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Elliott Roosevelt was the second surviving son of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt. Scandal trailed him like wake turbulence all
his life. Congress investigated him eight times, from 1934 to 1973.
He skated every time. In ribald detail, this book describes: The
"Texas Cabal" - How Elliott helped Texas oil oligarchs buy FDR's
favors and set the direction of American "pay-to-play" politics for
decades; The "Air Mail Fiasco" - Elliott's plan to create an
American "Aeroflot" to control all air travel and make himself rich
as Croesus; "I Wanna be a Captain Too" - the 1940 election
controversy over Elliott's sudden commission in the Air Corps;
Elliott's secret reconnaissance flights over Greenland and the
Sahara; The best work he ever did: the birth of photographic
reconnaissance in North Africa, Italy, and England - by a non-pilot
in draft category 4F (unfit); "Bombers for Stalin" - how Elliott
secured the Soviet-American shuttle-bombing project - and how
initial Allied Euphoria turned into Cold War; "Babes, Booze, and
Brass" - how Howard Hughes purchased and used Elliott; How Elliott
talked his father into buying the ill-fated Hughes F-11; "Blaze the
Flying Dog" - the 1945 scandal that enraged the nation; Elliott's
disputed role in the death of Joe Kennedy, Junior; The Hartford
Loan Scandal, a de facto extortion racket that could have run FDR
out of office if the details had become known; The true story of
the 1947 Hughes-Roosevelt hearings that transfixed the nation;
"Four out of Five can't be wrong" said his enemies, referring to
his wives; but Elliott's "fifth term" was the charm; How assorted
thugs from foreign dictators to the Mafia used Elliott Roosevelt;
The alleged plot to kill the Bahamian prime minister over a casino
deal; A Great Mystery: Elliott the dead murder mystery writer;
...and more Schemes, Scams, Scandals never told before. From the
Preface: Although it follows the thread of one man's life, this
book is not about one single subject. Instead, it links together a
number of seemingly unrelated issues and events by examining the
career of a now mostly forgotten Air Force officer - who just
happened to be the son of the president. Following this highly
twisted track, we can travel from the rum-running days of
Prohibition to the sand seas of the Sahara; from the hot embrace of
Howard Hughes's starlets to Greenland's ice fields; from Texas oil
tycoons battling federal taxes to inebriated world leaders carving
up Europe. We end with a remarkable profusion of swindlers,
gangsters and dictators settling their scores. There's a lot of
dubious entertainment along the way - fast women and faster
airplanes, booze, dirty politics, dirtier money; even an unsettling
number of very large dogs. At times the reader is likely to be
shocked and appalled. The writer was. But we will also see how the
United States learned how to map the world and conquer the oceans
by air, and with its closest ally create the new science of air
reconnaissance, the definitive tool of world domination. We will
watch America's brief romance with Marshal Stalin flourish and then
founder. We will uncover more than the proverbial iceberg-tip of
the corrupt and volatile mix of politics, the defense industry, and
organized crime. All along, we shall have a front-row seat to the
furious but now dimly remembered battle over the Roosevelt legacy;
with luck we can rip open some wounds that have, even after seventy
years, by no means healed. This is emphatically not a political
book, but inevitably some will think so because of its revelations
of criminal conduct in the Roosevelt family, including some
directly attributable to the president. However overwhelming the
amount of shady deals described herein, there were many additional
alleged schemes whose pursuit seemed unlikely to lead anywhere, and
most evidence has at any rate probably evaporated by now. These are
not political issues. On the contrary, it is striking just how
politically flexible, e
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