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Donovan's law office at 2 Wall Street was next to the Passport Control Office. He had special passports prepared for Stephenson's British agents. Stephenson had offices at three locations, Hampshire House, Dorset Hotel, and Rockefeller Center. Allen Dulles had opened a branch office of Coordinator of Information at Rockefeller Center in 1940. He evicted all the tenants on the 25th floor of 30 Rockefeller Plaza, which was the floor above the UK Commercial Corporation, whose president was William Stephenson. This agency was set up after Stephenson complained on April 14, 1941 that Standard Oil was supplying the Germans through Spain, and that it was acting as a hostile and dangerous agency of the enemy. A 400 page report by Stephenson listing Standard Oil and other American corporations dealings with the Germans was turned over to the FBI in 1941. J. Edgar Hoover prudently buried it.
Nelson Rockefeller, as Coordinator of Inter American Affairs, covered up the supplying of German military forces from his South American subsidiaries. Listed in the Stephenson Report were Standard Oil, I.G. Farben, a subsidiary of Standard Oil; Ford Motor Co.; Bayer Aspirin (Sterling Drug); General Aniline and Film; Ansco; and International Telephone and Telegraph. Co. Sosthenes Behn, head of ITT, had hosted a lavish conference of German intelligence operatives at the Waldorf Astoria in 1940. The German director of ITT was Baron Kurt von Schroder, of the Schroder banking family of Cologne, London and New York, who was Hitler's personal banker.
The OSS was actually set up by four members of the British Chief of Staff:
Lord Louis Mountbatten (formerly Battenberg), a cousin of the King, and related to the Frankfort banking families, Rothschild and Cassel
Charles Hambro, director of Special Operations Executive (SOE), and director of Hambros Bank
Col. Stewart Menzies, head of Secret Intelligence Service (SIS)
William Stephenson, in charge of SIS American operations
The "American" secret service was never anything but a British operation, directed at all levels by representatives of the British Crown. OSS agents received advanced training for the European theater at Bletchley Park, British espionage headquarters. This site was chosen because it was only ten miles from Woburn Abbey, where Lord Beaverbrook's agent, Sefton Delmer, operated the British "dirty tricks" center and other propaganda activities. Woburn Abbey was the ancestral home of the Duke of Bedford, Marquess of Tavistock. The British Bureau of Psychological, Warfare operated as the Tavistock Institute.
Lyman Bryson, who was with the American Red Cross in Paris, 1918-19, chief of special operations, OWI 1942, and a director of CBS
Thomas W. Childs, Rhodes Scholar, Paris representative of Sullivan & Cromwell (the Dulles law firm), exec. asst. to British Govt. War Supply US, British Embassy, Washington, 1940-45, partner Lazard Freres 1935-48, holds Order of the British Empire, leader in English-Speaking Union
Nicholas Roosevelt, American Commission to Negotiate Peace, Paris, 1919, OWI 1942-43
Joseph Barnes, director OWI's Foreign Operations, organized Willkie's world tour 1942, coined the phrase "One World", identified as a Communist agent
Elmo Roper, the famed pollster, OSS agent 1942-45
Gaudens Megaro, chief Italian Section, OSS 1940-45
Henry Sturgis Morgan, son of J.P. Morgan [Jr.], director Pullman, General Electric
Shepard Morgan, London director OSS 1943-44, was with Federal Reserve Bank of New York 1916-24, director reparations payments Berlin 1924-30 supervised by Chase Natl. Bank, later chmn Natl Bureau of Economic Research, the Rockefeller propaganda operation
John Gardner, OSS Europe 1999-45, then joined the Carnegie Corp.
Allen W. Dulles chief OSS Europe, director J. Henry Schroder, later first director CIA
Another son of J.P. Morgan [Jr.], Junius, was placed in charge of OSS finances.
https://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/sociopolitica/world_order/WorldCh05.htm