Who was behind the Shooting of Pope John Paul II?
By Staś
Originally published by TUT Dec. 2nd 2015
We divide to rule…”–Mossad adage
At 5:18 pm, May 13th, 1981, Mehmet Alì Agca shot Pope John Paul II in the stomach and the right hand. The original story presented in the media directed the blame towards the KGB in what would became known at the time as the ‘Bulgarian Connection’.
Then-KGB Director Yuri Andropov was convinced that Pope John Paul II’s election was the product of an Anglo-German conspiracy orchestrated by Zbigniew Brzezinski to undermine Soviet hegemony in largely Catholic Poland and ultimately to precipitate the collapse of the entire Soviet Union. Thus, logically it was argued that the KGB dispatched Agca assassinate the Pope.
Ali Ağca had made several trips to Sofia, Bulgaria. He also claimed to have had contacts with a Bulgarian agent in Rome whose cover was the Bulgarian national airline office. Soon after the…
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