Kissinger 1
In his London speech on 10 March 1982, published by the Centre for Strategy and International Studies (CSIS), Georgetown, Henry Kissinger reports that he was an opponent of the anti-colonialist policies of the late President Franklin Roosevelt. At the same time, Kissinger claims that since President Roosevelt's death all American foreign ministers have been British agents of influence. He proved this by saying that as Secretary of State under Presidents Nixon and Ford he had followed the orders of the British Foreign Office without informing the American President.
After completing his military service, Henry Kissinger was taken over by a British intelligence unit at Harvard University, which received financial support from the Rockefeller family during this period. He was assigned to the British intelligence project Wilton Park, which was set up by John Wheeler-Bennett, head of the Royal Institute for International Affairs (Chatham House). The unit specialized in the re-education of former Nazis as British agents of influence in post-war Germany. The department of Harvard University was headed by Professor William Yandell Elliot, a long-time British agent of influence who had worked under the auspices and direction of John Wheeler-Bennett since World War II.