Massoni | 7- United for Globalization

Chapter 7: Freemasons United for Globalization, Part One (1974-1975-1979-1991)

This chapter narrates the story of Licio Gelli and his links to super-lodges, the birth of new ultra-reactionary Ur-Lodges breaking long-standing equilibriums, two Freemasons in government in America and the UK (Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan), and the new Masonic peace determined by the secret pact United Freemasons for Globalization.




1. The “Guilt” of Brother Licio: The Secret Diaries of Tina Anselmi

  • Licio Gelli, former Master of the P2 Lodge (“Propaganda Due”), is discussed in the context of his assignments by the Ur-Lodge “Three Eyes” and other oligarchic global super-lodges.  

  • The debate on Gelli’s role is framed through the views of historians and Masonic scholars, notably Aldo Alessandro Mola (born 1943), a leading Italian historian of Freemasonry affiliated with the Grande Oriente Democratico, a progressive transnational Masonic opinion movement founded around 2009-2010.  

  • Aldo Mola’s extensive work includes the seminal “History of Italian Freemasonry” (first edition 1976), updated multiple times, which offers critical insight into different phases of Italian Freemasonry.  

  • Mola presents Gelli not merely as a subversive but also as a figure who, after a youthful fascist background and subsequent involvement with the P2 Lodge, became a guarantor for maintaining democratic-liberal institutions.  

  • Contrariwise, the Grande Oriente Democratico (God) editorial team criticizes this apologetic stance towards Gelli, highlighting his criminal convictions, including for aggravated calumny linked to terrorism investigations and financial fraud associated with Banco Ambrosiano.  

  • Despite legal absolutions in political conspiracy charges, Gelli’s network, including media magnates and politicians (e.g., Silvio Berlusconi – family member of P2), largely remained intact or even flourished.  

  • This section also revisits the intervention of magistrate Tina Anselmi, the first female Italian Minister and president of the Parliamentary Commission on P2, whose secret diaries reveal the political nature of that inquiry.

  • The chapter ends with lively exchanges between Mola and the God network regarding the complexities of Gelli’s figure and the broader context of Italian Freemasonry’s role in political life.  




2. The End of an Era: The Yom Kippur War

  • The chapter places the Yom Kippur War (6-24 Oct 1973) in the context of Freemasonic power plays.  

  • Henry Kissinger (Freemason, “Three Eyes” Ur-Lodge), U.S. Secretary of State and National Security Advisor under Nixon (de facto since 1969), played an ambiguous but crucial role in orchestrating the war dynamics.  

  • Kissinger’s strategy allowed Israel to demonstrate military dominance but then ordered a controlled withdrawal to maintain geopolitical balance and cement relations with Egypt’s President Anwar al-Sadat (Freemason affiliated with the “Amun” Ur-Lodge).  

  • The war precipitated the 1973-75 energy crisis due to the OPEC Arab oil embargo targeting the US and Netherlands, with consequences rippling globally.  

  • The chapter offers a comprehensive overview of the economic consequences ( stagflation, inflation, recession) hitting industrial countries and signaling the end of post-war economic boom.  




3. “Amun” and “White Eagle,” Two New Super-Lodges

  • The narrative reveals the emergence of a clandestine “civil war” inside the global neo-aristocratic Masonic networks.  

  • The “Three Eyes”, dominant since 1967-68, faced challenge from new Ur-Lodges: 

    • “Amun”: Established 1972 in Jordan by emissaries from “Three Eyes” and “Joseph de Maistre”, with support from Soviet Masons including Leonid Brezhnev and KGB head Yuriy Andropov. 

      • Key members included Middle Eastern leaders such as Hafez al-Assad (Syria), Hussein ibn Talal (Jordan), Mohamed Ben Brahim Boukharouba (Houari Boumédiène) (Algeria), Anwar al-Sadat (Egypt), and Israeli military leaders Moshe Dayan and Israel Tal 

      • Interestingly, Israel’s Prime Minister Golda Meir (progressive Masonic Lodges “Ghedullah” and “Daath”) refused honorary membership but attended Amun’s inauguration.  

    • “White Eagle”: Born in 1978 from a collusion of conservative Masonic lodges “Edmund Burke” and “Geburah”. Intended as a counterweight to “Three Eyes”.  

  • These lodges orchestrated major geopolitical events like the 1979 Iranian Revolution and the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War.  




4. The Mason John Rawls and His Enemies

  • In 1968, responding to the formation of the “Three Eyes” and other events (military coups, assassinations), John Bordley Rawls (Freemason in progressive lodges “Thomas Paine” and “Newton-Keynes”) was commissioned to write a seminal political philosophy treatise, resulting in “A Theory of Justice” (1971).  

  • This presented an ideal for a liberal, equitable social democracy, countering both authoritarian Marxism-Leninism and reactionary neo-aristocracy.  

  • Meanwhile, the neo-aristocratic lodges mounted an ideological counteroffensive: 

    • 1974 Nobel Prize winners Friedrich von Hayek and Milton Friedman (both Freemasons in “Three Eyes” and “Edmund Burke”).  

    • Robert Nozick published Anarchy, State, and Utopia (1974), advocating minimal state, free markets, and strong property rights.  

    • The 1975 trilateral report The Crisis of Democracy (Crozier, Huntington, Watanuki; all Freemasons of “Edmund Burke” and “Three Eyes”) critiqued excesses of democratic freedoms, advocating stronger executive powers and reduced welfare.  

  • These ideological struggles set the stage for political movements promoting neoliberalism and conservative governance in the late 1970s and ‘80s.  




5. A Sister at Downing Street and a Stepbrother at the White House: Thatcherism and Reaganomics

  • The election of Margaret Thatcher (free mason in “Edmund Burke”) as UK Prime Minister in 1979 and Ronald Reagan (Republican, not initially a Free Mason but surrounded by Masons espousing neoliberal ideas, some associates in the Mont Pelerin Society) as US President in 1980 were milestones in the ascendency of neoconservative and neoliberal ideas.  

  • Thatcher, influenced by Hayekian thought, honored von Hayek with the Order of the Companions of Honour in 1984.  

  • The neoliberal political-economic agenda included: 

    • Privatization and deregulation  

    • Tax cuts predominantly benefiting wealthier classes  

    • Cuts to welfare spending  

    • Monetary policy focusing on inflation control via high interest rates  

    • Reduction of union power, exemplified by the defeat of the UK miners’ strike (1984-85).  

  • Reaganomics similarly: 

    • Sought to reduce government deficit, deregulate industries, cut taxes, curb welfare  

    • Saw significant increase in military spending  

    • Resulted in rising deficits, growing inequality, and later economic overheating.  

  • These movements were backed and promoted by Masons in think tanks and policy research institutions linked to “Edmund Burke” and “Three Eyes”.  




6. The Fronde of the Counterinitiated

  • The “Three Eyes” Ur-Lodge, dominant from 1967-68, especially in US and UK establishment, suffered an internal challenge.  

  • In the UK Conservative Party leadership primary of 1975, “Edmund Burke” backed Thatcher over incumbent Edward Heath (“Three Eyes”).  

  • Thatcher’s victory shifted the power balance among lodges.  

  • In the US, the 1980 Republican primaries saw Gerald Ford (Three Eyes) defeated by Reagan, backed by “Geburah” and later affiliated with “White Eagle”.  

  • The Democrats’ 1980 primaries were split, with Ted Kennedy refusing to run and Jimmy Carter (paramason linked to “Three Eyes” and Trilateral Commission but not fully lodge-affiliated) securing nomination.  

  • Zbigniew Brzezinski (“Three Eyes” and Trilateral) was Carter’s National Security Advisor, while Secretary of State Cyrus Vance (“Janus” lodge, mildly progressive) clashed with Brzezinski and resigned in 1980 after the failure of Operation Eagle Claw, a secret mission to rescue American hostages in Iran.  

  • The 1978 election of Pope John Paul II (Karol Wojtyła) was backed by Brzezinski and “Three Eyes”, marking a key moment in ideological warfare against the USSR.  

  • Key geopolitical events between 1978 and 1981 led to the formation of a triarchic power-sharing agreement among the major neo-aristocratic Ur-Lodges (“Three Eyes,” “Edmund Burke,” and “White Eagle”) to stabilize influence over Western governments.  




7. War and Peace: Assassination Attempts and Masonic Pax

  • 30 March 1981: Failed assassination attempt on Ronald Reagan by John Warnock Hinckley Jr., whose father was a “Three Eyes” member and close to the Bush family.  

  • 13 May 1981: Attempted assassination of Pope John Paul II (Wojtyła) by Mehmet Ali Ağca; events interpreted as symbolic Masonic numerology (year 1717 is when modern Freemasonry was founded).  

  • The failed attempts intensified inter-lodge conflicts but led to diplomatic reconciliation spearheaded by Margaret Thatcher and William Whitelaw (“Three Eyes” and also “Edmund Burke”).  

  • A new unified Masonic front was formed, leading to the secret project United Freemasons for Globalization 




8. Freemasons United for Globalization

  • The Leviathan Lodge (est. 1910), representing a fusion of progressive and neo-aristocratic streams, played a mediator role. 

  • It had origins in prior cross-faction efforts such as the Pilgrims Society (UK and USA sections founded 1902-1903) and was supported by historic progressive figures. 

  • The United Freemasons for Globalization project (summer 1981) was a watershed pact involving leading figures from the neo-aristocratic (“White Eagle”, “Edmund Burke”, “Three Eyes”) and progressive lodges (“Thomas Paine,” “Montesquieu”). 

  • Signatories and key players included: 

    • Zbigniew Brzezinski (“Three Eyes”),  

    • Lew Wasserman (“White Eagle”),  

    • Madeleine Albright (“Leviathan”, later also “Three Eyes”),  

    • Robert Rubin (“Leviathan”),  

    • French figures François Mitterrand (“Montesquieu”, “Fraternité Verte”, “Ferdinand Lassalle”),  

    • German Helmut Schmidt (“Ferdinand Lassalle”),  

    • Jacques Delors (“Montesquieu”, “Ioannes”),  

    • American progressive Masons such as Arthur Schlesinger Jr. (“Thomas Paine”),  

    • Philosophers John Rawls (“Thomas Paine”, “Newton-Keynes”),  

    • Latin American political leaders like Raúl Alfonsín (“Simón Bolívar,” “Christopher Columbus”),  

    • American politicians such as Ted Kennedy (“Thomas Paine”, etc.).  

  • The accord envisioned over the next two decades included: 

    • Support for China’s economic opening under Deng Xiaoping  

    • Accelerated dismantling of the USSR, including manipulating Afghanistan conflict and promoting Pope John Paul II’s anti-Soviet stance.  

    • The gradual European integration under economic and financial governance, eschewing early full political federation.  

    • German reunification under lodges like “Pan-Europe,” “Atlantis-Aletheia,” and others.  

    • Controlled succession of the US presidency: Reagan (1984), Bush Sr. (1988), and negotiations for successors post-1992.  

    • Maintaining Thatcher’s premiership alongside orchestrated weakening of the UK Labour Party.  

    • Political management in France to allow Mitterrand’s presidency with Giscard d’Estaing playing a shadow role; creation of cohabitation governments for control.  

    • Ending repressive regimes in Latin America (Argentina, Brazil) and South Africa, facilitating democratic transitions.  

    • Progress towards resolving Israeli-Palestinian conflict via moderate inclusion of factions like Al-Fatah and the PLO, though slow.  

    • Suppression of violent extremist groups embedded in extreme left and right.  

    • In Italy: dismantling of Red Brigades and smaller terrorist groups; official ban on the “P2 Lodge,” with leadership replaced by figures like Armando CoronaGiovanni SpadoliniFrancesco Cossiga, and Beniamino Andreatta 

    • Support for Socialist leader and Mason Bettino Craxi as Italy’s first Socialist prime minister of that era.  

  • This pact spelled the end of Gelli’s P2: the lodge was dissolved legislatively in December 1981, while a new Masonic course was entrusted to designated leaders to manage power within Italy.

     



9. Brothers of Italy: The Resistible Rise of Gelli

  • From 1974 onward, Gelli consolidated his command over P2, ultimately winning a power struggle against Lino Salvini (Grand Master of GOI).  

  • Founded the Ompam/Womta (World Organization of Masonic Thought and Assistance) in 1976, aiming for global reach.  

  • P2’s influence spread across Eastern Europe, Monaco, and Latin America.  

  • In Argentina, P2 was intertwined with the government during Perón’s hijinks, Isabel Perón’s government (1974-1976), and the subsequent military dictatorship (1976-1981), supported by Freemasons like José López Rega 

  • Gelli sought admission to the super-lodge “Three Eyes” but was denied, increasing tensions with his Masonic patrons.  

  • His ambition and activism raised concerns even within “Three Eyes”(divisions grew between those defending P2 fiercely and those seeking to dismantle it).

  • The late 1970s were marked by fissures as other lodges like “Edmund Burke,” “Geburah,” “Amun,” and “White Eagle” began contesting “Three Eyes” dominance.  

  • The Italian Mafia, judiciary, and political events became enmeshed with these power dynamics around the P2 affair.  




10. A Fateful Year: 1978

  • 1978 saw the formation of the “White Eagle” super-lodge and began the fronde against “Three Eyes.”  

  • Most notably, this was the year of Aldo Moro’s kidnapping and murder (March-May 1978).  

  • The connection between P2/Gelli and Moro’s fate has been debated extensively, with many conspiracy claims and alternative theories.  

  • Recent scholarship by Mario José Cereghino and Giovanni Fasanella, authors of The English Coup, argues Moro represented a political leadership dedicated to a “national” modernization path, balancing state and private sectors, and was eliminated due to complex international geopolitical factors rather than merely internal plots.  

  • The US, UK, Soviet blocs, and supranational actors had intersecting, sometimes transnational interests beyond simplistic binary political alignments in Italy.  

  • After Moro’s death, the political center in Italy weakened, eventually leading to transformations in party structures and the 1990s political upheavals, not directly attributable to P2 alone.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Massoni | Introduction

Massoni | 1- The World At War