a drop is load4 and 4) a
drop is unloaded. ln common pmctice, opentives assigned to service drops will do so in respons to signaled requests. This signal will usually indicat which drop is loadsd, and be supponed by a safety/danger signal. We note parenthetically lhat absence of a safety signal is rcgadd as a danger sigoal. Proceeding to re area ofth drop, lhe operativ will practice diligent countersurveillance. [f the operatie is conJident of security the drop ltrill be quickly unloadei. He will then nake a signal to this effect suppo(ed by anoths safety/drnger signal. Safetyldangr signals are al$aya niade on rctum joumeys, afier countersurveilIance has been practiced going to aod coming from the drop sire. Genrally, signals can be divided into five categodes, as follows:

object usd 10 transmit messages, money, or equipment in scrcf between operational peNoniel. Drops are used in both intnul and external

clandestine commrmicationsDrops are usd in preferen@ to clandestine meetings. In general, the advaotages ofdrop6 are l) grater secrecy for communications, and 2) greater security for personnel. us of drops can reduc the number of clandestine meetings and oFer con.siderably nlore flexibility in time. There is no direct contact tretween frarties, and assuming the drop remains inviolate, only one operative is xposed at any given moment. Drops nay be established in depth to facilitate increasd isolation of either sender or receiver, or used to create a reserve ofoperational necessities, They are also adaplable for us by diferent t'?es of personnel, such as low-level utility operatrves (cut{uls) or lhose }yilh poor languaSe skills. The principle disadvanlage of drops is unceflainty. While loade4 matrials in drops are outside the operativ's immediStecontrol. Drops are also liable to accidental or deliberate discovery with subsequent adverse manipulation, and lhe rarages of fire, flood, or wild animals. Extensive use of drops may also have a negative ellect on managemot. Few-

locations provide ease of acc,ess for couriers and employ a high deSree of norlnal- traisint foot traffic. Anolher form of live drcp is the so-called underground rlrail slation. Such droF may be located in safehouser espe.ially devloped for the pupos wi(h elaborate concealment chambers. As materials are receive4 housekepars snd coded signals or mssages to lhe next link of the courir line, advising lhat servic is
necessary

catesorized oi tocation. the former crtegory we find l) stationary drops, and 2) poflable drops. In the later category we find l) urban drops, and 2) rural drops. Both categories admit ofth mobile, or

Y\.8^D

l-lln

DRoPs are

lvariousty uy

rype

L Cropiic. Chalk mad6 expressing numhers, letters, or dsigns; noappsring in lhe classifid section ofa newsl8per, poEtcards, or other forms of co[espondence. 2. ObJecI. Any small object, such as a flonr-pot, or armngement of an objecl, such as a window shade. The objecl mry be usd independently or tangentially; that is, the objecl and its position rnay both hold siSnificance.
tices 3.

"roving" drop,
Stationary dead drops are selected or prepared in lamp-posts, fencs, behind mirrors in washroornE- and in a host ofother places such as crevices in rocks ofcldls in tres. Portable dead drop6, also known as "concealmer devices," are drscarded or specially const.ucted objects that contain mes6ags, documenls or equipmnt to be passed. Early U.S. practitioners respomible for devisingconcealment devices smn discovered thal the cardinal principle in producing concealment devics was thal lhe subject of disguise be neither edible nor burnable. In such cases it is liable to be usd by some casual passer-by. Magnelic key-boxes, uscd to hide a dupli-

,rgrt. Ordinary flashlights,

automobile hesdlighlE or infrared

light.
4. .Sorrd. Radio lrar$missions,
telephone calls, distinclive rings on door buzzers. 5. Pe oral. Anicles ofclothing, or objects carried.

cr meetings dcrease th opportunities to train and evaluate agents. Drops are used for bolh long and shorl rcrm slorage. Long lerm storage
is calculated in lerms of days or weeks: sho( term in hours. When employed for the purpose ofcommunication, drops may hold original

Certain signals or combinations


may be used solely in conjunction

with specilic activities.


1,

Vol.

I, No. 4

15

TI:e RESISTER

BOOKREVIEWS
Revolutionsry Outhwr: f,than Allen Nnd th Struggle for lndeDdddcc on the farly Americ{n []onair. Michael A. Bellesiles. Charlottes.eille: Universily Press of\4rginia, 1993. ISBN 0-8139-1419-1. xi + 428 pages. $24.95. ofland thiews and bandiui 4s the govem,nent caled them-nol lav desired to rcject it entircty. According to the governne ofNev york, the |9o'.J,t ofthe rioters was their teadea Ethan AIen: a thug, a bu y, a loudtlouthed tem)list-and an athiest!-teith a$100rcvardon his head. A en had succeeded in uniting his neighbors--a tnotley anil yolatite co ection olethnic and religious Emups rtho could agtye onll on hating Neu, Yo*efi in lhe cause ofextalegal rcsistance to pmper authority. On these points every New york govemnent ofthe 1770s and 1780s ageed, as eoch was equa y certain that it couu deleauhis nob \eith theforce ollav."
'nob .ontent with brcaking the "A

pcrpetrated by governments in lhis cntury. Ir provides a chilling. fuUy documented expose ofthe abuse of power by govemmenls. It describes. in great delail, the sleps which havc been routinely laken prior to each documented genocide, steps which are now being rcpeated by American slatists, steps which can only seNe to
increase the lulnembility ofa citizenry to genocide or tyranny. Zetral Iavr further examines lhe role of the media in promoting or faciliLaling
these

"ofiicial' govemment programs


a compelling

of human exlermrnation

aerid, Zryr presents

argument against restrictive fitea ns laws by showinS how genocide may be prevented only if lhe concept of

-from

the Introduction

"gun-control" is destroyed. That equats to a Eociety in shich individ-

EvorlrnoN^Ry OurtAl's is totft a biogmphy of Elhan Allen and a history of tlrc conllict between agrarian freeholderc and their aristocrat advrsaries. Bginning his political career with a price on his head, Allen was tmnsformed by the American Revolution into a national hero. ln the same way he and his "oudaws," the Green Mountain Boys, became exemplars of rcpublical virtue. But in their own eyes, ths frontiet farmeN never changed their puryos; fron 1764 until 1789 they battled ihose who sought to steal their land and reduce them to tenanry The farmers who settled the Creen Mountain frontier not only fought efrons to dispodsss them, they worked to create the stale of Vermonl. Although h is a rnajor figur, Ethan AUon has ben overlooked by other biographers, but in Michael Bellesils he has found a historia! $orth the wait. Bellesils shows how Allen's variegated carcers as republican politiciar! local leader. mililary laclician. mtionalist ideologue. and land specuiator inlersect widl many key themes of Anerican developmenl in rhe lasl half of the eighleenth century. Allen's law ofself-pre$riation linked life, liberty, aDd land. Remove one, Alln aryued, and tlrc o0ers would vadsh. Rewlutionary Outlaws.xplores the rools ofpopular political cotudt[ent to th patriot cause, lhe signilicance of rural political activity, and the origins and struc0res otan emerging republicn polity.

uals have fte access lo firearnrs, and specially mililarytyle firearms, the very kind prolecied by our own Consdtution (and the vry kind tanned in rhe u.s. in 1994). &rralr'pr is a fiujor addition to the o!rwhlming body of evidence demonstrating lhat "gun-control" is not about guns, but about govemment power and popula-

tion conlrol.

Defrauding Americrt A Pstten


of Relrted Scrndrk. Rodrcy Stich. Published privatell Diablo Westm Press, Inc., PO Box 5, Al6mo, CA 94507. ISBN 0-93243845-9. 654
pages. $27.50.

'This book is a thirty-year chrcnolog/ of clrnrplion inllicted upon lhe American people, as seen and related through the eyes ofgovemmnt insiders." the Inuoduction

-from

Jews for lhe Preservation of Firearms Ownership, Inc. Publishers.2872 S. Went*orlh Ave_, Milwaukee, WI 53207. 1994. ISBN 0-96423044-2. vii + 34? pages. S24.95.

kthel

Lrws.

Jay Simpkin, Aaron Zelrnan, and Alan

M. fuce.

The Emrgence of North

Crmli-

Raiewd by Dr paul Gallant


Thlmud- comrnands.'He who comes to kill yo|r arise and The story of mankind cannol be told wit]rcur a description of dre evolulion and use of weapons Aflns have meant the difrerence between life and death, slavery and fredom. This country's Founding Fathrs knew wll lhis fact of life, and they inscdbed the protction of fiream|s ownersfup for all individuals in the U.S. Constitution. Yet, ven lhe Fourding F thers could not have predictei lh efliciency with which genocide has been commiued durinS the 20th Century Lethal Lavs is a landmatk treatise which describes seven nrajor genocides
l

T ! a,

[wsH LAw.

ne's Revolutionrry Sarl Gorcmment. Robeft L. Gan,ard. Raleigh: North Carolina Department of Cultural Rsources. Division of Archivs and History 1978. No ISBN. vii +
104 pages. np.

he

killhim lirsl.

"Mer a discussion of the struclure and problems of governont under lhe crown, the nanative concenfates on the emrgence and activities of the revolutionary cugresss, committees. and councils that seized contrcl of the colony between t774 and l7?6..." the preface -from
Vol.

1,6

I, Na 4

Tlte &ESISTER

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Milirie Free lless, c/o Tle RISISTDR, POB 17095, Kans Ciry, MO 64188

Vol I,

Na 4

77

The RESISTER

Open Letter...
Continuedion paae 2 emMiment of the concepl of a slect militia in that it is a.med, equipped, organizr4 traind and paid for byand therefore loyal

logical reGulls

of

RooBevelt's Marxist

eonomic and social policieE. The


rclsull r,yas gleater govemment Becurity.

Where was lhe militia wlEn the Supreme Coufl usrlrFd the power to

inlerprel lfie Constitution? Where

to-$e

fderal
was, again, public safety. Their tru purpose wa8 population conEol by means ofprohibiting Oe undoqrmented transGr offireffm!, arld they broadnd the scope police povrr. The end resdt eas evn geater gov-

was lhe militia when the Anti-Trusr laws were passed? Did the nilitia mobiliz to oppose AIy ofthe following? Democrscy; the Fcde.al Reserve

govemment Regardlss ofa slate's nominal mntrol ovet its national guard, it is subject to federalization
by prcsidential decre and lhus little more than all auxiliary of lhe slanding army. The mtional guard is a

Banh direct taxation: popular election of Serntors; unilersal srfrage: oompulsory education; prohibition; the formation of federal larv enforce. nrcnt rcgulatory, or social agencies: the War Pollrr Act; labor la$E;
socil secrrity; the formation ofthe U.N.; the Marshal Plan; so-calld 'civil rights;' Lyndon Johnsonh blatantly Marxist "Great Society. pro. grarns: environmental laws; loweritrg the voting aget e4ual opportunity; afiirmative aclion: fofeiluc laws; or Oly other slatis! socialisl or Marxisl legislation? The ansrr is: NO. The reaent fedml crackdowl on rhe unoBanized militia snd their rclated aotivities was not only pre diclable, it was inevitable, becausE the uoryanized militia ofpsst gcner-

hristed socialist mockw ofthc pri


ciple stated in

ernmc seqdty, Duriry $e 1980'6 the


pqssed latr5

slates

prohibiting parardlitrry

Today the

militia concspt exisb

within an irreconcilable

paradoD

lraining without a whilper of disred frcm the unoanized militia. The slald purytos ofthese larrys wa6, agaiq public safetj/. Their true purpose \ras io prevent the militia from drilling. This nFanr govemme
security.

uoalienable natural and |lltrhe common-law right of iodividuals to

fonr!joi4 drill, ard ifneces$ry figtt ar an organized body ofarmed


agai4 public safty. Th6ir lnrc purpose Des, again, polulatiotr cotrtrol by limiting re{dy access fo firearlls,

citizens itr defense of their common intersts (by volultary association) agsinst the forces ofeilher forcign or domestic gratrny is therefor unqustionable. This G, in fact, the trite intent offte Secord Amendment. The paradox is that the natural right of slf defense and the common law right (iodee4 obligation in your ow! slfintercst) to oplroo tlramy, by force of armr if na.{ary, has been rendered quslioruble, if not in 6ome cases illegal, by the slow but Frsislent forces of socialism and Marxism $ithin th fe&ral and state goimment5. ln 191?, the fde$l government assumed conlrol over the vadous states' org,aaizd roilitias by means of establiihing the National Guard. The statd reason nr national s'l|rity, The true was to liminate rcsislance to Woodrow Wilson's socialist design to cement this nation'6 dscrnt into Oe political gang warfare of democmcy. The re$ t was go\,em-

prohibiting military $yle stla|l anns without &odEntation, ad federalizitrg most "crisres:" which ne6ns; governnent 6curity, Whr was lhe ullorgadzed mili tia when all tlEse anti-militia la$s wBre being passd? Waiting for somorc elsa to "do sornething?" Whofi!

exactly?-

Retuming to the militia paradox

TIIIET.-Not

meotiond

previouslfllllD

militias! such ss thry are, need |o carefirlly consider dEir posi-

utcotrslitutional. givetr

irte

-tion ar'rservd

du( dghts sotedating the Constio-

nent securi9.

to the States respeclively, or to the people." Mrely quesliorable. And lhe rason the formation and exercire ofa nilitia today is qutionable, is becaure the unorganized militia of prvious genentionq wishing they could have

wdtten. threaiens extirKtion to th

their cake .trd eat il, did notiitrg while thet so<alled representatiles appald to their inational whims

inledict potntial rcsistance to tho

sold drem down the socialist -and rivr

18

Vol.

I, No. 4

The RESISTER

JT-D
are raising this issue to point

out tl|at the patriot morment in general, and militia grcups in panicular, need to get a firm grip on tlrc realities of resislance and underground operations. Most militia groups, as they now exist (tlEre are a very few exceptions), have all the claodstin subdety and operational sophisticatioo oflhe Knyan Mau Mau movement ofthe early lqi0's.

We have slated in lhe pasl that when the time comes, we will find you. ne RESISrEn is 0rc vehicle. Your voluntary association is lhe me3ns. Ifyou do not know how this works, pay attention. We will teach you. J.F.A.Davidson

aming and exernptions, ard s!cifically rcjected presidentbl power to call out th militi& thus rcserving ro
the states questions oI organization and drscipline. The very trotron of the

Hitch-hiker
On 04 February 1995, Mr Frank Elena, a membea of th Frmen, and alleSed member ofthe Militia of Montal|a, spoke for 28 minuts l? scords before the Arizona Breakfast Club. Mr. Elena's sonwhat disorganizd and (apparently) hasrily prepared presenlation rangEd across a number oftopics, including his Der. sonal life and O mowment and dispoBition of ex-Warsaw PacI mililary !hicle in ihe Unitcd States. l3 minutes 55 seconds into his presentation, Mr Elna antrounced;
Right now, Thc R$isier, which mothcr grcup ot..thh..-retired spaial rorooN, who h!v. in.idc infomdion.ll lhe timc...w. gcl
i3

militia fslling under fednl authority (Select militia) rv"s conridered a violation of the intent ofa militia (aI| srmed citizeffy), organiz4 taind
and disciplined by rtale legislatues. Objeclive reading of the Militia

eral govemment fiom exercioing its

Act nakes it clear that a legitinate organized militia f6lls under control of lhe Stat govnunent, which is rcsponsible for its organization, discipline and the appointne ofits ofic-

unlinited power since all they have to do when confronted with constitutional conslraints is redefine lhe parameters of tlrcse constraintr, 6s tlre
recent passage of HR 666 demonstmtes. During the debsts on naification of the Constihrtio& antifdralists argued that the militia clause conrained the seeds oft"anny by granting !o Cotrgress control ovI the militia as to depri! Oe slates ffcessential, for without legitimate autho.ity atry demagogu could form a "nititia," *hich in practice would b litde morc than a local anoed gang. Therei$ lies an inlFrent danger of the militia movement and the rcason th Special Forces Urdergroord will oot

tiv conlrol over lheir militia. Article I, Seclion 8 oflhe Consti-

tution delgates lhority:

ao

Congess the au-

To provid for orSilnizing,

lrming, and

disiplirirS,

the

Mili-

tir, lnd for govcrDirs suct Pln of thcm I mly be employ.d in lhc

commit its assts indisc.ininately. We slated abov6 dDt our support of the militia mowmeot in general is unqtialifi4 but that our srpporl of ponicular militias is very much qoalified To put it bluttly, njudge. If llle philo6ophy of youl organizarion resls upotr afly premire we fiDd contradictory to the Finciples ofunalienable idividual rights, laissez faire capi tali$rr ad limited constitutional
rpublicanisrn, you ar on your owo, [f youl decision to joitr ,our slat appmvd organized miliL is based upon a rational, objectirr blifthat yolr state gormment has consistently demongrated it is the guarator of youl libertis as a ft.e nall, then by aI mals do

inforrnalion on fax.s...on lhe inhl hoclinc, ard...thh...right now wG h.vc rbout 60% of ou. milia.ry '8onm blck us...lr!'v. gol probably thc srme amount of nationd

gur.d.

Mr. Elena's liberal joxtapo6ition of 'The Resisler," with '\r," in the s8me sentence, in his capacity as
spokesman for the Militia ofMon. tana, is a gross misrcpresentation, Mr. Elena l|as no cormctiorL

s.nicc ofihc Unitcd s!dq, rcs.ryirg to lhc Slrl.s rqplivcly, rhe Appoinrmcnr of rh6 oflice6, and lhc Authorily of lEirin8 lhc
Militia ac.ording lo lh6 disciplinc prcscnH by congr$.
The obvious 0o an antifederalisl) flaw in lhis section ir that if Cong.ess has the aulhodty !o arm the militia it also has the authority to dgl4 them. Ind4 a militia thus armed by Congrss (crlled a Select militia), would
be liable to srv as a forc to th rest of Ihe

direct or indircl with Spcial Forcet Underyrcund or fid nat/S?fi. We deny emphaticslly Mr. Elena's
assertions that he, or any orgadzation he purpons io reprrent speaks knowledgeably about Spcial Forces

Underground, ?X" XATIS?ER, out


activitie6, or our sup9on base. Mr. Elena's indiscretion appears to be an isolated incidenr For the record, there ate only four individuals outside the underground who klrow how to contact us direclly. Mr Elena is noa one oflhemM.O. Warren PAO, SFU

populace.l-

disam

Vol.

I, No. 4

79

TI:e RESISTER

ATF Values
Continued Ircn' page

II

the victim's casual allair with a female computer soflware contractor working for ATF. The alleged motive for ((MOORE))'S threat was jealousy. ((MOORE)) is also under scruliny for laking a govemment car oo a tip to

said such altemtions wer made. Now T.casury is withdrawing ils claim of the altemtions, aod even on the existence of a raid plan. The alleged absncr ol such a plan for an opration of such scale constitutes criminal negligenc!. Regardless, numerous Pentagon documents prove th claim there was no raid plan is a li. In facl,

PERSONALS
SWF 34, 5'l', ll0#. Busy consullanl, Tae Kwon Do enlhusiast, ISO SWM 28 - 40; Military, musr be fir Ud work out, no commitments, long absences OK.

Mexico. ((MOORE))'S supcrvisor al


the time of ((REECE))'S embezzlemenr was Dick ((GARNER)). Refercnce: Dick ((GARNER))I he is AIF liaison ofiicer lo the Pentagon. In the hours immediately after the Waco raid, (GARNER)) filed a request, (which blpa.ssed Opration Alliance and JTF{) with lhe DOD,

((CHOJNACKI)) and ((SARABYN))


reclaimd their jobs be.aus they know-and promised not to that final approval to go aiead wid) the comprcmisd mid was given only minutes before the shootin& which was slarted by Ron ((NOBLE)). Cellular telephone records prove this.

(MSG)202-l to-1486 WANTED: Volunlary donations or


loans of ham radio equipment. Pre1990 ICOM IC-R7000 or Knwood R-500O receivers, or equivalent;

tell-

ICOM or Kenwood transceivers,

for l0 Bradley Infantry Fighting \hicles (BIFVS). supposdly lo be


used to seFup a defeosive perimeter to evacuate wounded. but with lhe

a
DGEPY CRHCN HOHCI COBXT I{ZOXX

voic!. CW aod bursl capable; simplx and duplex hand-helds. wrile: C&E, c/o The RESISTE& PO Box 47095,
Kansas City, MO 64 | 88.

ominous postscript that "...iflhe vehicles arc 1o be used in an as$ult rol, U-S. Army markings are lo be obscured." Aner ((REECE))'s unpunished embzzlennt, ((CARNER)) was promoted to be SAC in Nashville, where he replaced Cummins Refercnce: WACO. AIF management is not only unwilling to punish poor management, it acturlly rewards poor management and, in the cass of ((BEATTY)) and ((REECE)), criminal behavior, among mamgrs. Another example of this would b the fi ring-and then rehiring----of Waco

DNIPI, TEZRT ROTZU ITNTBO LOFAR

SNIPER,/FIREARMS TRAINING: Former Special Forces Snipr instructor Selectir. Expensive. Write: IFT, c/o this publ ication.

WATCH

Warning: It's dangerous to b right when the Government is wrong.


lbt h Ourtd Medzl ltr, Ctl Kl..g r $cond casel.. .lbun t . *nily sueds 10 hk poplil&. h.r'i-hild.g $n3 colLato., Ir,t D.v.mubb. Rhtrrrh.itt anw n wrcnE Thc ruic ol Oregd s!8 tricr Cdl Kh!3 ir ispiftd 6y lhi!

@EAfrD).

.dio! r trbd.6 d.y lif. .nd d..th rh$ls fq Lib.ny. The bdbdt ed sr$ of Cel KIDB e vond.rtully .nltuinils, S.riN,

tbq8l Forc*itrB !trd spirinr!|. lh.y .!try e irlporllt ms.B. ubr yd will w.hr b rhr. with oth.G.
...........r't,r1ch Out For

raid comfiandrs Phillip ((CHOJNACKI)) and Charles ((SARABYI.I)). Both deny altering the raid plan to divert blame from themselves. The Treasury Repon on Waco

...........I1'.

MARTIAL

-.'.......Ah.rL.' AD.rio

D!4.re81o b.

M.drl l,r
Rlghr

--110.@

--t

8.O0

Encreyou.shechar!.dmiro: Crrl R. Khr& PO Box 217, CoLoD, oR


(503) 824-33?r

97017

Tbe

filf"*""

ER

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