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PENN JONES T H E
CONTINUING
INQUIRY
DECEMBER 22, 1981
Lllll> I -JU
381 I
Secret mission to Egypt
not in time to save Sadat
By DAVE O'BRIEN
Anwar Sadat's murder was the latest link in an
International conspiracy spanning most of the 20th
century, according to a man claiming to be a United
States special forces general.
Sponsored by The Mississauga News, the man
alleging to be General Dico Dimitrov was en route to
Cairo with hopes of convincing Sadat he was a priority
target of a world-wide anti-American conspiracy
when the Egyptian leader was gunned down .
As well as warning Sadat about "extreme and immediate"
danger, the mystery man hoped to secure
$150,000 from the Egyptian government to begin a
major motion picture aimed at exposing a num^r of
landestine operations alleged to be part of the con-liracy.
A veteran military officer, Dimitrov was reported
to have died of gunshot wounds to the head in 1977.
The man laying claim to the general's identity says
he has lived in hiding for security reasons since then.
On Sept. 29, The Mississauga News purchased an
airline ticket for General Dimitrov under the alias
D. Adams.
The general flew to New York on Oct. 4 and was on
his way to Cairo via England on Oct. 6, but never did
The Mississauga News
Copyright 1981
October 28, 1981
board his plane at Kennedy Airport in New York.
Instead, an obviously emotionally distraught
Dimitrov phoned this reporter to announce his
return to Toronto.
The Mississauga News decided to purchase the
ticket for the general when Mohamed KhalU, the
third secretary of the Egyptian Mission to the United
Nations, indicated Sadat would listen to the
Con'tfrom Pg. 1
• The assassination of
Robert F. Kennedy on
June 6, 1968 (RFK's
closeness to his brother,
Dimitrov reasons, probably
meant he also
knew about the anti-
American conspiracy
and therefore could not
be permitted to win the
presidency).
• The removal of King
Malik Faisol ibn Abdel
Aziz of Saudi Arabia in
1975.
• The forcible overthrow
of the Shah of Iran
in 1979.
• The murder of
Aristotle Onassis' son
and the subsequent
murder of Onassis
himself in 1973. (The
general claims Onassis
^l^^lid not die of natural
' p a u s e s , but was
""^•^murdered because "he
was going to finance my
film epic")
• The shaming of
America and forced
resignation of President
Nixon caused by the
Watergate scandal
(General Dimitrov
postulates that Nixon
was guilty of the
coverup, but not guilty of
the Democratic headquarters
break-in).
• The Iranian hostage
crisis (General Dimitrov
says he sent a confidential
letter-report to
President Carter on May
1, 1980, outlining how he
would organize a rescie
attempt to get the
hostages out of Iran. As
an expert in guerrilla
warfare tactics, the
general also sent a copy
of his report to incoming
President Reagan for
consideration should he
inherit the crisis as
president).
• The attempted
assassination of President
Reagan in March.
(Coincidentally or not, it
GEN. DICO DIMITROV
On Sept. 9, this man contacted The
Mississauga News' staffer Dave O'Brien
claiming to have information about the JFK
assassination, on wrhlch O'Brien is a noted
expert.
After numerous secret meetings, the
man's story grew to International conspiratorial
proportions that may even include
the Oct. 6 murder of Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat.
general's story if he could go to Cairo.
General Dimitrov felt President Sadat, a major
obstacle to the anti-American movement In the
Mideast, would support his $30-mllllon Illm project.
Dimitrov was about to tell Sadat he could be the
next victim of a plot that dates back to 1918.
The general's'amazing 63-year-old anti-freedom
conspiracy scenario claims, among others, the
following victims and historical happenings:
• The alleged execution of Czar Nicholas and
Alexandra by the Bolsheviks in 1918. (General
Dimitrov claims the Czar's family successfully
escaped and lived in exile in Egypt.)
• The extermination of millions of Jews during
WoridWarll.
• The assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy
on November 22,1963 (Dimitrov says JFK was
trying to halt the conspiracy).
• ThQ assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King on
April 4,1968 (This act, according to the general, was
an attempt to undermine the American system
through rioting t>etween blacks and whites, prompted
by MLK's death).
See UFE, Pg. 2
occurs after Reagan
demonstrates a strong
belief to bolster U.S.
armed forces strength.)
• The attempted
assassination of the Pope
at St. Peter's Square in
May. (The world's
leading symbol of peace
and freedom becomes a
victim of violence.
Later, a judges' panel
concludes that while the
accused assassin pulled
the t r i g g e r , the
assassination attempt
was the work of a major,
unknown conspiracy.)
• The Sadat assassination
on October 6. ("We
must not believe this act
was the work of a hundred
fundamentalists.
Sadat's own military
forces ran for cover
rather than fire back at
the terrorists. There is
much more to this than
we are being told," supposes
Dimitrov.)
While the general will
not publicly state exactly
what organization is
behind this frightening
scenario, he says pro-
American leaders in the
world will continue to be
targets of this operation.
TTie general, himself,
also claims to be a victim
of the conspiracy. "I
am a victim and so was
General Douglas MacAr-thur,"
states Dimitrov.
"We were both stopped
by President Truman
from fighting this
enemy. 1 remain a victim
today because of the
way 1 am forced to live
just to stay alive."
No less intriguing is
the mystery that shrouds
the life of General Dico
Dimitrov.
Born in 1924 at
Metkovetz near Lorn,
Bulgaria, Dimitrov as a
young man joined the
resistance movement
against the Nazis and
quickly established a
Object Description
| Title | Secret Mission to Egypt Not in Time to Save Sadat |
| Volume No. | 6 |
| Issue No. | 5 |
| Date | 1981-12-22 |
| Series | V. Personal – E. Publications – 1. The Continuing Inquiry |
| Uniform Title | The Continuing Inquiry |
| Collection Title | Poage Library - JFK - Penn Jones Collection |
| Custodian | Poage Legislative Library |
| ID | 15p-jfkjones-ci-v6_1981-12-22 |
| Resource Type | Newsletter |
| Format | Text |
| Rights | http://www.baylor.edu/lib/digitization/digitalrights |
Description
| Title | Page 1 |
| Series | V. Personal – E. Publications – 1. The Continuing Inquiry |
| Uniform Title | The Continuing Inquiry |
| Collection Title | Poage Library - JFK - Penn Jones Collection |
| Custodian | Poage Legislative Library |
| Resource Type | Newsletter |
| Format | Text |
| Full Text | PENN JONES T H E CONTINUING INQUIRY DECEMBER 22, 1981 Lllll> I -JU 381 I Secret mission to Egypt not in time to save Sadat By DAVE O'BRIEN Anwar Sadat's murder was the latest link in an International conspiracy spanning most of the 20th century, according to a man claiming to be a United States special forces general. Sponsored by The Mississauga News, the man alleging to be General Dico Dimitrov was en route to Cairo with hopes of convincing Sadat he was a priority target of a world-wide anti-American conspiracy when the Egyptian leader was gunned down . As well as warning Sadat about "extreme and immediate" danger, the mystery man hoped to secure $150,000 from the Egyptian government to begin a major motion picture aimed at exposing a num^r of landestine operations alleged to be part of the con-liracy. A veteran military officer, Dimitrov was reported to have died of gunshot wounds to the head in 1977. The man laying claim to the general's identity says he has lived in hiding for security reasons since then. On Sept. 29, The Mississauga News purchased an airline ticket for General Dimitrov under the alias D. Adams. The general flew to New York on Oct. 4 and was on his way to Cairo via England on Oct. 6, but never did The Mississauga News Copyright 1981 October 28, 1981 board his plane at Kennedy Airport in New York. Instead, an obviously emotionally distraught Dimitrov phoned this reporter to announce his return to Toronto. The Mississauga News decided to purchase the ticket for the general when Mohamed KhalU, the third secretary of the Egyptian Mission to the United Nations, indicated Sadat would listen to the Con'tfrom Pg. 1 • The assassination of Robert F. Kennedy on June 6, 1968 (RFK's closeness to his brother, Dimitrov reasons, probably meant he also knew about the anti- American conspiracy and therefore could not be permitted to win the presidency). • The removal of King Malik Faisol ibn Abdel Aziz of Saudi Arabia in 1975. • The forcible overthrow of the Shah of Iran in 1979. • The murder of Aristotle Onassis' son and the subsequent murder of Onassis himself in 1973. (The general claims Onassis ^l^^lid not die of natural ' p a u s e s , but was ""^•^murdered because "he was going to finance my film epic") • The shaming of America and forced resignation of President Nixon caused by the Watergate scandal (General Dimitrov postulates that Nixon was guilty of the coverup, but not guilty of the Democratic headquarters break-in). • The Iranian hostage crisis (General Dimitrov says he sent a confidential letter-report to President Carter on May 1, 1980, outlining how he would organize a rescie attempt to get the hostages out of Iran. As an expert in guerrilla warfare tactics, the general also sent a copy of his report to incoming President Reagan for consideration should he inherit the crisis as president). • The attempted assassination of President Reagan in March. (Coincidentally or not, it GEN. DICO DIMITROV On Sept. 9, this man contacted The Mississauga News' staffer Dave O'Brien claiming to have information about the JFK assassination, on wrhlch O'Brien is a noted expert. After numerous secret meetings, the man's story grew to International conspiratorial proportions that may even include the Oct. 6 murder of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. general's story if he could go to Cairo. General Dimitrov felt President Sadat, a major obstacle to the anti-American movement In the Mideast, would support his $30-mllllon Illm project. Dimitrov was about to tell Sadat he could be the next victim of a plot that dates back to 1918. The general's'amazing 63-year-old anti-freedom conspiracy scenario claims, among others, the following victims and historical happenings: • The alleged execution of Czar Nicholas and Alexandra by the Bolsheviks in 1918. (General Dimitrov claims the Czar's family successfully escaped and lived in exile in Egypt.) • The extermination of millions of Jews during WoridWarll. • The assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy on November 22,1963 (Dimitrov says JFK was trying to halt the conspiracy). • ThQ assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King on April 4,1968 (This act, according to the general, was an attempt to undermine the American system through rioting t>etween blacks and whites, prompted by MLK's death). See UFE, Pg. 2 occurs after Reagan demonstrates a strong belief to bolster U.S. armed forces strength.) • The attempted assassination of the Pope at St. Peter's Square in May. (The world's leading symbol of peace and freedom becomes a victim of violence. Later, a judges' panel concludes that while the accused assassin pulled the t r i g g e r , the assassination attempt was the work of a major, unknown conspiracy.) • The Sadat assassination on October 6. ("We must not believe this act was the work of a hundred fundamentalists. Sadat's own military forces ran for cover rather than fire back at the terrorists. There is much more to this than we are being told" supposes Dimitrov.) While the general will not publicly state exactly what organization is behind this frightening scenario, he says pro- American leaders in the world will continue to be targets of this operation. TTie general, himself, also claims to be a victim of the conspiracy. "I am a victim and so was General Douglas MacAr-thur" states Dimitrov. "We were both stopped by President Truman from fighting this enemy. 1 remain a victim today because of the way 1 am forced to live just to stay alive." No less intriguing is the mystery that shrouds the life of General Dico Dimitrov. Born in 1924 at Metkovetz near Lorn, Bulgaria, Dimitrov as a young man joined the resistance movement against the Nazis and quickly established a |
| Rights | http://www.baylor.edu/lib/digitization/digitalrights |