Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3379150> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 66 of
66
with 100 triples per page.
- Q3379150 description "American intelligence officer".
- Q3379150 description "American intelligence officer".
- Q3379150 subject Q6394242.
- Q3379150 subject Q6647153.
- Q3379150 subject Q6938527.
- Q3379150 subject Q7599239.
- Q3379150 subject Q8247421.
- Q3379150 subject Q8637662.
- Q3379150 subject Q8757032.
- Q3379150 abstract "George "Guv" S. Musulin (April 9, 1914 – February 1987) was an officer of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) and naval intelligence services, and in 1950 became a CIA agent.George Musulin was born into a Serbian family in New York City and grew up in Georgetown, Pennsylvania. He graduated from the University of Pittsburgh, where he played with the university's football team. After college he played professional American football in St. Louis and Chicago.Musulin became a captain in the OSS during the Second World War. In mid-October 1943, Musulin, as part of a U.S. military mission, parachuted into Yugoslavia to the headquarters of General Draža Mihailović. On 29 May 1944, Musulin, aided by Chetniks, was evacuated along with the British and American mission and 40 rescued Allied airmen to Bari, leaving General Mihailović without support. In Bari Musulin proposed another rescue of American airmen shot down over Yugoslavia. He again parachuted into Chetnik territory, near the village of Pranjani, where there were several hundred American airmen rescued by Chetnik forces and hidden from the Germans. Musulin successfully commanded the airlift Operation Halyard, the rescue from the air of about 447 U.S. airmen from Nazi-occupied Yugoslavia, from 10 to 29 August 1944. Although this operation was successful due to cooperation from General Mihailović, Musulin had been ordered not to give the Chetniks political promises, an order he violated when he allowed members of General Mihailović's political mission to board the plane. At this time the British were the main Allied authority in the Mediterranean, and their Special Operations Executive (SOE) complained to Musulin's superiors in the OSS, who decided to expel him from the service. In late 1944 Musulin was transferred to the Far East as part of the naval intelligence service, where he would stay until the end of the war.After the war the CIA conducted its own investigation into Musulin, which concluded that he had acted appropriately and that he had been the victim of James Klugmann and other British agents in the SOE with communist sympathies. For his efforts, Musulin was awarded the Legion of Merit.Musulin enlisted in the Office of Naval Intelligence and joined the Central Intelligence Agency in 1950, where he remained until he retired in 1974. During his intelligence career, Musulin belonged to a hard current of hawks in the CIA. Musulin was not an office clerk, but an operational agent. He was part of a team that was responsible for recruiting and training Cuban exiles to fight against the regime of Fidel Castro. He was disappointed with the failure of the Bay of Pigs Invasion and the loss of human life.Musulin died of complications of diabetes at the age of 72.".
- Q3379150 birthDate "1914-04-09".
- Q3379150 birthYear "1914".
- Q3379150 deathDate "1987".
- Q3379150 deathYear "1987".
- Q3379150 thumbnail George_Musulin.jpg?width=300.
- Q3379150 wikiPageExternalLink forgotten500.html.
- Q3379150 wikiPageExternalLink oss_spring_05.pdf.
- Q3379150 wikiPageExternalLink oss_summer_fall_07.pdf.
- Q3379150 wikiPageExternalLink browse.php?mode=viewiaward&awardid=8095.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q11256.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q156122.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q191077.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q191721.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q235034.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q240390.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q2583226.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q3102962.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q3519.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q362.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q3623174.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q36704.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q37230.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q42225.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q4918.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q5546956.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q60.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q6394242.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q658626.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q6647153.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q6938527.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q724443.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q7599239.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q8247421.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q8637662.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q872672.
- Q3379150 wikiPageWikiLink Q8757032.
- Q3379150 dateOfBirth "1914-04-09".
- Q3379150 dateOfDeath "1987".
- Q3379150 name "Musulin, George".
- Q3379150 shortDescription "American intelligence officer".
- Q3379150 type Person.
- Q3379150 type Agent.
- Q3379150 type Person.
- Q3379150 type Agent.
- Q3379150 type NaturalPerson.
- Q3379150 type Thing.
- Q3379150 type Q215627.
- Q3379150 type Q5.
- Q3379150 type Person.
- Q3379150 comment "George "Guv" S. Musulin (April 9, 1914 – February 1987) was an officer of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) and naval intelligence services, and in 1950 became a CIA agent.George Musulin was born into a Serbian family in New York City and grew up in Georgetown, Pennsylvania. He graduated from the University of Pittsburgh, where he played with the university's football team. After college he played professional American football in St.".
- Q3379150 label "George Musulin".
- Q3379150 depiction George_Musulin.jpg.
- Q3379150 givenName "George".
- Q3379150 name "George Musulin".
- Q3379150 name "Musulin, George".
- Q3379150 surname "Musulin".