Assassination


The term ‘Assassin’ is thought to be derived from its connections to the Hashshashin, a militant religious sect of Ismaili Muslims, thought to be active in the Middle East in the 8th to 14th centuries. This mystic secret society killed members of the Abbasid elite for political or religious reasons. It was said that they were drugged during their murders, often with materials such as hashish and opium.

 

The name assassin is derived from either hasishin for the supposed influence of the drugs, and disregard for their own lives in the process, or hassansin for their leader, Hassan-i-Sabah. The above, however, relies heavily on second-hand information from crusader-authored histories which have been traditionally very unreliable for information about native cultures.

 

Today, it is known that hashishinnya was an offensive term used to depict this cult by its Muslim and Mongolian detractors; the extreme zeal and cold preparation to murder makes it unlikely they ever used drugs. As far as is known they only used daggers, rarely survived their attacks, even when successful (unlike in many tales, where they are silent, invisible killers) and it seems that they rarely acted against westerners during the Crusades, partly because the crusading orders were not as affected by losing individual leaders as were the autocratic local regimes of the time.

 

The art of assassination is one of secrecy. Information regarding assassination is very hard to find and often of any material found, the author has no real experience on the subject.

 

Except material found here.

 

Included in this library you will find a genuine handbook written by an assassin hundreds of pages long and two other featured documents discussing the techniques implied by assassins. This assassination information is the most genuine available.


Counter Sniper Guide

Counter Sniper Guide

Here is everything the countersniper needs to know about ammunition, rifles, sights and how to deal with noise and muzzle flash. Useful supplementary material includes diagrams illustrating sight settings and photos depicting stable and unstable shooting positions.

With the help of this sniper’s bible, the famed U.S. Army snipers killed 1,187 Vietcong in one five–month period. Only 1.37 rounds were expended per kill. An excellent source of info for hunting, target or sniping work, this manual covers camouflage, shooting techniques and positions, map and compass reading and necessary equipment for survival in the field. 8 1/2 x 11, softcover, 100 illus., … Continue Reading

Kill Without Joy

Kill Without Joy

The object of this study is to instruct the reader in the techniques of taking another human life, up close, and doing it well. You may well find this booklet offensive, repulsive, brutal, and vicious. It is meant to be. It is completely contemptuous of human life and my only admonition to the would–be assassin is: KILL WITHOUT JOY.

No attempt is made to differentiate between the moral good or bad and the complexities of the motives of the reader are not delved into. This book will merely show you how to kill.

The victim (i.e.. the subject) can … Continue Reading

Murder Inc

Murder Inc

From the Introduction:

“Hitmen, cleaners, murderer’s, assassins, professional killers. Very few people ever consider killing as a profession; but for more people than the world’s governments care to admit, killing other people is indeed their profession.

Does our government train killers? Of course it does. Every government does. To believe otherwise is stupid. Today, the C.I.A., the D.I.A., the N.S.A., and each special operations branch of our armed forces all maintain elite “termination squads.”

Then there is the Mafia, every person on this planet knows about a Mafia of some sort. Mafia hitmen are the most dangerous killers. … Continue Reading

A Study of Assassination

A Study of Assassination

This document is an instructional guide on assassination found among the CIA’s training files for “Operation PB Success” –– the agency’s covert 1954 operation that overthrew the democratically elected government of Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala in June 1954. The CIA released it to the public on May 23, 1997, in response to a Freedom of Information Act request.

Assassination was indeed a part of the CIA’s plans in Guatemala. According to an internal CIA history, the agency drafted lists of Guatemalans “to eliminate immediately in event of [a] successful anti–communist coup.” Planning for assassination included budgeting, training programs, creation of hit … Continue Reading

The Hitman

The Hitman

Rex Feral kills for hire. Daring. Unafraid. Professional. Now he dares to tell his professional secrets.

Feral is a hit man. Some consider him a criminal. Others think him a hero. In truth, he is a lethal weapon aimed at the enemy of the one who pays him. He is the last recourse in these times when laws are so twisted that justice goes unserved. He is a man who controls his destiny through his private code of ethics, who feels no twinge of guilt at doing his job. He is a professional killer.

Learn how a pro makes a living … Continue Reading