Korean War event
also: Korean thing, Korean history, the war, conflict, battles of war, war, war in Korea, what happened in Korea, Korean conflict, attack, Korean Peninsula, war next door in Korea, the Korean War, Korean hostilities
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Koreacountry · 72Chinacountry · 27United Statescountry · 24CIAintelligence service · 19Vietnam Warevent · 15Vietnamcountry · 14World War IIevent · 10Chiang Kai-shekperson · 10Operation Gladiooperation · 10Harry S. Trumanperson · 9Soviet Unioncountry · 8Douglas MacArthurperson · 8Japancountry · 6Frank Wisnerperson · 5United Wa State Armyorganization · 5South Vietnamplace · 5United Nationsorganization · 4Philippinescountry · 4Washington, D.C.place · 3Francecountry · 3Allen Dullesperson · 3China Lobbyorganization · 3Air Americaorganization · 3Irancountry · 3
Claims (7)
Communist conquest of China led_to
Korean War host_asserted
“The McCarran investigation of the IPR was predicated on the assumption that the U.S. diplomacy had never suffered a more disastrous defeat than in its failure to avert the communist conquest of China. The communist conquest of China led to …”
▶ The Colonel's Corner The Invisible Government by Dan Smoot Part 2 @ 35:37
David Halberstam exposed
Korean War book_quoted
“He ignorantly and arrogantly underestimated the resolve of the Chinese. He wasted American lives because of his dereliction, and the blood is on his hands. And he was responsible for much more than American forces. His egregious performance…”
▶ Operation Gladio - Korea Part 4 @ 27:44
ARC Wings carried_out_attack
Korean War book_quoted
“On January 12, 1953, the wing commander and a crew of 13 flew one of their B-29s to Yokota, another Air Force base, where they picked up leaflets to drop over North Korea. These would be the 581st first PSYOPs mission into the war. Stardust…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 7 @ 33:34
United Nations front_for
Korean War host_asserted
“They called it a UN effort, and all they got was onesies and twosies from like 13 other countries. We covered it a little bit yesterday in our first series of this Korean thing. But basically, they had like a handful of people from the UK, …”
▶ Operation Gladio - Korea Part 2 @ 1:14:02
Korean War carried_out_attack
Operation Gladio host_asserted
“for the military-industrial complex to transition into Operation Gladio. It is pivotal to everything that we talk about. And I want to explain a little bit about their history, and I'll go into more of that probably tomorrow. But it's also …”
▶ Operation Gladio - Korea @ 11:26
Douglas MacArthur instigated
Korean War host_asserted
“This crap in the dividing of the country, MacArthur got a little too big for his britches, instigated a false flag, used it as the pretense to go north, went all the way to the Chinese border and passed it, pissed off the Chinese who then g…”
▶ Operation Gladio- Prelude to Terror Chap 19 @ 55:18
CIA covered_up
Korean War host_asserted
“Even when the Chinese prisoners were captured, Willoughby dismissed them as a few advisors. The G2 in Tokyo recognized that some Chinese divisions had been moved, but argued that they were not combat strength units. Willoughby basically doc…”
▶ Operation Gladio - Korea Part 4 @ 10:10
Mentions (120)
▶ 26:57
So the very first event that we redirect our forces, because we haven't even demobilized after World War II completely, when we basically go to war in Korea. Well, why did we go to war in Korea? We are going to go in depth about that becaus…
▶ 1:57:41
So when you go back and you look, that is not the preponderance of it. A lot of these weapon systems comes by, and that's the reason why the United States has had to be at war since 19 whatever, whatever we went into Korea. But even before …
▶ 8:56
at a minimum, three days on Korea. I'm going to start off with William Bloom's Killing Hope book, chapter five, which talks about Korea from 1945 to 1953. And then we're going to go to several other source documents for the day two and thre…
▶ 9:27
Because I want you to understand the different aspects of what happened in Korea and why it matters now. And Korea was pivotal to the post-World War II building up of Operation Gladio. And you have to realize that we had not even...…
▶ 9:58
brought anyone home from World War II before we were in Korea. And you have to ask yourself why that is. Now, we're going to discuss this over the course of these next several days. It is quite obvious that as there…
▶ 10:57
There had to be some skirmish, some war, some false flag. There had to be some reason to keep all of the wheels of global warfare turning. And I want you guys to understand that because if you don't understand that core principle, you're no…
▶ 15:23
And again, this is from the book William Bloom, Killing Hope, Korea, 1945 to 1953. And it says, how is it that the Korean War escaped the protests which surrounded the war in Vietnam? Everything we've come to love and cherish about Vietnam …
▶ 15:48
The atrocities, the napalm, the mass slaughter of civilians, the cities, the villages laid to waste, the calculated management of the news, the sabotage of peace talks. But the American people were convinced that the war in Korea was an una…
▶ 16:15
None of the historical, political, or moral uncertainty that was the dilemma in Vietnam. The Korean War was seen to have begun in a specific manner, i.e. North Korea attacked South Korea in the early morning of 25 June 1950. While Vietnam, …
▶ 16:45
The U.S., after all, was fighting as part of a U.N. army. What was there to protest about? And, of course, there was McCarthyism, so prevalent in the 1950s, which further served to inhibit protest, because you didn't want to be seen as a co…
▶ 21:02
That Korea was still one country with unification still the goal at the time of the war began was underscored by the chief U.S. delegate in the U.N., Warren Austin, in a statement that he made. Here's the quote. The artificial barrier that …
▶ 21:29
Its Commission on Korea, nor the Republic of Korea, which meant the South part, recognizes such a line. Now, the North Koreans, by armed attack upon the Republic of Korea, have denied the reality of any such line. Now, that's the U.S.'s tak…
▶ 21:58
could thus be regarded as no more than an escalation of an ongoing civil war. The North Korean government had claimed that in 1949 alone, the South Korean army or police perpetrated 2,617 armed incursions into the North to carry out murder,…
▶ 23:25
and their lifestyles. And that was before the Japanese ever showed up. A State Department official, Ambassador-at-Large Philip Jessup, speaking in April of 1950, said this, quote, There is constant fighting between the South Korean Army and…
▶ 23:56
boundary, as I did, UC troop movements, fortifications, and prisoners of war. Unquote. Seen in this context, the question of who fired the first shot on June 25th takes on a much different air of significance. As it is, the North Korean ver…
▶ 26:20
In either case, such a military victory on the part of the South forces is extremely difficult to reconcile with the official Western account maintained to this day that has the North Korean army sweeping into the South in a devastating sur…
▶ 30:59
had often expressed his desire and readiness to compel the unification of Korea by force. On 26 June, the New York Times reminded its readers that on a number of occasions, Dr. Lee had indicated that his army would have taken the offensive …
▶ 31:29
That's a common theme as well. Ri may have had good reason for provoking a full-scale war apart from the issue of unification. On 30 May, elections for the National Assembly were held in the South in which Ri's party suffered a heavy loss. …
▶ 31:59
Stanley Earl resigned in July, expressing the opinion that South Korean government was an oppressive regime, which did very little to help the people, and that an internal South Korean rebellion against re-government would have occurred if …
▶ 34:20
with money, blackmail, whatever. And then those people basically sell out their countrymen. And you can see this hand working in here as we go through this information. Soviet leader Khrushchev and his statements makes it plain that North K…
▶ 34:50
of the South for some time, and he reports their actual invasion without any mention of provocation. This would seem to put that particular question to rest. However, Khrushchev's chapter on Korea is a wholly superficial account. It is not …
▶ 1:08:28
You may want to pass over if you've got a weak stomach because it truly is horrific what napalm does. And they intentionally stockpiled it to use in Korea. It was something we more or less figured out. And we refined our technique in Korea …
▶ 1:09:05
That's a true statement. AMC, go ahead. I want to add, too, is it's important to think of Korea not as, at the time, as not as North and South Korea because that wasn't really a thing prior to post-war. And to add insult to injury in the ba…
▶ 1:11:58
to me seems like the largest case of RICO ever recorded in history from the start years before Korea, but all the way up through now, it seems like it's just the black syndicate. It's a huge RICO racket. It's terrible. And what's interestin…
▶ 8:26
that MacArthur didn't allow CIA officers in his headquarters in Tokyo. And right here, we have two of them. So I just want to point that out. And also, one of the flying units that was active in North Korea area during the Korean War was fl…
▶ 13:07
And not only in the Far East, where the ideological conflict was playing out in the Korean War. Yeah, that's not what it was either. The Air Resupply and Communication Services acronym, ARC, A-R-C, was fitting. Three ARC subgroups, known as…
▶ 19:19
The Korean War went from 1950 to 1953. These people went immediately from Korea to Vietnam. No break. Got to keep that military industrial complex funding rolling. So they were there in support of the French forces. And keep in mind that th…
▶ 1:11:33
I liked him, but that explains a lot. So thank you. And I have a friend. My father has passed recently. He wasn't in Korea, but his good friend was who is still alive. So I'm going to try to get him. He didn't talk much about Korea. He was …
▶ 1:12:03
first account stories from him because that's the best kind but it is and that's really important jillian and thank you for bringing that up because these people are not going to be with us for very much longer um if you know people that um…
▶ 1:14:02
They called it a UN effort, and all they got was onesies and twosies from like 13 other countries. We covered it a little bit yesterday in our first series of this Korean thing. But basically, they had like a handful of people from the UK, …
▶ 1:14:30
Right. Okay. Well, that's good to know. Yeah, I'll try to reach out to him and he's really in good health. So I better. Yeah. You just never know once they get there. You know, it's just but thanks for all you guys. Thank you. I mean, my be…
▶ 0:47
And that's just as good. We'll close out the week on Korea because, as we've said repeatedly, it's foundational for the rest of the information. And the more I look, the more I find. So it's gotten crazy. By the way, ma'am, doesn't it cheer…
▶ 2:47
Began with a disaster. Well, first of all, we weren't actually in the People's Republic of China. We were in Korea. So step number one, and we're not even finished with the first sentence. But they want you to believe that we were. They cat…
▶ 5:17
The article goes on, Mao Zedong formally announced the creation of the People's Republic of China in 1949. The year after the creation, Mao decided that China would enter the Korean War. No, he was provoked because he was attacked. The war …
▶ 11:06
get the impression of what our history actually is. But I did want to read this one part because it talks about India's part in this. And it says that India had tried to warn America that Chinese forces would enter the Korean War if attacke…
▶ 16:42
It says, less than three years after its creation, the CIA became involved in its first hot war after North Korea launched an invasion into the South. Not true. The new agency conducted an array of espionage and covert operations unilateral…
▶ 18:08
invasion, because we're not going to condemn the attacks that happened before that. By all appearances, North Korean attacks seem to have caught the Truman and MacArthur and the fledgling CIA by surprise. Within days, the congressional crit…
▶ 26:50
The war is unpopular in the U.S. and goes badly. It costs the president a chance at a second term. This is not Vietnam. This is Korea. The Korean War is a very bitter memory for Americans. Even though a non-communist South Korea was preserv…
▶ 28:40
The communist victory in China was the pivotal event affecting the first Korean War, basically. And then also the second, we already know about that, which we're going to talk about next week, which is Vietnam. I had always wondered why the…
▶ 29:03
It was not a happy outcome, even though a non-communist government was preserved. The war was very unpopular and ended in an armistice, not a peace agreement. America's involvement was plagued by mismanagement and dereliction. The whole aff…
▶ 31:00
is so telling. And this book makes that very clear. I needed to know more about this conflict. I had no idea anyone in the Johnson administration was even thinking about Korea before the decision to put boots on the ground of Vietnam. U.S. …
▶ 31:29
and get her ass kicked like we did in Korea at the end. That was my part. Growing up during the 60s, I had always thought of Korea as a victory or at least a draw. As I delved into the history of the Vietnam War, it became obvious there wer…
▶ 16:33
This organization operated not exclusively in Portugal, but also in Italy. Italian senators found that the CIA supported Agenter Press, and Agenter Press was led by a French guy by the name of Captain Yves-Garrion Serac. Serac, a specialist…
▶ 18:50
Many of Portugal's Gladio units had previously fought against the African colonial independence movements throughout Portugal colonies. Compellingly, Yves Gaterin Serrat was a Catholic militant who had fought on behalf of France and Vietnam…
▶ 56:09
But my father used to always have me ask, you know, he always used to say, always ask questions. And so as I became an adult, I started noticing, I guess, even as a child, noticed things that were unusual, but never had any idea what was go…
▶ 55:18
This crap in the dividing of the country, MacArthur got a little too big for his britches, instigated a false flag, used it as the pretense to go north, went all the way to the Chinese border and passed it, pissed off the Chinese who then g…
▶ 1:00:27
In the wake of the Chinese Communist Party victory and the surprise entry into the Korean War, U.S. conservatives found Chiang Kai-shek's Taiwan an opportune place to build a new international vision that countered the containment policy of…
▶ 1:00:53
conservative Republicans in Congress believed that Chiang Kai-shek and his military could overthrow China. And we have speculated, and I don't have a smoking gun document, but that is exactly why we went to war in Korea. That is exactly why…
▶ 1:01:24
strong leader. And they had no counterpart in the South, and it was very agricultural in the South of Korea. And they had no way of getting around Kim. So the whole Korean War was basically to overthrow Kim out of the North, basically assas…
▶ 1:02:48
Moreover, Chiang Kai-shek's soldiers were successful. Mainland China would once again be open to American business and quote unquote missionaries, you know, for exploitation. And we did expend American lives in Korea, a lot of them, in orde…
▶ 11:33
baiting officials who suggested any accommodations with communist China. Now, I'm going to take exception to it saying that the China lobby was largely ineffective in lobbying the U.S. government. That's why we had the Korean War. That's wh…
▶ 49:24
They also trained Filipino paramilitary and police units and disseminated disinformation, tortured enemies, and employed hunter-killer teams to murder the Huk leaders and sympathizers, which is exactly what they were planning on doing in Ch…
▶ 46:47
So what they want to have happen is under the Asian People's Anti-Communist League is they want you to believe back in the 1950s, like in the immediate aftermath of the Korean War and before we even go into Vietnam, that Ho Chi Minh was a c…
▶ 2:09:08
Even yesterday, one of her friends came over. She said, I just want my daughter to go. She talks too much, talks too much. She's just crazy, crazy. She's half Korean. This morning, I'm just now leaving her house for a minute. She told me to…
▶ 2:10:57
It's like, okay. And I start digging and going through everything. And it's like, oh, we're going to do Libya. It's like, oh, all right. But in some respects, because what they've been doing to these different countries, because she's been …
▶ 2:11:49
And then how you guys discussed it and broke it all apart. She's like, oh, my gosh. Stellar. Stellar. I think we're going to make your mom upset. No, no, no, no. She's she is now awake. She's I know. But I'm telling you that that's not what…
▶ 2:14:02
Just a quick question for you, because unfortunately I'm a part of the generation that got propaganda in school instead of facts, which is great. That's why I dropped out and torrented all my textbooks. I was under the assumption that what …
▶ 2:14:32
Well, every war is a Nazi war from that perspective, but you're going to have to wait. We're not going to kind of go through Korea because it is a very complicated, and it'll probably take us at least two or three of our spaces to be able t…
▶ 1:44:56
was allowed to be facilitated for so long. And that's where you get to the drug trafficking, the human trafficking, and the weapons trafficking. And the origination of all of that is in Asia, and it started with the Korean War. So go ahead,…
▶ 1:55:08
And, yeah, that's pretty much what I wanted to say. Thanks. Well, I mean, I think that's basically how we have left, other than maybe the shitty way we left Afghanistan. I think that's how we've left every war. Those that fight that war, be…
▶ 1:57:56
totally perverse psychological operational aspect to war in basically how they started out the Vietnam War with the brainwashing of those people in the North to get them to move out of places they'd been for hundreds of years. I think every…
▶ 1:59:22
that that Gottlieb guy had been doing the entire time. So yeah, it's crazy. Go ahead, Stellar. So what I'm gathering is, is like after World War II got finished and, you know, the OSS, you know, they had their little mind game things going …
▶ 2:08:09
basically stay behind units. Some even call them stay behind units, like the one when we were just covering Korea. I don't know if he was with us then, but they actually called them in a declassified CIA memo, stay behind units in the memo …
▶ 2:27:54
anti-communist league yes he was during world war ii and the korean war yeah i was just wondering i haven't heard you mention his name and i and also i saw there was a call um right after the jfk assassination um that was listened in on tha…
▶ 48:18
According to a U.S. Army G2 report, between 14 and 15 residents of the Jeju were killed in 1948. In one mass execution the following year, 249 people were killed with the approval of Sigmund Reed, an event that was not reported at all outsi…
▶ 48:49
the Korean War, because it ended in 53, violence had basically significantly reduced and restrictions eased. But for decades, even mentioning the massacre was considered taboo. Those who did risk being labeled a North Korean sympathizer and…
▶ 53:37
calls Jeju the core of the post-1945 conundrum and collapse of what still continues to be a Pax Americano. She told someone, Inkstick, that Jeju was arguably the precursor to the Korean War, which began after widespread civil conflict and b…
▶ 38:39
It's a pretty important time. It means he's the guy who directed the Korean War. I should also point out that him and Marshall were really vocal in opposing the recognition of Israel in 1948. So he did not want Israel to be recognized as a …
▶ 40:09
That's what he wanted. He wanted a much bigger military presence in the United States and peace. And he got his way for the most part. And this is why he pushes the Korean War. You know, he is fear mongering the Korean War. You talk about t…
▶ 40:39
everything that you learned about the Korean war in class was a lie. As we have found most of our history that the threat in the North was exaggerated. And we were basically putting Gladio stay behind units in the North in order to justify …
▶ 2:57
Comes to Yale. It was a close friend and classmate, of course, of William F. Buckley, Bonesman, who we've discussed before. Yep. The father of conservatism. You want to guess where Evan Galbraith went to law school? Harvard. Oh, of course. …
▶ 51:05
Oh, yeah, Carnegie names it. This is an exact quote from him. He says, war could be eliminated by stronger international laws and organizations. He founds this endowment in 1910. Have we had any wars since 1910? Like perpetual war? Yeah, li…
▶ 22:57
It's so crazy. It says the document itself is titled The War in Korea and World Political Possibilities for Germany and Europe. And it was originally classified as top secret. So how in the world are they talking about at the same time the …
▶ 1:05:28
Nassau seems to think that the argument that he was pro-Hitler or pro-fascist is vastly overstated by propagandists of the likes who were on the so-called left New Deal, but later moved into the MICC during the Cold War. Because he says, lo…
▶ 46:09
inside their country. They were paid a handsome amount of money to include $100 a day at the time for re-entry. And if you made it back, you got a $1,000 bonus. They didn't pay out a lot of bonuses. One of the earliest landings along the co…
▶ 46:39
So this is all going on where we're nipping around the edges of the Soviet Union, inside the Soviet Union, attacking them through the CIA while we're around over here on the Korean Peninsula already at war and headed towards China. A more s…
▶ 1:13:06
You don't need a tracker, Miles. We have 24-7 satellite coverage. You can't move some of these large pieces of equipment that was sitting on that base without somebody having eyes on. The whole purpose of leaving it over there was to pilfer…
▶ 52:53
Right. Exactly. That's exactly what what you said. Yes. Everything was a complete lie. She honestly thought just like how I did and like most of us did that, you know, we were on the side of right trying to prevent communism. But in actuali…
▶ 53:49
totally faultless she does have a hard time understanding and she just shakes her head and says i wish daddy was here i wish daddy was here but yeah um i mean her family is still broken apart um some are in the north some are in the south a…
▶ 54:42
It became very apparent with the mass extermination of nationalists that wanted a unified Korean Peninsula and all foreigners out. That was their whole thing. They were unified in, because they had been under occupation, basically a colony …
▶ 1:29:56
Because you can't go back to post-World War II and understand that we went immediately into the Korean War, followed immediately by Vietnam. And we had one military engagement after another consecutively with people deployed all over the wo…
▶ 28:05
While in January 1949, George Kennan predicted that, quote, by next year at this time, we would be able to recognize the Chinese communists, unquote. All such thoughts were frustrated by the sudden outbreak of war in Korea on June 25th, 195…
▶ 28:32
which may have been anticipated by certain KMT spectators, who, because of the war, cleared an estimated profit of $30 million in soybeans. Efforts at rapprochement with Peking were again frustrated by this crisis. Now, those of you who've …
▶ 31:14
They found enough people to set up some stay-behind units, smuggled them into the northern sector just over the area that, and into the area that was being oversaw by the Soviet Union. Then they pretended like they were part of a Soviet Uni…
▶ 31:44
So it was the South attacking the South, pretending to be the North. And that was the entire impetus of the Korean War. It was all planned. MacArthur basically tells them that it is not enough to take out because it's actually their people …
▶ 32:41
Chiang Kai-shek temporarily had been assigned the northern sector of Vietnam because if you go back and you read the documents, Vietnam was separated the exact same way, only on paper it says China was given the northern sector and the Brit…
▶ 34:33
When they talk about Chinese nationalists, they're actually talking about a drug lord, Chiang Kai-shek. Shortly after the outbreak of the Korean War on July 10th, 1950, Civil Air Transport, along with its holding company called Airedale Cor…
▶ 37:03
Briefly, as the CIA deputy director from 51 to 53, which is during the course of the Korean War, soon afterwards, two of Wolf's fellow directors in the small Empire City Savings Bank, a Mr. Samuel Sloan Walker and author B. Richardson, were…
▶ 44:28
in 1953, which would be at the end of the Korean War. 17 days after the civil air transport using planes and pilots loaned by the U.S. Air Force began its military airlift to Dien Bien Phu. So, I'm sure that's just a coincidence. The inaugu…
▶ 4:21
in that arrangement. And the China lobby basically functioned at the time as an NGO, much like what we're talking about in the news today. They had obtained or purchased significant support within the U.S. political establishment, meaning t…
▶ 5:23
And then we go to he gets kicked out, obviously, and of China. And then suddenly we declare war in Korea, which you guys know from our previous lessons was basically a front to be able to go into the northern sector of a fairly well fortifi…
▶ 9:21
And by the 1970s, they had actually done so by basically eliminating, like in assassination, almost the entire Corsican mafia crew. But I find it very interesting that they're talking about using Iran, because keep in mind, in 1953, we over…
▶ 36:38
the expectation that Congress would be told that all was not well in Korea. That is, unless a surprised and outraged Congress was the goal. So in other words, they're hinting at another false flag. With this and much more evidence, Cummings…
▶ 49:44
was involved in yet another major San Francisco drug bust. The KMT was faded, but these other drug lords and their drug connections were still in place, largely thanks to the CIA. These continuities lend a coherence to the intrigue leading …
▶ 1:29:20
In exchange for his freedom, tell him where all of these units were and they would jointly have command and control and they would set up a function in NATO to manage them for the future. Because, of course, it was under the guise of they'l…
▶ 1:29:46
These types of capabilities were set up because the U.S. had already pre-decided that Kim in Korea, the current Kim's dad, was not going to be in charge of a country called Korea. So they were going to do whatever they could to keep that co…
▶ 1:30:19
Not only did they refuse to do that, they planted stay behind units in the northern area, which was under the jurisdiction. You know how like at the end of the war, they'll assign geographic like what we did in the no fly zone in northern I…
▶ 5:55
The next five chapters of this book, he presents the information of all of the themes that the book's about, drugs, oil, and war. In the two decades after 1950, the year the Korean War and the China lobby began, there was never a genuine U.…
▶ 1:04:09
I have to point out that he sought military assistance from Latin America for the Korean War, basically promoting the fact that, hey, we've been here for you in Latin America. You need to be there for us as we go and do imperialism and basi…
▶ 7:18
on what was actually going on. And I've not, I've only got the first two chapters of this one read. But it is talking about the hidden history, sorry, the hidden history of Korea. And it's very interesting only because we now look at the Ko…
▶ 7:45
Basically, we were the good guys and we went in there to try to free the entire country when, in fact, that's not how that happened at all. What's interesting about this book is this book was written at the end of the war. It was copyrighte…
▶ 6:33
The proposals were soon afoot in Washington to exploit the still contentious communist control of mainland by using a new nationalist base in the islands off the coast of China. The Korean War injected tremendous momentum into this program.…
▶ 7:02
The secret campaign against China had only minor success. More importantly, the intelligence buildup that occurred during this time because of the Korean War greatly expanded the U.S. capability and its interest in covert operations overall…
▶ 33:02
the field armies that it had used to intervene in the Korean War. Thus, the military impact of the anti-communist guerrillas, this guy said was minimum. But you don't have mobilized almost 1.2 million people to fight this element without it…
▶ 1:27:38
all to launch a bunch of unsuccessful paramilitary operations. And this is all going on at the same time you're running a war next door in Korea. So that pretty much ends the chapter. But I think it's important to take a step back here and …
▶ 20:00
which is too limited to justify atomic war. It cannot protect uncommitted nations against a communist takeover using local or guerrilla forces. It cannot be used to so-called brushfire peripheral wars, unquote. JFK's vision was different fr…
▶ 21:20
as president of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York, which was then in its final stages of construction. This employment seemed to make Taylor even more attractive to JFK. Here was a general who was cultured, who had writ…
▶ 26:03
The 10th Special Forces Group had been placed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, since June of 1952. In September of 1953, it was supplemented by the 77th Special Forces Group, which remained in the U.S. while 782 men of the 10th were deployed …
▶ 29:13
And so this entire time, they're not attacking anybody. Nobody in the Soviet Union is attacking. Nobody in China until Korea pops off. And then that's because the U.S. went into Chinese territory. So everything about our history has been a …
▶ 1:56:03
And the Carlyle Group conveniently bought in minority shares of all of the military industrial complex at the beginning of the 1990s, which we all know what happened during the 1990s, 2000s and on. We've been not that we weren't at perpetua…
▶ 16:26
Operations as the Albanian one that we talked about and the China one that we talked about, you know, from those not corrupt CIA people, were only the tip of the iceberg. During the Truman administration, more precisely during the Korean Wa…
▶ 24:43
the CIA. And then, of course, they all end up being in the CIA. The OPC field stations increased from 7 to 47. Personnel to about 6,000 by 1952. And 1952 would have been in the middle of the Korean War just prior to overthrowing Iran. And t…
▶ 58:47
Now, keep in mind, these Eastern immigrants are Nazi terrorists. This bill became public law 587 passed by the 81st Congress of 1950 on the eve of the Korean War. So we're getting ready to start a war in Korea. So we pay the Congress to pas…
▶ 1:00:18
and they're going to put these people in them under quote-unquote enlistment, and then they're going to give them their citizenship. These people that are fighting over H-1B visas have no clue any of this shit has ever been done before. Whe…
▶ 1:01:58
were a time of change in the entire covert operations. The Korean War, winding down and in a stalemate under, I think, yeah, here it is, signed July 27, 1953. By then, they had tried repeatedly to insert paramilitary operations inside of Ch…
▶ 1:02:32
On the ground, ground to a halt, reports of the Korean partisan units claimed accomplishments, but the veterans had a completely different story as to how the war went. The Korean Air was witnessed a substantial buildup in the means to psyc…
▶ 1:03:04
Before the end of the conflict, the CIA and the military possessed paramilitary resource out the yin-yang. They had covert legions ready to undertake any type of operation anywhere, and operators like Frank Wisner and managers like Gordon G…
▶ 1:04:32
The Republican Party platform offered to roll back the Iron Curtain, not just contain it. While Eisenhower, though he pledged to end the Korean War, promised to intensify the Cold War through such measures as removing restrictions on Chiang…
▶ 1:51:48
that Mao was underestimated because everybody, I mean, MacArthur, all of those people were backing William Pauly. All of the ambassadors over there were all backing Chiang Kai-shek. So they were doing it covertly because they couldn't do it…
▶ 1:52:18
in 1950. So, you know, at the same time, and again, there is a lot of information out there that the Korean War was fought in order to insert Chiang Kai-shek into Northern Korea and then eventually back into China to overtake Mao. So they n…