Left: Olof Palme marching against the U.S. war in Vietnam (1968) together with the North Vietnamese Ambassador to Moskow. Right: Marcus Wallenberg, head of the Wallenberg Empire, who had John Foster Dulles as his lawyer during the Worl War II and facilitated for Swedish generals to meet with their U.S. counterparts and to meet senior U.S. officials. The Wallenbergs had their own intelligence service headed by Karl Arvid Norlin, who acted as liaison between U.S. officers and their Swedish counterparts (Photos, Public Domain).
Dual State: The Case of Sweden. Part II
Dual State: The Case of Sweden. Part II
Dual State: The Case of Sweden. Part II
Left: Olof Palme marching against the U.S. war in Vietnam (1968) together with the North Vietnamese Ambassador to Moskow. Right: Marcus Wallenberg, head of the Wallenberg Empire, who had John Foster Dulles as his lawyer during the Worl War II and facilitated for Swedish generals to meet with their U.S. counterparts and to meet senior U.S. officials. The Wallenbergs had their own intelligence service headed by Karl Arvid Norlin, who acted as liaison between U.S. officers and their Swedish counterparts (Photos, Public Domain).