Taking Back Our Stolen History
Stimson, Henry
Stimson, Henry

Stimson, Henry

(b. 1867-d. 1950) Yale Skull & Bones (1885-88); Harvard Law (1889-90); Elihu Root and Clark Law (1891, partner from 1893, Andrew Carnegie lawyer, Standard Oil attorney); US Attorney, South District of New York (1906); Secretary of War (1911-13); London Naval Conference (1930-1931); Pilgrims Society (1930-50); NYC Bar Association (1937-1938). Following Washington’s proverbial revolving door collusion strategy between corporate oligarchies and government, Stimson held the following strategic positions: civilian Secretary of War under fellow Skull and Bonesman Taft (1908-1912), Governor General of the Philippines (1926-1928), Secretary of State under Hoover (1929-1933) and civilian Secretary of War under Roosevelt and Truman (1940- 1946), where he managed the drafting and training of 12 million soldiers and airmen, and directed the purchase of 30 percent of the nations industrial output to the battlefield. He was responsible for the internment and subsequent property seizure of thousands of Japanese-American citizens. He was a member of the Council on Foreign Relations (1938-1952) and also deeply involved with the Manhattan Project (1940-45); Internment of Japanese Americans (1942-46); Marshall Plan Committee national chairman (1947-48).

Stimson contrived the economic provocations directed at Japan to maneuver them into firing the first shot, also facilitated by Japan-based Ambassador Joseph Grew and many well-place members of the Institute of Pacific Relations who urged Japan’s willing war-hawk leaders to respond. Stimson supervised General Leslie Groves, head of the Manhattan Project, developers of the atomic bomb. Hollister Bundy (Skull & Bones) was Stimson’s special assistant at the Pentagon for the Manhattan Project. His two sons, William and McGeorge Bundy, also members of Skull and Bones, followed in their father’s global government footprints. Later, Stimson, in complete control of President Truman, (Roosevelt had died on April 12, 1945) would personally choose Hiroshima and Nagasaki as inexcusable, non-military targets for those bombs, a message to the world at the beginning of the Cold War, and an excuse for the massive military build-up to shrink the U.S. treasury. Stimson “took credit” for swaying Truman to drop “the bomb” on Japan. [1]

Against the initial concerns of Roosevelt and Churchill, Stimson would later insist on proper judicial proceedings against a minimal number of Germany’s top war criminals. Stimson and the War Department outlined the original proposals for an International Tribunal, which Truman, the incoming president, obediently backed. The results of those proposals ultimately led to the Nuremberg Trials of 1945-46, which would affect the development of International Law, a means of establishing a world authority to ultimately supersede all national authorities. [2]