Read Conspiracies: The Facts * the Theories * the Evidence Online
Authors: Andy Thomas
Tags: #Conspiracy Theories, #Social Science
Al-Fayed, and the Royal Family wanted to avoid a
genealogical connection to a Muslim family. This view
has been robustly promoted by Mohamed Al-Fayed,
but friends and witnesses have cast doubt on this, with
some pointing out that their relationship was fairly new,
and maybe not that harmonious, with Diana having only
recently broken up from a serious two-year relationship
with another Muslim, Pakistani heart surgeon Hasnat
Khan. The Royal Family had apparently shown no
public disapproval of Diana’s connection with Khan, so
why would Fayed present a problem? Others, of course,
contend that what the Royal Family says and what it real y
thinks are two completely different things.
• Diana was pregnant with Dodi Al-Fayed’s baby and,
similarly, the Royal Family could not tolerate a Muslim
bloodline entering the lineage, this time in a rather
permanent way. Although this is a view widely subscribed
to, official test results on Diana’s body ruled pregnancy out.
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Truthseekers hardly consider the word of officialdom to be
failsafe, however.
• Prince Charles wanted Diana removed to grease the path
to remarrying without adverse publicity, as intimated by
the Princess in her letter to Burrel . There is no question
that Diana’s absence did help Charles gain more acceptance
of his eventual marriage to Parker-Bowles, although the
Legge-Bourke conundrum remains unresolved in this
picture. That this is the view Diana clearly subscribed to
must obviously be taken into serious account, yet some of
the less hardcore theorists find it hard to believe that the
likes of Charles would support such a scheme. Those who
see the Royals as blood-drinking reptiles natural y differ in
this view – see below.
• The Queen’s husband, Prince Philip, took matters into
his own hands over and above Charles’s authority, and
plotted Diana’s death for some of the above reasons or
more, believing her revelations were bringing the Royal
Family into disrepute. This view was heavily promoted
by Mohamed Al-Fayed in his courtroom attempts to
convict the ‘killers’ of his son and Diana, but was, perhaps
predictably, rejected by the British courts.
• Diana’s growing campaign against the use of landmines
and other questionable military devices was becoming a
threat to influential arms manufacturers concerned about
the effect of her work on their reputation. Diana’s close
relationship with Dodi Al-Fayed could have created an
embarrassing problem too close at hand for some, given
that Dodi’s mother had been Samira Khashoggi – sister
to the Saudi billionaire arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi.
Diana’s campaign had certainly been successful in
galvanizing public support and was gaining ground at the
time of her death.
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• The New World Order was also concerned about Diana’s
growing prominence, given her inside knowledge of the
British Royal Family and its links to various intelligence
agencies, things which the Princess had begun to al ude
to in her candid interviews and published letters. In
this view, NWO operatives took her out before further
damage could be done, adding secret society symbolism
into the mix to make for something of a ritualistic death.
Similar claims have been made over Dealey Plaza, where
JFK was shot – that site has several occult inferences in
its layout, as does the whole of Paris, which is rich in
Masonic relics and subliminal patterns. The fact that
Diana’s car crash took place directly beneath the ‘Flame
of Liberty’ monument above the underpass, a potent
mystical symbol, has been seen as significant. It is also a
place claimed to have once have been the site of a burial
chamber of Merovingian kings and/or a Roman temple to
the goddess . . . Diana.
• Diana was a direct descendant of Jesus and Mary
Magdalene, and/or carried the bloodline of Merovingian
kings and the Stuart dynasty, rivals to the House of
Windsor. As such, she risked becoming a saintly figure who
might reveal too much hidden history and unsettle the
established power-bases.
• The Royal Family is in truth a mask for a race of dominating
extra-terrestrials (
see
chapter 7) and they did not want
certain bloodlines mixing with the ET genes.
The list could continue, covering everything from the theory that Diana was executed on the orders of a jealous Hil ary Clinton,
who had heard that the Princess was due to be forcibly ‘married’
to her own husband Bill in a secret occult ceremony, to the notion that Diana didn’t real y die at all and that the whole event was a set-up to enable her to live a secret life as a recluse, presumably in 153
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the same quiet paradise where Hitler, Elvis and Jim Morrison all
shipped up at one time or another (
see
p. 26).
Some of the above possibilities appear, at first glance anyway, to be more reasonable than others. But in a world where big lies are told so often, is anyone in a firm enough position to real y be able to make fun of one above another?
Diluting Credibility
One difficulty that presents itself in terms of Diana conspiracy
theories being taken seriously is the nature of those promoting
them. It is perhaps unfortunate that the not entirely unreasonable ideas concerning royal resistance to Muslim bloodlines have come
to be indelibly linked with the claims of Mohamed Al-Fayed, who,
unfairly or not, is rarely portrayed by the media as a credible figure.
His exuberant and outspoken manner has perhaps allowed genuine
grief at the loss of his son to translate into often-unguarded and unverifiable accusations. Fayed’s insistence that Prince Philip gave orders to stage the crash – an allegation unlikely to be well received in a country which has never much favoured republicanism – has
enabled the press to sideline him as an eccentric. By association, the subsequent ridicule has been used to denigrate the potential
significance of the undeniably odd anomalies around Diana’s death.
Fayed is far from the only person to be concerned about the truth, as the pol s demonstrate, but more sober questioners have too often been eclipsed by the gaudier aspects of the circus around it.
This effect was not helped by the
Daily Express
, which kept numerous Diana conspiracy stories on its front covers for years.
Each was promoted as another nail in the coffin of the official
account, only for none of them to come to anything in the final
inquiries, whereafter the sensational claims, often with good
points buried within them, were quietly dropped, never to be
discussed again. Some truthseekers believe this was in itself a
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coordinated strategy of a long-established kind. Sensing from
the public mood that the mainstream was not going to be able
to avoid discussing conspiracies this time around, maybe the
powers-that-be consequently
chose
to saturate the population with multiple theories, some sensible, others wild, until all of them sank from view under the weight of their own confusion. History
records that this tactic general y works; the public sigh, turn the page and put the kettle on, knowing that something isn’t right, but having neither the time nor the energy to pursue it further.
Thus the Diana theories have already become, like the
Kennedy conspiracies before them, just another part of a dark
and extraordinary saga, a story doubtless set to become one of the Grimm-like fairytales of future centuries. Yet, if the conspiracy view is correct, and the official conclusion wrong, the fact is that the people who helped take the Princess’s life are probably still alive and influencing our world today.
Certainly, several years on, the public’s propensity for believing that public executions were still continuing, albeit in a different guise to that of times past, was showing no signs of diminishing.
iii) Dr DaviD kelly
The Iraq Gambit
As we saw in the previous chapter, spring 2003’s devastating allied invasion of Iraq took place largely on the strength of an intelligence dossier which claimed that the country’s leader, Saddam Hussein,
was preparing weapons of mass destruction that could be
deployed against the world within 45 minutes. The war resulted in thousands dead and much greater influence for Western powers
in the Middle East – but none of the alleged weapons was found.
This was no surprise to the diplomats and insiders who had tried
to call attention to their absence before the guns started firing.
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Prominent among these was the former microbiologist and UN
weapons inspector Dr David Kel y.
With impressive credentials, having worked for the British
Ministry of Defence in such places as the controversial secret
research laboratories at Porton Down, Kel y was an important and
informed observer of potential weaponry accumulation, chem-
ical, biological and conventional. Perhaps someone should have
listened to his quiet concern, therefore, that the war against Iraq was being rushed into without serious forethought or evidence,
but it was blatant that the decision had already been made and so the wheels of war rolled on regardless. Even as early as February 2003, Kel y, who had himself contributed information to the
crucial dossier published just six months before, was voicing the fact that there had been ‘a lot of pressure’ put on its compilers to make a more robust case for war than was truly honest.
When the initial wave of the invasion ended and the smoke
cleared to reveal no weapons of mass destruction, by May 2003
Kel y could contain his views no more and expressed them
– as an off-the-record source – to the BBC radio journalist
Andrew Gilligan. Sensing an important story, Gilligan used this
information, along with other views he had gathered, to make the
(then) sensational claims on the Radio 4
Today
programme that the dossier had been deliberately ‘sexed up’. Kel y’s name was not mentioned in the report, but his anonymity would not last long.6
Official Fury
The response to the BBC story from Tony Blair’s government,
led from the front by press secretary Alastair Campbel , was one
of blind fury, perhaps at an injustice, but more likely because it touched a raw nerve in an area where it knew it was weak. Gilligan’s report was slammed as a ‘lie’ and, in an unusual y touchy move,
an apology was demanded from the BBC. With the press baying
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to know who the main informant was, the Ministry of Defence
and Blair’s aides soon, albeit by subtle but inexorable
means, allowed it to become clear that Kel y was the man at the core. This highly irregular move (the state normal y protects its own staff) appeared to be a vengeful act designed to load as much shame on
one man as possible, seemingly in an attempt to distract from the information itself by demolishing the source’s reputation. When
government spokesmen began referring to Kel y as a ‘Walter
Mitty’-like character (James Thurber’s fictional Mitty being a day-dreaming fantasist), the denigration of a man who, until only a
few weeks before, had been regarded as one of the best in his field had firmly descended into cheap personal attacks.
Besieged by journalists and government intimidation, Kel y, a
gentle and private man, was understandably taken aback by the
furore which had suddenly erupted around him. Called to give
account of himself before Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee
on 11 July 2003, Kel y was harshly grilled in an apparently punitive public interrogation, an experience that was undoubtedly stressful and difficult.
All of that might explain why, just a week later, on 18 July, Kel y’s body was found in woodlands near his home at Harrowdown Hil ,
Oxfordshire. He had apparently died from a self-inflicted gash to one wrist and had several (nearly) empty packets of co-proxamol
painkillers on him; it appeared that the pressure had become too
much for Kel y, resulting in a sad, suicidal exit. The ingratiating expressions of grief from the likes of Blair and Campbel , as patron-izing as they were, reinforced the emphasis that a man had ended
his life in tragic circumstances of his own making. But had he?
Public Doubts
With memories of Diana’s traumatic departure and all its
unanswered questions still lingering, the British public was
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perhaps quicker to think twice about David Kel y than it once
might have been. Almost immediately, suspicions were raised
among the general populace, even before all the questionable
details were revealed. Kel y’s demise seemed too conveniently