That's why the CIA agents based in Rome (were they also "repentant brothers and/or dissidents"?) turned to Schlesinger when they discovered that the coup plots were already well underway. And Schlesinger fought them brutally: in 1974—what a year, by the way, 1974: the democratic brothers brought about the triumph of the revolution in Portugal and put an end to the dictatorship of the colonels in Greece, confronting with great force the conservative aprons who, galvanized by the success of the Chilean coup, couldn't wait to go on the offensive in Italy—Schlesinger personally protested to David Rockefeller, the great puppet master of the "Three Eyes." He didn't just protest. He went so far as to threaten, according to Magaldi, to "expose in a big way all the American and international operations in which his Ur-Lodge was involved." Thus, Henry Kissinger was forced to halt everything. For the third time. "Sooner or later, the Italians will have to erect a monument to Brother Schlesinger," Magaldi continues