The Proud Prophet Government file was not declassified until December of 2012 while the United States was under the Obama Administration. While there is still several sections completely blacked out, American citizens now know more than they ever had about this war simulation game. The Proud Prophet documents blacked out sections also make you curious as to what is still concealed, why it is concealed. Many Americans, unless they were a part of the war games in 1983, had never even heard of the project until 2012 [1]

Brief Synopsis:

Proud Prophet was a war simulation game in 1983 that helped government and military officials make tough decisions with a quicker response time. There was a Blue Team (USA) and a Red Team (Soviets). While this did prepare for certain events that could possibly occur, you never know just how officials will respond in the moment. Proud Prophet game play went on for appro

mently twelve days.i

Death

edit

Pincher died on August 5th, 2014 in Kintbury outside of West Berkshire, England. Just seven weeks before Pincher suffered a stroke. He passed with his family by his side while his family and Pincher talked about the good ol’ days of espionage and the power it gave him in his career[2] Centurian.

Career

Pincher had an epic career as a journalist unveiling Cold War secrets in London for the Daily Express, which was one of the most popular newspapers around. During his career, he had contact with the British Government that M15 and M16 could possibly be providing housing for Soviet agents without them even knowing. Pincher always went above and beyond for his investigative reporting style, including undermining people's personal phone calls and relentlessly bugging important people, such as Prime Minister Harold Wilson, for answers to questions that he had that he was not telling the public. Pincher obtained the title "spy catcher" after he exposed several people one of the most famous being George Blake, an M16 member who let close to one hundred Soviet spies get jobs at the embassy there in London. [3]

man Pincher

Henry Chapman Pincher, also known as “The Lone Wolf of Fleet Street”, was known for the hundreds of secrets he uncovered in his thirty-year career at the Daily Express. Pincher was a well-known novelist, historian, and journalist. Many of his writings pertained to reconnaissance, and things of this sort. Pincher died on August 5th, 2014 at 100 years old.

Death

Pincher died on August 5th, 2014 in Kintbury outside of West Berkshire, England. Just seven weeks before Pincher suffered a stroke. He passed with his family by his side while his family and Pincher talked about the good ol’ days of espionage and the power it gave him in his career.

Career

Pincher had an epic career as a journalist unveiling Cold War secrets in London for the Daily Express, which was one of the most popular newspapers around. During his career, he had contact with the British Government that M15 and M16 could possibly be providing housing for Soviet agents without them even knowing. Pincher always went above and beyond for his investigative reporting style, including undermining peoples personal phone calls and relentlessly bugging important people, such as Prime Minister Harold Wilson, for answers to questions that he had that he was not telling the public.

Pincher was contacted by the Daily Express for information about new explosive that had been developed while he was researching rockets during his time in the Royal Armoured Corps. Pincher loved reporting about the news of the RDX and would continually supply information about “V-1 flying bomb, the V-2 rocket and the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima.”









Early life

edit

Pincher was born in Ambala, Punjab, to English parents. His father, Richard Chapman Pincher, was a major in the British army, and his mother Helen (née Foster), was an actress. They were living in India because of Pincher father’s military services. His father's family was from north Yorkshire and his father was serving in the Northumberland Fusiliers in India when Chapman was born.[4]They had married in 1913 in Pontefract.[5] which is a small market town.

The family returned home to Pontefract when Pincher was aged 3 and he attended 13 different schools before the family settled in Darlington, where his father would later own a sweet shop and a pub on the River Tees.[4] Aged 10 he won a scholarship to Darlington Grammar School where he took an interest in genetics and then studied zoology and biology at King's College London.[6]

Chapman Pincher married Constance Sylvia Wolstenholme in 1965. Pincher does have two children, but they are from a previous marriage.

Later life and career

edit

Pincher is best known as the author of the book Their Trade is Treachery (1981), in which he publicized for the first time the suspicions that MI5's former Director General Roger Hollis had been a spy for the Soviet Union, and describes MI5's and MI6's internal inquiries into the matter. Pincher was at one point close to Peter Wright, who he knew suspected Harold Wilson of having been a Soviet agent, and according to the biography of Wilson written by Ben Pimlott, Pincher was trying to get information from Wright so that he could accuse Wilson in a public setting in the near future.[citation needed]

Wright, a retired MI5 Soviet counterespionage officer, was Pincher's main source for Their Trade is Treachery, along with British MP Jonathan Aitken and Wright's former colleague Arthur S. Martin. Aitken, using information from retired CIA counterespionage chief James Jesus Angleton, wrote a highly confidential letter in early 1980 to British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, outlining Angleton's suspicions of Hollis acting as a double agent.[citation needed]

Pincher became ensnared in 1986 in the Spycatcher affair, when Wright tried to publish his own book in Australia, in apparent violation of his oath-taking of the Official Secrets Act when he joined MI5. The matter led to prolonged legal wrangling, with the British government mounting a heavy defence, which was ultimately unsuccessful through three levels of the Australian court system. In the meantime Spycatcher was published in the United States in mid-1987, where it became a best seller. Pincher was investigated and cleared of any wrongdoing, through a police investigation.[7]

Pincher was convinced that, alongside Wilson, many other members of the Labour Party were Soviet agents, among them Member of Parliament, Tom Driberg, who was Chairman of the Labour Party. Pincher claimed that Driberg was an active double agent for MI5 and the KGB despite his well-founded reputation for total indiscretion.[8] Treachery: Betrayals, Blunders, and Cover-ups: Six Decades of Espionage Against America and Great Britain, first published in 2009, brings the known Soviet espionage cases against the UK and United States up to date.[citation needed]


Congressional politics

edit

In 1972, Wilson was elected to the United States House of Representatives from Texas's 2nd congressional district, taking office the following January. Re-elected eleven times, Wilson thoroughly enjoyed his job and always sought to "take care of the home folks" until his resignation on October 8, 1996.[9] Wilson took pride in his job in every aspect and would do anything it took to keep his country safe. Although hawkish on foreign issues, he was liberal on other issues such as women's rights, social security and abortion making people think twice, occasionally.

As a freshman representative, Wilson achieved the designation of the Big Thicket in Southeast Texas as a National Preserve in 1974.[10] This early achievement made his colleagues respect his political power and Wilson quickly earned an appointment on the House Appropriations Committee. During his incumbency, Wilson's colleagues regarded him as the "best horse trader in Washington" because of his ability to negotiate and trade votes with other congressmen to ensure passage of his favored bills.[11]

Despite not having many, if any, Jewish constituents, Wilson developed a strong relationship with Israel during his entire congressional career. This bond began during Wilson's first year in Washington when the Yom Kippur War occurred. From a young age, Wilson had always supported the "underdog," and Wilson quickly went to Israel's defense as a self-proclaimed "Israeli commando." While on the Appropriations committee, Wilson increased U.S. aid to Israel to $3 billion annually. Later, Wilson's close ties with Israel enabled him to collaborate with Israeli defense engineers to create and transport man-portable anti-aircraft guns into Pakistan to be used in the Soviet-Afghan War.[12]

As for domestic policy, Wilson ceaselessly championed for the individual's rights, especially women and minority rights. He continuously voted pro-choice and fought voting discrimination against African Americans, two of his largest constituent bases. Wilson respected his district's female vote so much that in 1974 he used the League of Women Voters to pass the Safe Drinking Water Act.[13] In addition to supporting women's rights legislation, Wilson broke Washington tradition and hired female staffers. Although Wilson never had a female chief of staff, his office was filled with gorgeous women who tirelessly helped the congressman. "Charlie's Angels," as they were commonly referred to, handled constituent problems for Wilson to ensure none of his constituents lacked in aid and support.[14] Wilson's staff quickly drew the attention of his colleagues and media. Although rumors of scandals surrounded Wilson's office, Wilson emphatically insisted that his staff should be respected and their diligent work for the representative enabled them to have freedom to work independently of Wilson.[14]

Wilson worked on improving Americans' lives, especially those of the underprivileged. Wilson lobbied against business interests to maintain a $3.35 per hour minimum wage.[15] Wilson also continuously sought to increase Medicare and Medicaid funding for the elderly and underprivileged and Veterans' Affairs funding for veterans. His efforts in these regards gained him the reputation of “taking care of the home folks” and gained funding to open the Veterans Affairs Hospital in Lufkin, Texas.[16]

Wilson avidly supported the Second Amendment and the individual's rights to own firearms. His Second Amendment support created tension between Wilson and his sister Sharon Allison, but the siblings reached an agreement that Allison would leave Wilson alone about his second amendment support, and Wilson would support Allison's pro-choice agenda.[17]

Wilson achieved a measure of success through his horse trading capabilities. Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill appointed Wilson to the House Ethics Committee in 1980 to help protect Representative John Murtha, Jr. from investigations during the Abscam scandal. In return for Wilson's appointment to this committee, O'Neill also gave him a coveted spot on the Kennedy Center Board of Trustees.[18] Wilson also gained a position on the House Defense Appropriations subcommittee. This appointment enabled Wilson to funnel support money for Somoza in Nicaragua and support Mujahideen efforts to oust the Soviets from Afghanistan.[19]

  1. ^ "Proud Prophet - 83" (PDF). December 20th, 2012. Retrieved April 3, 2017. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ http://www.biography.com/people/chapman-pincher-21101387
  3. ^ https://www.britannica.com/biography/Chapman-Pincher
  4. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference guardian-chapman-pincher-fleet-street was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ "findmypast.co.uk". Search.findmypast.co.uk. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
  6. ^ Philby, Charlotte (16 February 2013). "'I intend to die in the harness': Chapman Pincher is still on the hunt for spooks". The Independent. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
  7. ^ Chapman Pincher A Web of Deception: The Spycatcher Affair, London: Sidgwick and Jackson, 1987; ISBN 0-283-99654-4
  8. ^ "UK Politics: Driberg always under suspicion", BBC News, 13 September 1999.
  9. ^ "U. S. Congress Votes Database: Charlie Wilson (D)," Washington Post, accessed on December 1, 2011, http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/W000570
  10. ^ Francis E. Abernethy, "BIG THICKET," Handbook of Texas Online , published by the Texas State Historical Association, accessed on December 1, 2011, http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/gkb03.
  11. ^ Kenworthy, Tom (August 20, 1990). "Congressman Charlie Wilson, Not Holding His Fire: The East Texas Democrat's Way with Women, and War". Washington Post.
  12. ^ Crile, Charlie Wilson's War, 31-33.
  13. ^ Charles Wilson to Darvin M. Winick, Dickinson, TX, November 19, 1974, in Charlie Wilson Papers: Correspondence, Box 11, Folder 1, available at the ETRC.
  14. ^ a b Peggy Love, interviewed by Perky Beisel, March 25, 2011, part of the Charlie Wilson Oral History Project, available at the ETRC.
  15. ^ Charles Wilson to W.H. Avery, Houston, TX, June 15, 1973, in Charlie Wilson Papers: Correspondence, Box 1, Folder 52, available at the ETRC.
  16. ^ Ian Foley, interviewed by Troy Davis, March 25, 2011, part of the Charlie Wilson Oral History Project, available at the ETRC.
  17. ^ Allison, interviewed by Sosebee and Sandul, ETRC.
  18. ^ Archie McDonald, "Charlie Wilson," Nacogdoches, TX, October 31, 2011.
  19. ^ Crile, Charlie Wilson's War.