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..I don't think that Harry was good enough at it to get any detailed plans out of Snape's mind. Yes, he saw flashes of Snape's childhood, but nothing terribly cohesive. Nor was it anything that Snape wanted to keep secret. Remember if Snape can fool Voldemort or Dumbledor using occlumency, wouldn't it stand to reason he wouldn't have to safeguard information from a mediocre legilimens? This is part of the reason I think Snape meant him to find his "worst memory" in the pensieve.
I do not believe the rest of the Order had any idea about any plan. I'm not even sure they knew about the Horcruxes. And considering how much trouble they would be in if Voldemort got wind of their plans, I think only Snape, Harry and Dumbledor originally were informed. The fewer people who knew the Dumbledor's attach strategy, the safer they all are. [/b]
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I agree.
There's something fishy about those three items in the pensive,
the Order knows nothing about the Plan, and
the Order knows nothing about the horcruxes.
Except that I don't see a reason to tell Snape about the horcruxes.
Slughorn might guess if he wanted to spend the time thinking about it, but he probably hasn't.