GLADIOARCHIVEAND BEYOND
sign in

Operation Gladio (241113)

1:48:44 · recorded 2024-11-13

Transcript

0:00 Hello, hello, hello, everybody. Well, good afternoon, ma'am. How are you? I'm good. It already kicked me out. I heard another tweet, and I'm like, what? I'm like, we're off to a good start. We're definitely off to a good start. Let me grab my laptop. Probably a couple things that we want to go over, just because they happen to be.
0:36 People are talking about them right now. And it's funny how when you've been a part of something and you understand it because you were part of it, you oftentimes forget that other people don't know certain pieces of it because they haven't been part of it. And then you see somebody say it. You're like, oh, crap, maybe other people don't know that.
1:05 So one of the guys pointed out this morning, Nicholas, he's in here sometimes. I don't know what his actual name is. It says nickel on his identifier, whatever the app thing is, handle. And pointing out the obvious that this iteration of leadership selection for the Senate.
1:37 obviously highlights many things. And remember that we're experiencing a live civics lesson. And basically, to me, the last eight years has been a massive civics lesson for everyone who has not paid attention.
2:05 did not learn in school anything about how their government operates, for obvious reasons, the dumbing down of America. But each session of Congress is separate from anything that came before and anything that happens after. As a matter of fact, if the House, which they did, passed several laws and they sent them over to the Senate,
2:37 Well, if the Senate didn't take them up, which, of course, Chuck Schumer did not, the House has to basically revote them in because obviously they could have changed majority. And therefore, they have to revote them because anything that happened last session means nothing to the next session, including a Senate leadership vote. So let me say that again.
3:09 If they have a Senate leadership vote this session, it doesn't apply to next session. If next session decides not to honor it, then it doesn't apply. So that's very, very important for people to understand to number one, quit hyperventilating over something that may or may not even matter. What I do think matters and the reason why.
3:44 I highlighted it, is the secrecy and the process in which it's being done matters. But it matters for reasons that most people may not think about. It matters because of putting each person's senator on a stage for everyone to watch and whether or not they called out.
4:12 the hypocrisy of a secret ballot in a quote-unquote democracy. Yes, I know we don't live in a democracy, but this is the term that they use. So how do you tell me repeatedly and shove it in my face that you're all about protecting the democracy, according to your words, and while at the same time you're comfortable with
4:44 and fully supportive of having a secret ballot. A secret ballot has no place in a republic or a democracy, either one. Own it. If you're going to vote, own it. But this is illustrating to you and every one of us in America who these people are. And it is only when they are put on the spot like this.
5:14 that they will demonstrate to you who they really are, where they can't just smooth talk their way out of a position on something and kind of split the hair in, you know, being for and against it, depending on what audience they're in. They cannot do that with this. And every one of them should have called out the hypocrisy of a secret ballot. A couple did. The majority of them did not.
5:44 And on top of that, several of them showed support for Rick Scott, while many of the others, and you guys have seen it, you're all on X, the craziness of the positions that the other two, Thune and Cornyn, have taken on so many different issues. It's crazy that they would even think that they fit into a leadership position in.
6:15 a Senate in today's United States after the election we just had. So I wouldn't sweat the small stuff. The other thing that I wanted to highlight before we get started is the fact that all of the rumor mills are, and I think that's what the whole Senate thing is all about too, getting us emotionally involved.
6:47 in it and spun up because the the more emotionally um uh triggered people can be the more easily they can be manipulated so there's going to be a lot of rumors that goes around about what trump is is or isn't going to do as far as appointments goes most of you guys all have um accounts on true social
7:19 I would strongly encourage you to follow who he actually announces and when he announces them, as opposed to responding to people with suggestions one way or the other. And it is perfectly acceptable if you hear a rumor that someone is going to be nominated for this to point out.
7:46 Why that would not be a good idea, because that's all about informational warfare. That is about us doing our homework and knowing whether someone is good or bad. And I have pointed out that we can only make that judgment based on the information we know today because the I reposted Staff Sergeant Q's.
8:14 The very short video he posted in response to my comment about Operation Grey Lord. We have no idea what's going on behind the scenes. We may never know. And as a result of that, it would be other than us using it as an exercise to do our homework and investigate these people, which is always a good idea.
8:44 And we don't have to agree with everything. If you look at the one that Trump just came out and confirmed, which is walls, you know, he has some good things and bad things. I am I did order his book because supposedly the book talks about terrorism. And I would like to know if.
9:16 he has any idea about Operation Gladio. And his book is primarily about modern day warfare. And I'm going to be cautiously optimistic that there's going to be something in the book that reflects that he knows. Whether that's true or not, I don't know. It appears...
9:47 um, based on his biography that, um, the way they talk about him, it makes it sound like, um, he stayed on active duty for 20 years. He did not. Apparently he was on active duty for like four years and then he transferred to the guard. Um, and, um, let's see.
10:20 It says that he was raised by a hardworking single mother and is the son and grandson of Navy chiefs. Where's my Navy chief? I don't see him in here. It says that he graduated from BMI, which is Virginia Military Institute. And let's see. He was he went to Ranger School as a lieutenant, graduated as a Green Beret.
10:58 And I'm not sure how many tours he went on while he was on active duty, but he did deploy overseas as a guardsman. And let's see. It says that he led the team searching for deserter Bergdahl. And he was the first one to publicly call into question that Obama's labeling of Bergdahl as a hero.
11:26 He does have, obviously, some great points in his favor. But like I said, I ordered the book. I'm going to look it over and see how it matches up with the stuff that we know. He served on a China task force with 15 Republican lawmakers representing 14 committees of jurisdiction to coordinate policy on China. And let's see.
11:56 He opened a business and it said that he is a small business owner. I don't see anywhere where it talks about what his business is. Hopefully it'll say so in the book. But he lives in St. John's County, which is on the east side of Florida. And let's see. That should do it. Yeah, it says here he's in the...
12:27 deland orban beach palm coast area um so cool i don't have a very much other um to add about what's going on um at the moment in in in that regard other than what i just said so we are going to go back to um where we left off yesterday and um we are going to talk about
12:59 what Shackley and Clines and Edwin Wilson was doing as it relates to setting up the network. We left it off in Laos and that they were setting up that whole network. We also talked briefly about Eric von Marbog, M-A-R-B-O-D.
13:29 who was a logistician in the Department of Defense. And he basically was the guy that got everything together. The Loggies is probably one of the least appreciated and most critical elements in an operation because they're the ones that, and especially in what the CIA was doing, because the movement of the goods, both the drugs and the weapons, was critical.
13:58 To their cash flow. That's all done by logisticians. And so very, very critical. And Edwin Wilson said about this Eric Marbog guy, quote, he had the ability to get hardware and manpower to where it needed to be under the most difficult of circumstances. And it goes on to say that he was also.
14:24 part of the Vietnam evacuation after the fall of Saigon. And basically that the effort that was put forward to do what they did, even though it fell short of what they were trying to do, was nothing less than overwhelming given the odds that they were working under.
14:50 says that he took command of an aircraft carrier and ran rescue operations as helicopters landed and took off from the U.S. Embassy, which was under attack. He actually ordered choppers to be pushed overboard to make room for more helicopters so that they could push overboard to make way for more helicopters to land. So von Marbog became a world figure.
15:18 and basically ended up controlling much of the U.S. military foreign aid during the 1970s and 80s. And what's interesting about this is it's a name that you never have heard of. And that is true of most of the logisticians that are critical to these efforts. That was one of the things that struck me when I was reading Otto Skorzeny's book that Major Gannis had put together. He was a master at
15:47 the logistics part of operations. He was a master planner. He was a master organizer as far as the logistics goes. And he was also very good at the tail end on the actual execution of it. And that's why so many of his missions, even though they were awful, they were very successful because he was able to
16:14 kind of run the tables when it came to filling all of those roles. In addition to these, like the Kleins and Marbog and Wilson, there was a supporting cast of characters from the CIA, the military, and CIA-trained Cuban exiles, which we have categorized as our Operation Gladio inside the United States.
16:43 The colorful special operations expert, General John Sengleb, who shows up in all of these stories, worked in Laos and Cambodia with Shackley. Under Sengleb, during this period, were Secord and a young Marine named Lieutenant Oliver North. Years later, Secord and North would control portions of the Iran-Contra operations for America's private intelligence network. Secord
17:14 Answered to both Singlib and General Adderholt, who headed the military assistance command in Thailand. Now, for those of you who are not military inclined, General Harry Adderholt is an icon in special operations, like the granddaddy. Both Singlib and Adderholt would later become pawns of the network. All these men socialized with one another over the years.
17:42 and with the opium warlock, warlord, Vang Pao. In 66, Secord had already flown more than 200 secret combat missions, mostly into Cambodia, and won four air medals. When he appealed to General Aderholt for his chance to join the secret war in Laos, he was rewarded with the management of secret air operations there. Let's see. His mannerisms will always...
18:15 will be with us always. One of his assignments for Shackley was to drop dishwashing soap on the Ho Chi Minh Trail in a rainy season. The CIA had concluded that this would make the trail too slippery for the enemy use. Like most of the CIA's attempts in Asia, it did not work. General Aderholt had little appreciation for Secord's personality.
18:39 but liked his ramrod straight West Point train professionalism. I thought he was arrogant. He acted like a general when he was a captain, but he was the best officer I ever had. General Singalib ran covert air operations in the entire region, but it was Secord who got close to Shackley and his deputy, Thomas Klein. Paul Helliwell's replacement in Bangkok was...
19:06 This is where our stories merge, guys. And this is kind of the fun part for me of doing all of this. Paul Helliwell was replaced in Bangkok by a guy by the name of Bernard Houghton. Now, who remembers who Bernard Houghton is? Do you remember, Bridget? Can you spell his name? H-O-U-G-H-T-O-N. Houghton. Okay. Nope.
19:42 I got nothing. Okay, he's the guy that ran the operation in Australia for Nugent Hand. Oh, Nugent Hand Link. He is the guy that, Houghton is the guy that owned the restaurant in that red light area that they set up the R&R for all of the guys coming in from Vietnam. They set up that hotel that they had cameras in, and they had the hookers downstairs, and they had the casino there.
20:13 And when we were doing the Nugent Hand section, we were talking about Rupert Murdoch and all of his guys that were down there in the mafia that had owned that entire strip of area in Sydney where all of the vices, like it was like the Las Vegas portion of that area. And Houghton was the one that ran that land where they were selling plots of land.
20:42 to people as part of the Nugent Hand. Yeah, Bernie Houghton was involved, like probably of the, he was the number three guy at Nugent Hand. You had Nugent and you had Hand and then you had Houghton. So Houghton replaces Paul Helliwell in Bangkok, Thailand, when Paul Helliwell moves to Miami to set up the Ford deployed Thai console.
21:13 in Miami to be the reception of all the drugs that are about ready to come out of there. So that's very interesting because Houghton also, while he was in Vietnam, he made a fortune stealing military supplies and reselling them sometimes back to the military. So it says Houghton had ferried planes for General Aderholt in Asia and had a longstanding intelligence connection.
21:46 Bernie Houghton's cover was to operate the R&R tours, it says right here, R&R tours for GIs in Australia. Houghton expanded military rest stops to include Sydney, where he had opened the Bourbon and Beef Steak, that's the name of his restaurant that was next to the hotel, in 1967, and he developed ties with all of the Austrian intelligence services.
22:15 Houghton would play a key role in money laundering for the American Private Intelligence Network through 1980, and that is with Nugent Hand, even though this author doesn't mention that. Another man who assisted Shackley in the secret war in Laos was a Bronx-born Green Beret named Michael Hand of Nugent Hand. Hand had enlisted in the Special Forces in 1963. In 1965, he held off a Viet Cong attack.
22:44 at the Special Forces camp of Dong Yang. As a result, he received a silver star, a purple heart, and America's second highest decoration, the Distinguished Cross. But there was much more to Hand's story. In 1966, Hand had already been working for the CIA while he's supposedly still on active duty. He helped the Montegards get their poppy to market.
23:13 Via Air America, which of course is the CIA's airline. A quote from William Corson, quote, they had made their living for generations growing opium. They foolishly took our word that they should fight for us. We merged them with the Vang Pao's opium army. When we decided that we were losing the war.
23:37 We moved many of them down to the Delta and we did not provide for them. We began carpet bombing with B-52s, essentially destroying very ancient cultures. Unquote. By 1967, Mike Hand was the back man between the opium warlords and the banking conduit set up to launder drug profits. He used Air America pilots to move the drugs and money and then, working with Houghton, Shackley, Colby,
24:05 used the Royal Thai Military Bank, a connection to set up Paul Helliwell's banks to launder the money, kicking back a percentage to fund the Thai officers already under CIA control. And that's where you come up with the $35 million that eventually gets paid to the Thai National Police. As Shackley later explained it to the FBI, the Royal Thai Military Bank was set up
24:34 to provide loans, jobs, and sources of cash to keep the Thai military establishment happy. High Thai officials would exert influence on the bank in respects to loans, Shackley said, and also said a brother of a high official could go to the bank, introduce himself to the official's brother, and this would be sufficient for the manager to give him a loan. The amount depended on the stature of the relative. Meanwhile,
25:03 Hand, with the assistance of Houghton, developed a knack for handling the profits of the opium crops. Eventually, both Houghton and Hand became key players at Nugent Hand Bank and the CIA's successor to Paul Helliwell's offshore banks and the predecessor to the BCCI network, which, of course, we covered as well. In 1968, the secret war in Laos was a failure.
25:32 Victory was on the horizon, and for all its efforts, the CIA chief accomplishment in Laos seemed to have been destroying the ancient civilizations and increasing the world's heroin output, which is exactly what they meant to do all along. In private briefings of key members of Congress, CIA men would admit that some of the American friends in the area did smuggle opium, but they vehemently denied that they took part in it. Former CIA officer Del Rosario
26:02 disputed this claim and quote, in 1971, I was an operations assistant for Continental Air Services, which flew for the CIA in Laos. It was another front company. The company's transport planes shipped large quantities of rights. However, when the freight invoice was marked diverse, I knew it was opium. As a rule, an office telephone with a special number would ring and the voice would say, the customer's here.
26:29 And that was the code designation for the CIA agent that hired us. Keep an eye on the plane from Ban Howe side. We're sending some goods and someone's going to take care of it. Nobody's allowed to touch anything. Nothing can be unloaded, was the typical message. These shipments were always top priority. Sometimes the opium was unloaded in Laos and stored in an Air America depot. Other times it went to Bangkok or Saigon.
26:59 Although the war was lost, Ted Shackley's boss, William Colby, considered his performance in Laos excellent. And it was because their entire purpose of being there and slaughtering tens of thousands of Americans and almost a million Vietnam and over a million Cambodians eventually ends up dead and tens of thousands of Laos or Laotians.
27:26 was to get the drugs out of there. It had nothing to do with national security, a domino effect, or anything else. Victor Marchetti, who was at the time an up-and-coming CIA executive, said, quote, we were officially spending $27 million a year on the war in Laos while Shackley was there. The war was costing 10 times that amount. It was no secret how they were doing it. They financed it with drugs. They gave Shackley a medal for it.
27:55 So the $27 million that they quote is what you and I paid or our parents paid. That was the official overt war. That was not the amount that was actually spent on it because it was in some cases double that. But that other portion of it was paid with the covert funds from selling drugs.
28:19 The CIA involvement with organized crime had begun in the late 1940s. The agency was desperate to make certain that communist organizers did not take control of European ports. With the cooperation of various labor organizations, including the Union, AFL-CIO, the CIA was in bed with the Corsican mafia in order to thwart the communist trade unions.
28:44 The trade unions weren't communist. They just wanted workers' rights, but they love using that title. A decade later, Edwin Wilson, who had begun his CIA career as a guard for a secret U2 base, found a home. Oh, man, who else did that? That was Lee Harvey Oswald. Found a home in the CIA's European Trade Union infiltration effort under CIA official Cord Meyer. And there's a whole...
29:14 story about Cord Meyer because his wife ends up getting killed and she allegedly had an affair with JFK, blah, blah, blah. Wilson's cover job was arranged by the American Federation of Labor because labor in the United States leadership is part of the
29:38 execution arm of the CIA. They are 100% controlled by the international syndicate. Wilson and Tom Klein first met in Virginia suburbs in 1960 when Klein's was moonlighting as a real estate salesman and Wilson wanted to sell his house before going to Europe under the AFL-CIO cover. Neither man knew at first that the other was working for the CIA.
30:07 When they discovered the relationship, they realized that they were both working on the same project. After Wilson's stint in Europe, he returned to the U.S., still undercover for the AFCIO. Wilson's manner and the fact that he handed out more than a million and a half dollars in campaign contributions to incumbent congressmen in the 1964 election made him a high-profile figure in Capitol Hill. Wilson feared
30:36 that his AFL-CIO boss, Paul Hall, would become angry if he discovered that his political assistant was, in fact, a CIA agent. Yeah, I doubt that since they're in bed with him anyway, but let's go ahead with the pretense. So Wilson decided to try to get into the Special Operations Division of the CIA. Clines, who had just returned from JM Wave in Miami, where Paul Helliwell was,
31:04 helped to get Wilson CIA approval and funds to start a covert operation. With $11,000 in CIA money, Wilson set up shop at the foot of Capitol Hill. He called his company Maritime Consultants. That was a CIA front company. And within months, he was chartering barges to Vietnam, arranging cover for commercial businesses for CIA agents and setting up businesses all over the world. Using his maritime cover, Wilson...
31:35 Did detailed surveys of nearly every port in Africa. Now, keep in mind what these guys are not telling us. And I don't remember. I read this a couple of weeks ago. What these guys are not telling us is the Navy actually thinks he's working for them doing the same job. OK, he was part of Task Force 157. So anyway, using his maritime cover, Wilson did the detailed.
32:06 surveys of the ports in Africa and the Pacific. By the end of the second month, Wilson's overt operations were paying all of his overhead, including his government salary. Wilson was a natural businessman who possessed an uncanny ability to get bureaucrats to trust him. Clines arranged for a half a dozen of the anti-Castro Cubans, our Gladio,
32:32 to be paid through Wilson's company and to operate under Wilson's control. His top agent was Rafael Chichi Cotero. Now, guys, they have placed a cell of Gladio under Edwin Wilson. That's what I just told you. The others worked in menial jobs around Washington until they were needed for an operation, you know, like Watergate.
32:59 One of Wilson's first operations was to help stop what was perceived as Patrice Lumumba's Moscow-backed, quote-unquote, Marxist insurrection in the Congo, so that a CIA-approved government could be installed. The CIA wanted to stop Soviet arms being smuggled across Lake Tanyakita.
33:23 All right. So I have to stop here for just a second just to refresh anybody that's news. Anybody that's news background on this. So, first of all, this is this book is being written by the CIA agents on the inside as translated from Joe Trento, who was given all of their papers. So all he's doing is telling a story as it was.
33:53 portrayed to him from the inside of the operation. Now, we all know that Patrice Lumumba was not a Marxist. He was not a communist. And that it was the CIA that created the insurgency in Congo to overthrow Lumumba, who had just been elected prime minister. And it is the CIA that, with Otto Skorzeny,
34:25 that arranged the assassination of Lumumba. So, and the last line is true, but that's the only true part of that whole sentence. So that the CIA approved government could be installed, which is exactly what they did. The CIA wanted to stop Soviet arms being smuggled across the lake. And the lake, by the way, is the, the lake.
34:59 Separate the area where the uranium and all of the gold and diamonds in Congo was located. Right. And so that area of Congo, what Otto Skorzeny was tasked with setting up the largest to date NATO base ever made in that area. And they.
35:30 developed a plan to succeed from the Congo and create their own country in order to steal the resources from the Congo. And the CIA was behind all of this so that they could continue for their international syndicate real bosses in Belgium and the U.S. in stealing the Congo's uranium.
35:57 The CIA mercenary force had only a single slow fishing boat to carry out their mission. There was seemingly no practical way to bring in additional boats. Wilson hit upon a scheme to ship aluminum swift boats in pieces into the country on C-130 aircraft and reassemble them at the lake. Waiting to man the newly assembled boats was Quintero and his team of
36:25 Cuban exile, Operation Gladio, assassins. The effort was a great success tactically. Strategically, however, it ended with CIA station chief Larry Devlin anointing Joseph Montabu, which is Moe Butu, who was going to be or was going to be the CIA-installed stooge after Lumumba.
36:53 The Congo operation proved that Wilson was more than just a man with a touch for business. Wilson became the new Paul Helliwell operating around the world. He set up the Asia Research Organization, which is another front for the CIA, Asia Research Organization, so that the CIA could put out unfavorable polling results on anti-Marcos candidates in the Philippines. In Indonesia, he set up an ex-Navy SEAL.
37:22 as the CIA's front man in the anti-Sucarno operation, which we know they overthrew his government too, as they did with Marcos eventually in the Philippines. In Mexico, Wilson ran Ricardo Chavez as an agent in place in an operation involving the highest officials in the Mexican government, including George Bush's old business associate, Jorge.
37:51 Diaz Serrano. Two years after Clines brought Wilson into the special activities area, it was obvious that Wilson was indispensable. Clines brought him into the secret war in Laos. Wilson traveled regularly to Laos in his capacity as a CIA business asset in Washington. Wilson said, quote, it was never the CIA's intention to get in the drug business, but the smugglers had information they needed.
38:21 They helped the smugglers. That's why they were in bed together, unquote, which is a bold-faced lie. We know that this business model went back to Paul Helliwell during World War II, being the military attache with Chiang Kai-shek. In Laos, Wilson worked with clients for logistical purposes. Quote, I helped get supplies to them and their people. I guess you could say that I was a kind of a shipping agent.
38:51 unquote. No, you are a terrorist working for the CIA. Wilson was being very modest about his role. Another of the several thousand CIA officers supporting the secret war in Laos was James Cunningham. He was Wilson's old U2 boss. Cunningham had worked closely with Paul Helliwell in setting up the air operations in Miami, Thailand, and Laos. He was now in the midst of running the biggest CIA
39:22 airline in history, Air America. James Cunningham used Wilson through his front companies to make sure that Air America got what it needed for its friends. Wilson had nothing but admiration for Shackley and Cunningham. Wilson worked with the short red-headed logistics expert from the Pentagon by the name of Marbod, M-A-R-B-O-D, the same guy we were just talking about, in getting supplies for the Secret War.
39:52 Von Marbog, who officially worked at the Pentagon Assistant Comptroller at the time, was in fact making certain that the logistical pipeline for the secret war was running smoothly. Harry Adderhall was one of the CIA's most important assets in Laos and Vietnam, and Von Marbog asked Wilson to help him get Adderhall his first star. As Wilson later told the story, Von Marbog
40:21 this is a quote, made him a general. But the guy who got him cleared through the Senate was me. I got Senator James Eastland to ask Senator John Stennis to do it, unquote. Eastland was the head of the Judiciary Committee and Stennis was the head of the Armed Services Committee. After the Meow people had been all but exterminated.
40:48 The Laos had been lost. Shackley called upon Wilson's Capitol Hill connections to cut through the immigration red tape to resettle Van Pauw, the general who was the drug lord, and his many wives inside the United States. The CIA allowed Wilson to continue to capitalize on his reputation as an influential man in Congress by letting him expand his business fronts. Wilson formed
41:17 Consultants International and set up an office on K Street Northwest next to Washington's super lobbyist. You just can't make this shit up. Robert Keith Gray. Now, who is Robert Keith Gray? Robert Keith Gray, and I know Bridget's going to post this, is the PR guy that owned the whorehouse that all of the congressional members belong to.
41:46 that they would go over there and it was all rigged with cameras and everything else. Robert Keith Gray was the Jeffrey Epstein before Jeffrey Epstein. He is in every single one of these stories. His Hill and Knowlton, the PR firm.
42:10 was a repository for any CIA agent that they needed to hang out and hide away for a little bit of time. He is an instrument of the CIA up, down, and sideways. And that's how we knew that the CIA was behind his quote-unquote club that he set up, which was basically just a whorehouse to entrap people.
42:38 Had big parties, you know, drug people, did all that kind of stuff. So it says it did not take Wilson long to court business from the nationalist Chinese on behalf of Gray. And by nationalist Chinese, they mean Chiang Kai-shek. The CIA wanted Wilson to wine and dine members of Congress and their staff. And more importantly, they wanted him to keep an eye on others who are doing the same, especially the Koreans in foreign interest. Now, this says a lot without saying anything.
43:08 And the CIA wanted Wilson to wine and dine members of Congress and their staff. And where did he do it? At that whorehouse. And then it says that they wanted him to keep an eye on the Koreans. Well, the whorehouse was co-owned by a Korean. And oh, by the way, that Korean was attached to the Unification Church. And the Unification Church is part of the Operation Gladio inside of South Korea, where you have Reverend Moon.
43:38 who also ran an entire large, tens of thousands of Operation Gladio-trained assassin and paramilitary people that when they moved this operation eventually to South America, and the Unification Church provided a bunch of the paramilitary people to guard the opium fields in South America. So none of that is said in that sentence, and every bit of that is implied.
44:06 But you have to know what's in all of these other books in order to be able to read this book and know all of this stuff. But this book, that's the reason why I was so excited about this book, is it corroborates all of the other things that we have uncovered. It goes on to say that his association with Robert Gray, Wilson's association with Robert Gray.
44:30 Had as much to do with the CIA wanting to know why Gray was associating with the Korean spy, Tunsin Park, as it did with mutual business interests. Now, let me just rephrase this because this is bullshit. Again, this is the CIA lying about the CIA. The Tunsin Park was part of the KCIA that was ran by the CIA. So they're telling you a story to try to distance themselves from the Korean portion.
45:00 of their own organization. The KCIA was basically like a stepchild of the CIA, much like the BND was and several other, the ISI in Pakistan, a lot of them served in that same kind of function. So no, they weren't spying on him trying to distance themselves or trying to figure out what they were because they were all working for the same people.
45:29 The official end of Wilson's CIA career came under the strangest of circumstances. Yes, it did. It began on April 4th, 1968, the night MLK was assassinated. Wilson's principal contact in Eastland's office, Bill Simpson, brought a new office staffer, the new press secretary, to Wilson's office to watch the assassination coverage and to share Wilson's liquor. The staffer
45:58 Kenneth Tolliver seemed very friendly. When he overheard Wilson having a tough time with a potential business contact, he offered to check the contact out. Wilson was taken aback when Tolliver called what he said was the FBI and got a full report on the contact's financial condition. Wilson reported this to his CIA case officer, who made a note but never followed up.
46:25 Tolliver stayed friendly until one day in summer of 1968, he came to Wilson's office to tell Wilson that he knew Wilson worked for the CIA. A few weeks later, Tolliver brought Wilson some classified CIA documents. Wilson, in a panic, again reported the conversation. This time, Wilson was called to a safe house meeting with top CIA and FBI officials. Tolliver, in fact, was now being investigated as a suspected...
46:54 Soviet agent. The FBI had no desire to embarrass Senator Eastland, who controlled the Bureau's purse strings, by divulging that he had a suspected communist agent on his staff. And so, Tulliver was allowed to resign, but Wilson, his cover blown, meant that Eastland could be more indebted to him than ever.
47:19 Years later, the CIA claimed that Wilson had been fired from the agency for misrepresenting the ownership of a CIA-controlled company as his own in order to get a bank loan. That disinformation was part of a legend, a neatly fictionalized history of Wilson that the CIA permitted to prosecutors. Hold on a second. My little doggy's hiding under the footstool again, teasing the big brother.
48:05 OK, so basically they wanted Wilson gone and they frame Wilson, who at this point and they don't even talk about that either here. I thought they did later on and maybe they do. Wilson is selling arms to Gaddafi for the CIA and he gets in trouble for that, among other things. But it's because.
48:35 They want him framed. So let me go back and read this because this is the end of the chapter and then we're going to open up the mics. Years later, the CIA claimed that Wilson had been fired from the agency for misrepresenting ownership in a CIA-controlled company as his own in order to get a bank loan. That disinformation was part of a legend, neatly fictionalized history of Wilson that the CIA provided to prosecutors and reporters.
49:04 The truth is that after the Tulliver incident, Wilson was paid a $25,000 fee and offered a chance to work inside of Langley. Wilson realized that the Soviets watching his every move, he could only handle non-sensitive operations or work inside. Instead, he accepted the settlement and struck off on his own. The CIA had taught him to make money and connections. Now he intended to make the most of his talents. That is not true.
49:33 He remains working for them and they double cross him after setting him up, selling weapons to Gaddafi and they arrest him. That's the real story. And that's why I find it interesting. And obviously you guys do too. When you read these books that are, this one was not approved by the CIA because
50:03 Trendco didn't work for the CIA. But it also was not, they did not try to ban this book. So this is the story that they want told. What I find fascinating is what parts they corroborate and then what parts that they try to leave out, like some that I filled in for you guys, and then which ones they spin. Because you can tell.
50:32 By that, what are the most sensitive areas? If they're trying to spin it, then they want you to believe something. So something's important about it, but they want you to believe it's something else. The ones that they leave out completely, like the fact that he's selling these weapons to Libya, is the stuff that they don't want you to know at all. But you find that by reading several books, not just one on this subject. So with that, we're going to open the floor up.
51:01 I see Trumpfrog, and I see Stellar. Wait, can I tell you something really, just interject something really funny? Yeah. When I was looking up one of the people that you mentioned early on, that Maurice Bernard posted, do you know they actually have a bust of him in memorial in Australia? Yes.
51:32 Crazy. Yes. The guy was just no good. No good. Yes. But that's like the Angleton having two memorials in Israel for him. True. True. Sometimes I'm just flabbergasted. I'm like, boy, they, you know, when they talk about them really waving it in your face and bragging about it, they really, really do. And we never knew.
52:03 Totally never paid attention. Well, didn't know who they were. Yeah. Yeah. And that's how they got away with it. Correct. And that's our mission is to change that. Yeah. And make sure that we know everybody's name and we can name and shame all day long with the best of them. Amen. Yep. So what's up with you, Stellar?
52:30 Oh, I found a video on YouTube and started watching it. So there's another family that I'm going to look into that I know that has ties to all of this crappy stuff that they do. It's a chateau in Belgium. And I guess the kings came through this one family. And it's just crazy. It's part of the places where they used to do some of the hunting party. And the nickname was the witches. But some of the names that have come up.
52:58 you know, within the higher ups and stuff like that, they kind of interlink between your stuff. So, I mean, I'm going to get some more information on it and then tie that and send it over to you. That would be awesome. Yeah. Belgium obviously is very interesting, you know, not only because of its ties to their former colonies, all of which, you know, we ended up operating in, but also from the perspective of
53:24 Gladio lots. That's where they had the I think you pronounce it. Vanguard massacres where they were slaughtering people as they walk out of grocery stores, sometimes inside of grocery stores and women and children, all part of a terror campaign via Operation Gladio in order for them to.
53:47 make the population fearful and more submissive to the government edicts that were coming. And every time they would get agitated about stuff that NATO was doing and the prostitution and how bad that area around NATO was getting, they would start this terror campaign. It was like kind of, you know, the way things were done. And then, of course, you have Mark Dutro, which is the guy that was organizing a lot of the pedophile.
54:17 networks throughout all of belgium yes that's the guy that's the guy yes yes yes yeah i we've talked about him stellar yes that's why i was like oh my gosh because i hadn't heard this other part of it and this one house that was built in the 1800s is the chateau and it's oh my gosh and there's like really nothing on it and i found some a video
54:39 And I'm like, oh, my gosh, these are all the people that you've been talking about. The ties within Netherlands, Denmark, the banks. Holy. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Mark Dutro is Jeffrey Epstein times about 100. I mean, they found dead children when they arrested him in his basement. That's how bad he is. He is. He had.
55:11 masonry work done so that he could hide children in the walls of his house. And they even heard the kids, the police came and they never investigated. His own mother was turning him in and everything. He was a sick, sick mofo. Yeah. Yes, he was. And he got paid really, really, really well. Yes, he did. And he had lots of accomplices.
55:41 And they don't go any farther with it. They just kind of let it end it with him and stuff like that. And the police and everybody's all involved. Yes, every one of them was paid off. That's how he was allowed to maintain that operation for so long. All along. Go ahead. Yeah. Regarding Belgium, the book that I that I I know you've read the one that's published in 1950 that the CIA tried to bury that was written by a former army intel.
56:12 or G2 guy who was supposed to denazify West Germany. He maintains that, you know, Belgium was a really key sort of juncture in the international syndicate because British, I'm sorry, primarily French and German gigantic corporations.
56:37 that were really cooperating with each other, but, you know, purportedly competing, but really cooperating with each other would like do a lot of their merging and hiding of business records in Belgium, which is, you know, this little country right in between them, you know, or, you know, near both of them. So it's kind of a, and it's, of course, a very important, as you pointed out, a key country for NATO command.
57:05 I mean, there's a lot of digging that can be done with Belgium, to put it mildly, as you've already suggested. But I just wanted to also point out, you brought up this Senator Eastland guy, and he's, I think, a really important guy because you probably have mentioned earlier, he was the mentor of a young senator by the name of Joe Biden.
57:35 Senator Biden got to the Senate in the 1970s. And James Eastland, I mean, think about this for a second. You have this Democratic coalition, right? And we know how much emphasis is on race. And to me, what really stands out is race alone as opposed to race and social class.
58:02 which would be the folks who got assassinated today. It's race alone. OK, so, you know, here's the most racist senator in the second half of the 20th century. And I feel pretty confident in making that. And so do historians in making that assessment of Senator James Eastland. Well, what was his nickname? What was his nickname? Voice of the White South and godfather of Mississippi politics.
58:33 That's what they could refer to. I mean, I believe it. Yeah. So that's a very important point that he was that strongly identified with aggressive support of Jim Crow. He was a George Wallace, if possibly not even worse, because he was older. His race, hardcore racism was older than George Wallace's. He was actually surprisingly recent if you look at it in the mid 50s.
59:03 But anyway, think about this for a second. I mean, think about, you know, how consolidated our media is, right? And how hard the Operation Mockingbird media works to just completely obliterate Joe Biden's past in the Senate. I mean, he was from Delaware, for crying out loud. We know why banks love that place, right?
59:35 And it's really kind of, I think, a case study that could be done since we're trying to spread awareness, you know, to everybody about Operation Mockingbird of, you know, making a long thread of Senator Biden's, you know, record in the 70s, 80s, 90s and up to the 10s. And, you know, and then saying basically, wow, look at what.
1:00:02 You know, how many folks out there knew this about Joe Biden? How many folks heard about this passive Joe Biden in either on either Fox or MSNBC? Right. And it's kind of a good educational device for teaching people just how like, you know, really controlled our media is and just how just really kind of evil Operation Mockingbird is.
1:00:32 It obliterates history right where they need to obliterate it. But, yeah, I just think it's important to remember that about Senator Eastland. Okay. Thank you for that. Anybody else have anything? Jeff, go ahead. Colonel, I tell you, that's one of the nicest Camaros that you guys have. That is a beautiful car. I love that car. What year is that, a 67? A 68.
1:01:08 Does it have a 396? No, it has a 327. That's a sweet car. It is. It's beautiful. Thank you. It's one of my favorites. I prefer a 427 and a 302 Z28, but that is a beautiful car you got there. I love it. Appreciate it. Bridget, go ahead. I've got a question.
1:01:42 One of the things that we come across quite a bit is one of the ways that when they money launder is through real estate. As far as hiding money, can you give me just a general example of that? Because I'm doing some research into a particular senator, and he tends to have certain ranches that are kind of...
1:02:13 surprising and not within the state that he's representing. And I'm trying to figure out if this is hinky or not. So normally, if actually there's several examples. So the oligarchs that were over in Ukraine, there have been several of them that used certain real estate, quote unquote, investment companies down in the Miami area.
1:02:44 that they would send like $50 million to. And the real estate investment corporation would go out and set up fake LLCs or land trusts. And that's why they love Florida, because we have a special provision for land trust where you can hide who owns it. That also is true only in the, the only other state that has a similar land trust law as us is Illinois.
1:03:12 And that dates back to the mafia trying to hide stuff in Chicago and here at the same time. And I'm not lying about that. So anyway, they would set up LLCs that would be the registered agents for these land trusts or the trustees for the land trust. And then they would buy they would purchase the property in.
1:03:34 this land trust with some trustee. And then the piece of paper, the last paper in a land trust is the beneficiary. And you never have to disclose, according to Florida law, who the beneficiary is of the land trust. So it's the perfect vehicle to hide real estate. And as Warhamster points out every single time we have this conversation, real estate is the only business.
1:04:01 That's a financial transaction that you don't have to disclose or do your own deal due diligence that the person has the money honestly. And that's why there's a lot of cash sales in real estate because there's no loan, you know, research, workup, whatever, no underwriting. They could just come in, plop down a million dollars and buy a house. And that's the way. So you launder your.
1:04:30 ill-gotten gains like baby farming over in Ukraine, that billionaire guy owned a whole bunch of crap here. Ihor Kolomoisky basically owned all of Cleveland. And the way he did that by taking the World Bank loans out of the Privat Bank, he then put them in U.S. banks, which was then transferred to another U.S. bank, and then they would cash the money out, go down and buy a building.
1:04:59 in downtown Cleveland for cash. And so those types, that's probably one of the most well-known money laundering operations that has been proven to have occurred. The other guy, Ehor Kolomoisky, when I did that research project, his...
1:05:26 because he was also buying real estate in London. And the guy that he was using to buy real estate in London embezzled money from him. And there was a whole big squawk between those two people as to, because when you're dealing in cash, I mean, what are you going to do? It's all ill-gotten gains, right? So it's not like you're going to go down and go, oh, hey, he just stole this money from me. And you're going to go, oh, where'd you get the money?
1:05:53 So it's a risk that you run when it comes to those types of things. So that's an example. Did that help out at all? Yes, ma'am. Very much. Thank you. Sure. SR-71. Thank you, Colonel. I'll add a little bit to what Bridget's digging into, specifically at their rental units. It's very easy to take that rental unit and use it as money laundering.
1:06:24 Crazy. It's easy enough to get tenants that you say, well, okay, here's what your rent is. You say that's what it is, but I'm only going to charge you X amount. So the rest of it goes into a money laundering operation. That's another way of laundering money as well, Bridget. Thank you, Colonel. This was particular ranches that apparently he owns that are tied up in a trust in New Mexico.
1:06:53 That the beneficiary of the trust is his wife. And I was just, like I said, doing some of the research and it was setting off some bells and whistles. And boy, we've come across this so many times. Yeah, I know. Matt, go ahead. Colonel, that's the same Kolomoisky that owns Burisma, which Hunter Biden served on the book.
1:07:27 Okay, that's what I thought. Yeah. Same guy. Same guy. Jeff, go ahead. Now I'm feeling really, really bad. Now being down here in Roswell, New Mexico, we tried our level best effort to get Trump in. I see that our state looks like blue all the way through. It's not true. Colonel, I was just wanting to know if you had...
1:07:59 since Vladimir Zelensky had a telephone call with Trump and Elon the other day that there was a ceasefire, considering the winter season battle in that area is very brutal, and tank situations become really just dead targets in the field with snow and all. Do you see a ceasefire with President Trump coming to play before election?
1:08:28 brought in on January 20th. What's your take on that? I don't know. It will be interesting to see how that, I mean, obviously he's not going to participate in it because he's not president. Whether or not he can behind the scenes make that happen before he takes office, I don't know. He's pretty much got a full plate, so I don't know. Matt, go ahead. If you were offered, sorry to put you on the spot like this.
1:08:57 But if you were offered any position in the incoming administration, either as an advisor or cabinet, what would you take? So, first of all, I'm not going to be offered any position. I'm way too outspoken about all the politically incorrect things we're supposed to be talking about to fit in anybody's little box.
1:09:22 project that I would want to work on is the declassification of CIA documents. I do think that based on my research, I'm uniquely qualified to do that, both on the fact that I spent 30 years and have a master's degree in national security so that I understand what actually is national security, not embarrassment to an agency to be able to make a call on what should remain classified of anything.
1:09:51 always erring on the you're not going to do that side of things. But it really is the only thing at this point that interests me. Everything else, as far as my career, I've been there, done that. I'm not interested in actually working for the government. But I would even volunteer to work on that one. Oh, and by the way, my husband did tell me, I don't know where it's at. There's some website that RFK set up.
1:10:22 You just made me think of that. For people to volunteer, my husband did volunteer me, just so that you got to know. My name's floating out there somewhere just for that particular thing, to work on declassification of CIA documentation. And since there's, you know, like 10 billion pieces of paper that's classified in a vault in Suitland, Maryland, which is right down the road from where I used to work at Andrews, very familiar with the archives there.
1:10:52 Again, I would voluntarily do that. If they paid for my RV slot on Andrews Air Force Base, I would do that until it was done or I died, one or the other. Blue, go ahead. Oh, no, I was just sitting here doing research. I just got off the phone. I was calling a bunch of senators. You mentioned CIA and somebody mentioned Kash Patel. I'm looking up right now to see how.
1:11:22 much validity that holds because if cash patel takes over the cia that gives you lots of opportunity and i'm on google now i'm not seeing any validity i'm going to probably go back and delete that post yeah it has not been thanks here we go yep hi i have a question for you um
1:11:54 Today, I was listening to the Duran, and they were talking about empire. And they were saying that America has a chance to exit from empire without losing its ass, without collapsing.
1:12:25 They didn't like talk about tactics for doing that. And I know that, you know, the British are riding us like a donkey. But what do you think about that? Riding us like a donkey? What the heck is that? I don't know. I'm from Missouri, lady. It is. It is.
1:13:00 It's not something that I'm focused on. I do think that anyone that has brought us to this point has a plan and hopefully we are able to stick as closely as we can to that plan. So I don't think we're going to have a hard landing as we bring our ride to it.
1:13:32 stop and we all can exit safely. But, you know, again, I don't like speculating on stuff that I don't have a history or expertise in speculating on. So I'm going to leave that there. SR71. Thank you, Colonel. I did want to say something today about the Financial Times article concerning Zelensky and his offer to Trump.
1:14:02 The other thing that I would mention is I don't believe that any of this was discussed with Zelensky, Trump and Ilan concerning what's going on with Ukraine and what our intentions are really going to be. I seriously think Zelensky is fishing and hoping he gets something out of it. Now, I don't think he's going to get much. And if he's trying to bribe President Trump into...
1:14:29 And, oh, please come take our resources, this, that, and the other. It ain't going to work. So other than that, that's what I got, Colonel. Thanks. Trump, go ahead. Trump frog. Trump frog. Stop typing. Golfing. Oh, golfing. I'll take his speaker spot while he's. Just be sure. Are you able to hear me? Yeah, I can hear you fine. Okay, cool. Yeah, I'm just driving again.
1:15:07 I was wondering, I saw your post earlier and I was intrigued and I'm very late to the discussion. You likely already covered it. Can you give me a quick synopsis on your thoughts with regard to Mike Huckabee and his appointment? Sure. So Kelly's talking about a post that I've made. Yeah, you're going in and out, Kelly. I'll just kind of paraphrase your question.
1:15:35 The post that I made earlier about Mike Huckabee being the ambassador to Israel. So if you go back and you look at the history of ambassadors to Israel, primarily they are all Jewish American.
1:15:54 You can tell, and I'm not the best one to speak on this because I have not done the research that like Ghost of Base Patrick Henry and those people have. I mean, I have the fundamental knowledge, but I do believe that there is a reckoning coming with how we have militarily and everything else supported Israel when in fact.
1:16:24 As we have pointed out routinely here, the relationship that we have had with Israel is very dysfunctional as it comes to the definition of an ally. Most people realize they have not been an ally. They have been basically a useful tool for the...
1:16:52 spreading of weapons to places that we want them to go, a willing participant in that arrangement as well. And it's true for all of the European countries. Israel has served as a weapons conduit to anything that the Western countries wanted to weaponize, but their citizens forbid them to do it. That is true with the Contras. That is true with the Iran. That is true with...
1:17:21 Angola, around the world, we have come across network after network after network under Operation Gladio, where both the money and the weapons transited Israel. And so to me, putting a not any, it's not that he's just a Christian. He was a Christian preacher. Mike Huckabee was.
1:17:51 in as the ambassador to Israel, I think is profound in so many ways of basically a, and I'm not going to call it a line in the sand, that's too dramatic, but it is a change of the old guard. It is a changing of the way things has been done in the past in order to move forward. And I love it.
1:18:20 Matt, go ahead. I wish I could say that I share your optimism on that front, but I'm just not sure, because if Israel is in fact a conduit for us to launder weapons to other countries that we want to have them, but their citizens don't, and all this comes... No, no. Okay, I don't know who muted everybody.
1:18:55 Matt, sorry about that. Go ahead. I think it might have been fat fingers me. I'm sorry. It was an accident. So, Matt, let me let me rephrase because I think you misunderstood what I was saying. Our citizens in the United States had our representatives pass a law that we were not going to supply weapons to the Contras anymore. We also passed a law that said we were not going to supply weapons to Angola.
1:19:24 Our CIA went to Mossad and said, hey, here's the money. We need you to send the weapons to Angola. We need you to send the weapons to the Contras because we can't do it legally. And they did it with France. France also not only supplied nuclear technology to Israel to create their nuclear program.
1:19:50 But they also supplied all kinds of Mirage jets, helicopters, missiles to Israel to further deploy into like former French colonies that the French people said they did not want. They wanted to grant the freedom to these colonies. And the France intel community did not want to do that. The OAS is of the day and basically used Israel as a conduit.
1:20:20 And Israel was more than happy to do that. Does that make sense? Was that a way for them to get around some of the concessions that they made back with under Gorbachev when we were trying to get into a better place with Russia? If that makes sense. I know I'm driving and my question probably sounds retarded. No. Okay. I know that you kind of know what I mean. No, I know exactly what you mean. And no, we were not doing anything as a concession to Russia.
1:20:49 We were doing it because the American people had had enough. They didn't want our weapons going to Contra because they knew, like the Vietnam War, the Contras at the time was not the good guys, even though Reagan was lying to us, telling us that they were the freedom fighters. And this was strictly about us holding our government accountable. And the son of a bitches went around us and used a cutout, namely Mossad, in order to pour those weapons on.
1:21:18 despite the fact that we all stood up and said, hell no. Okay, thank you for clarifying because I thought that we had, I don't know, done something to basically get Russia to chill out. And even though we were doing lots of regime change in a whole bunch of areas and we messed with Serbia, messed with a whole bunch of other places. So that's all true. We broke apart, obviously, Yugoslavia by importing. We used the Mujahideen and a whole bunch of the...
1:21:48 Muslim terrorists that the CIA trained in the Afghanistan, Pakistan area and basically brought them in, not just to Chechnya. We were behind the entire Chechnya in order to reroute an oil pipeline. We were behind the breakup of the Yugoslavia by importing and doing regime change and obviously country breakup, just like we tried to do in Congo so that we could steal all of those resources down there as well. We've just done this a whole bunch of times.
1:22:17 The the trying to and that's why Putin that's why they hate Putin. Putin being in the KGB knows firsthand all of the shit that we've done. And he will not allow anybody to pull the wool over his eyes and they can't stand that. So the very thing that our intel agencies tell us is the biggest problem with.
1:22:45 Putin, the KGB experience, is the very thing that makes him who he is today and the ability of his to hold us accountable because you can't lie to him. He knows scripture, verse, chapter, page number of every fucking coup we've done. He knows them all. And he sat and watched us do this. He watched us.
1:23:13 Time after time after time, lie. We lied to Ho Chi Minh. We lied to Kim in Korea. Just one lie after another lie after another lie. And he watched it all unfold. He watched us overthrow all of the governments. And he was willing to let all of that go until you came to his back door in Ukraine. And he said, this is where it stops. This is my line in the sand. And he kicked people's ass.
1:23:40 As he should have. We were not supposed to move any further east and we kept doing it, kept doing it, kept doing it. And then I think 2014 came around and he got really pissed off and he's been waiting for a good time. And sounds like that time was under Biden. That time was 19 or 2022. Yeah. Matt, go ahead. Did you have a follow up with what you were saying?
1:24:03 No, not really, because you sort of clarified what... And I just want to clarify what I understood, because you did correct it. I understood it as the citizens of the countries we were laundering weapons to didn't want the weapons. Not our citizens, so that was my bad. Yeah, didn't want them either. But the other thing I did want to bring up, though, is it's like no wonder...
1:24:33 No wonder people hate the fact that Trump meets with Trump met with Putin and Kim Jong Un, because when you juxtapose that those meetings with the with the information you just shared about is about not Israel, about how Putin knows all the deep, dark, dirty secrets that our CIA doesn't want.
1:25:03 you to know. And the picture you get is the CIA would have Putin assassinated if they could get away with it. But they probably can't. They probably can't. And under Trump, they sure as heck can't because they wouldn't have a built-in narrative to justify it.
1:25:29 Now, if Putin gets reckless and, I don't know, obliterates whatever like a warlord, then they probably would. But as of now, they don't. And under Trump, they sure won't. So I don't know. As far as them and Putin, I'm not sure where they go from here unless they're just waiting on Putin to die out so they can install someone else in there. But I did wonder as you were talking.
1:25:55 The so-called Arab Spring that happened under Obama, those were all coups too, right? Correct. And I don't even know what countries were involved. I know Egypt was, where they overthrew the guy and then the Muslim Brotherhood got in there. That was probably CIA and Gladio. But what other countries were involved in there? Because Egypt's the only one I remember. Libya. There was a whole bunch of them.
1:26:25 Yes and no, because there was a global uprising. That's what Occupy Wall Street was a part of. There was Occupy in Europe, and then it spread to, and that was all part of Arab Spring. So yes, they manipulated, but also there was a human natural uprising that they rode. But Carrie, not yes and no. Anytime that there is a...
1:26:56 a natural uprising, as you call it, rebellion, whatever you want to call it. If it is held in an area of interest to the CIA and the international syndicate, they will co-opt it and use it in order to overthrow the government. So it is the Arab Spring, as it's referred to in the government.
1:27:25 the overthrowing of governments, which is basically, there may have been a small organic element in some of these countries, again, not all of them. And once they were able to create the one or two organic uprisings and infiltrate it,
1:27:49 Then they can make the argument that all of the rest of them were organic, even when they were not. And you have then, it's exactly the same model they used in South America. This one was done in the Middle East. So yes, in fact, it was part of an Operation Gladio style overthrow, destabilization strategy of tension throughout the Middle East in order to further the goals.
1:28:19 of the international syndicate. So you had Libya, Egypt, Yemen, Syria. There was a smaller one in Tanzania and Bahrain. And there were also small demonstrations in Morocco, Algeria, Lebanon, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, Sudan. So, I mean, it was just a huge, big, and basically it was just.
1:28:49 It also provides the CIA the opportunity to find new networks of people they can pay to be agitators. And then what they do is once they find them in one country, they ship them around to other countries in order to have bigger crowds to be able to manipulate particular governments. Because what we often found was that, like, for example, the Muslims that we found in Bosnia.
1:29:18 A lot of them were not just from Afghanistan. They were from like Tajikistan and what's the other one that's over there? Kazakhstan. So and that's only because the CIA had created agitation movements and grooming programs in those countries in order to recruit these people.
1:29:44 by doing minor agitations inside of the countries when they wanted to get their NGOs into the countries and stuff. This is a very well thought out entity and they have uprisings when and where they want them to be. Okay, so I have a question then. So the 2008 financial crisis, was that done on purpose to, in your mind,
1:30:14 to create a global uprising? So in 2008, there were several non-organic things that happened in the financial market. And after they happened, there were quote unquote cures that had never happened before. So yes, in my mind, the 2008 financial crisis was basically
1:30:45 a financial version of COVID, which was a medical thing. So again, strategy of tension. In the aftermath of the 2008, what happened? They enacted legislation that basically screwed us as consumers under the quote unquote Consumer Protection Act and garbage like that. They did the same thing with, obviously, the aftermath of 9-11. This is their modus operandi. It's what they do.
1:31:15 The entire reason they told us that we were going to have a Fed and why it's good for us, and they still say it on television today, is all of this shit would be so much worse. Well, it wasn't that much worse. We've had as many, if not more, financial catastrophes with a Fed that's supposedly there to create not having those. So it's just, it's all just.
1:31:41 Bullshit. Let me get to some of these hands. Miles, go ahead. Good evening, Colonel. So if you were offered a job to test drive classic Camaros and evaluate them on Substack, would you take that? Yeah. Thank you. That's not working for the government. That's having fun. Trump frog, you still got your hand up. I don't know whether I should call on you or not. Okay. He's still not doing anything. All along. Go ahead.
1:32:15 Okay, yeah, Colonel, picking up on what Carrie and you both just said, it seems to me that, you know, there's a question of, you know, is everything government instigated? And if that's so, does it mean that there can be no social history whatsoever? In other words, the people themselves, you know, having some sort of uprising or organizational. And, you know, just to put that on the back burner for a second, I think.
1:32:44 Let's go to our favorite little campsite, the UAW's camp in Michigan in 1968. Now, you have correctly pointed out that, guess what? There's government seeds of Gladio up in that. But I also think it's quite possible that there was folks.
1:33:12 such as Walter Reuther, such as those parts of the CIO, which represented the less skilled workers who really, what 1968 is really about. Again, when you dig up under the Paisley and incense and more middle-class type student history, the labor history is completely buried under all of that.
1:33:42 smoke and fog. And I think that's deliberate. In other words, those UAW camps were, it's quite possible that there was definitely genuine, you know, social history or groups trying to organize for change and also government, you know, instigators up in that. In other words, the line of scrimmage moves in a football game and it moves in politics too.
1:34:14 So at a place like the UAW camp, labor camp in 1968, we should almost expect both sides to be there because that's the line of scrimmage. So you said everything, but I think I acknowledged that point at the very beginning of what I said, in that the legitimate ones, even if they are legitimate and not...
1:34:41 intelligence organization prompted, they are quickly overtaken and infiltrated by the intelligence agencies in order to co-opt them to have done what they want done with them, which generally goes towards the destabilization and overthrow of the government. Yeah, I agree with that. But I think, especially in the case of 1968, that required three...
1:35:09 major political assassinations of MLK, who was united with RFK, who was united with Walter Reuther. And I think, yeah, normally they're infiltrated before it ever gets to that stage. But we got to point out, you know, to our fellow citizens, that's a huge turning point in U.S. history. And we got to point out those assassinations are they get zero attention.
1:35:37 primarily because the CIA has learned you're not going to cover that up totally with the New York Times and the legacy media. You're going to require a fake left to cover that up. And in other words, these left keepers are going to be more useful in covering up the assassinations of leftward moving in the sense of organized labor and moving groups than legacy media. And we got to get loud about that because.
1:36:06 When you let them do that and then go on teaching these elections for 57 years after that, basically what you're giving kids is a political menu that is really kind of narrowed down and really kind of causing political malnutrition in the classroom, you know, and in political discussion, as RFK said, in the meagerness of our political debates. Yeah.
1:36:35 political menu. I think we're force-feeding them a political diet. Yeah, I agree. And one of the reasons it's so narrow is because these assassinations are covered up and that preserves the legacy media that imprisons classrooms. Okay. Blue, go ahead. Yeah, no, I'm just sitting here with my voice being in kernel. Thank you, sis. No, there's a lot of aspects to this ratio.
1:37:05 They are, yes, I know about the assassination. We all know about everything that's going on. And the thing with the assassination attempts is, I'm hopefully, Colonel, and you can correct me if I'm wrong, but that'll all be declassified. There's a reason for everything that is going on right now, and it's becoming a chess move. And, you know, I have a huge question for you, actually, Colonel, because...
1:37:33 Back in the day, they had infiltration where they had their own community, and then there was a whole bombardment of people that came in and overtook that area. But we've never seen a mass migration that actually you have sleeper cells sitting inside the country.
1:37:59 Back in the past, they never even thought about migration or bringing them into the castle. But nowadays, it's just bringing the illegals in. Now, if I was illegal, I would be totally scared, but you have mass immunity and you're asleep or so. Are we seeing a different type of warfare with illegal immigration? And that's why Thorne, he's on top of things.
1:38:29 Because way back in the day, when you infiltrated a country, you just stormed down the walls. But now that every, I'm going to ask Quelly, and I'm going to ask Stellar, I see both, they have their hands up. Quelly, Stellar, am I wrong here? I mean, they broke down the doors, and, you know, the best way to do it is to stop the doors. Operation Gladio.
1:38:57 Operation Gladio, they've been doing it everywhere else where they have to stay behind and stuff like that. Just because they're a citizen or a non-citizen doesn't mean anything. We've been infiltrated for a very, very long time, in my opinion. So obviously the illegal immigration is to overwhelm the system, create chaos so that they can implement control and the control will be focused on us.
1:39:27 Not the illegals. We've already seen this happen. You have the Marine up in New York City who, defending people on a subway, is now in jail. They are turning our system on the citizens and they are using illegals and the chaos that ensues in the breakdown of society in order to further the Phoenix program that...
1:39:55 The Homeland Security has been implementing behind the scenes for the last, well, ever since 9-11. That is when this jumped into high gear. It's not that it hadn't been going on before that, but it definitely shifted into a much higher gear. Kelly, go ahead. I wasn't able to hear anything that Blue was saying, but it sounds like he was talking about Ordo Abcal, you know, the big Masonic.
1:40:24 Order out of chaos. But anyway, I was just going to say, I think it was all along was the one who was making the what I would consider somewhat of a false correlation between JFK and MLK. And I was hoping that you'd be able to expound upon that a little bit, since we know that JFK was one who spoke out against the CIA and MLK was more of a useful tool that ended up outliving his usefulness. Well, all along, and I'll let him if he's still here.
1:40:51 Basically, his point, and it is a valid point, the movement that was behind MLK and the Rainbow Coalition in Chicago was all focused on all of us collectively that were in the non-club members, generally lower class, white, Hispanics, and blacks.
1:41:21 forming a coalition that they didn't control, and then being able to use that coalition in order to effect change for us and not the elites that were controlling everything. And they basically, in the assassination of MLK and RFK that year in 1968 was his focus, basically sidelined that.
1:41:52 And, you know, took back a coalition that had been forming in order to hold our government accountable. And, you know, basically use it. And it basically had a lot to do with the labor unions and all kinds of other aspects to that. So that. Thank you for clarifying. Sorry, I was born in the 80s, guys. I'm trying my best. Thank you. All along. Go ahead.
1:42:21 And then, guys, I'm going to have to close this up. I'm going to let him be the last one. My daughter showed up with my grandbaby. Yeah, I think to describe MLK as a useful tool, I think that's kind of being sort of one-sided here.
1:42:49 What I mean by that is already in 1964, we see JFK, I'm sorry, 63 March on Washington. JFK is like saying to MLK, like, let's get the UAW in there and so-called whiten up, quote unquote, whiten up the March on Washington so that it is a labor demonstration.
1:43:21 And not only a demonstration about race. And the minute he does that, you are no longer playing good old Democrat Eleanor Roosevelt, Adlai Stevenson, upper class politics. You are the way that the elites saw it. You're now potentially activating a new coalition.
1:43:52 potentially a New Deal without Jim Crow. OK, you're activating the CIO aspect of labor and the elites had always used the more skilled, you know, more racist AFL types, which was skilled and mostly all white dominated unions. So already in 1963, we see JFK, MLK and Walter Reuther uniting to make this a race and class thing.
1:44:20 which meant helping the CIO. And already, you know, that's like a microcosm of what is later going to happen in 1968 when these, when RFK, MLK and Reuters are uniting. And, you know, that's a fundamental threat to the elites that they do not want folks, you know, of the less skilled workers to pay too much attention.
1:44:49 Right. There's a reason that the Democrats are giving us senators like Kristen Gillibrand, who's completely mute. Right. They want people to not pay attention. And that was a fundamental threat to as they saw it, I think. So, I mean, what was at the same time that infiltrated? I think we would be surprised if it wasn't, you know. So, again, the line of scrimmage is.
1:45:17 changes over time. And that's where it was, I think, between 63 and 68. It was a fundamental threat to elites, and they responded by assassinations. We have to get loud about that. Otherwise, we let the media have every classroom in America. Which is not unlike what's happening right now. And what was their default? Assassination attempt on Trump. And that's basically the whole bottom line for Gladio.
1:45:45 strategy of tension in order to control us. And that's kind of a perfect note to end on tonight. So thanks everybody for being here. I will tell you tomorrow, I am going to be traveling. I don't know. We're going up to the Great America Restoration Tour tomorrow. I don't know where I'm going to be at four o'clock. If I am in a place where I can have
1:46:12 the show, we will have the show. And I will let you know a couple of hours before then to kind of check in and let everybody know what's going on. And we will not have one on Thursday or Friday. Now, I may try to get online in the evening just to kind of give you an update of what's going on and if anything happens. But we will resume.
1:46:40 next Monday on the official continuation of our Prelude to Terror book, and we'll move on from there. So it'll be very spotty over the next several days, and I'll be here when I can. Stellar, go ahead.
1:46:59 I was just going to say, it looks like Radcliffe has been the pick for the CIA director. Going to miss you tons and tons because now we have to hold on until you come back to find out about what you think of the rest of his picks. And Operation Gladio, they're coming down. Money system, everything. Look at the ISOs. It's a beautiful thing. Love you. Thank you. And Radcliffe, I could not be.
1:47:25 more ecstatic of having him at the CIA only because he was one of the very few people that stuck with Trump through everything and was in the know on all of that stuff. So that actually, but again, my opinion of the CIA is the actual intelligence mission needs to go to DIA and NSA and we don't need covert operations by anybody.
1:47:53 If we need information, we can now get information in a multitude of different ways, and we do not need a CIA, period. As far as I'm concerned, that should be a 24-hour job. Go in, turn the lights off, put a lock on the door, and put a for sale sign in the yard. That's what I was hoping you'd say, and that's why I was hoping they got him in there to dismantle that corrupt piece of crap stuff and the CIA. Bye. All right. Take care, everybody. I have a confession to make.
1:48:23 Before we get out of the space, Colonel. Okay. That is Bridget took the heat for the mute. That was my bus, not hers. So we're good. All right. Awesome. Thank you. Talk to you guys tomorrow. And again, I will check in at some point. It just may not be at four o'clock. So everybody take care.

Entities here

Patricia21Laos14Israel12Edwin Wilson12Bernie Houghton10Operation Gladio10Ted Shackley9Paul Helliwell8Vietnam7Erich von Marbod7Vladimir Putin7Tom Karamessines6James Eastland6Michael Hand5Richard Secord5Nugan Hand Bank5Congo5Robert Keith Gray5Belgium5Secret War in Laos4Joe Biden4Walter Reuther4Contras4Soviet Union4Harry Aderholt4Air America4AFL-CIO4Arab Spring4Kenneth Tolliver4United States3Unknown Book by Mike Wall3Ihor Kolomoisky3Cambodia3Libya3Ukraine3France3Angola32008 financial crisis3Otto Skorzeny3Bangkok3

Claims made here

Erich von Marbod member_of Department of Defense host_asserted ▶ 12:59
“what Shackley and Clines and Edwin Wilson was doing as it relates to setting up the network. We left it off in Laos and that they were setting up that whole network. We also talked briefly about Eric …”
Richard Secord member_of Iran-Contra affair host_asserted ▶ 16:43
“The colorful special operations expert, General John Sengleb, who shows up in all of these stories, worked in Laos and Cambodia with Shackley. Under Sengleb, during this period, were Secord and a youn…”
Oliver North member_of Iran-Contra affair host_asserted ▶ 16:43
“The colorful special operations expert, General John Sengleb, who shows up in all of these stories, worked in Laos and Cambodia with Shackley. Under Sengleb, during this period, were Secord and a youn…”
Richard Secord member_of Secret War in Laos host_asserted ▶ 17:42
“and with the opium warlock, warlord, Vang Pao. In 66, Secord had already flown more than 200 secret combat missions, mostly into Cambodia, and won four air medals. When he appealed to General Aderholt…”
Bernie Houghton member_of Nugan Hand Bank host_asserted ▶ 20:42
“to people as part of the Nugent Hand. Yeah, Bernie Houghton was involved, like probably of the, he was the number three guy at Nugent Hand. You had Nugent and you had Hand and then you had Houghton. S…”
Michael Hand member_of Nugan Hand Bank host_asserted ▶ 25:03
“Hand, with the assistance of Houghton, developed a knack for handling the profits of the opium crops. Eventually, both Houghton and Hand became key players at Nugent Hand Bank and the CIA's successor …”
Tom Karamessines funded Edwin Wilson host_asserted ▶ 30:36
“that his AFL-CIO boss, Paul Hall, would become angry if he discovered that his political assistant was, in fact, a CIA agent. Yeah, I doubt that since they're in bed with him anyway, but let's go ahea…”
Edwin Wilson front_for Maritime Consultants host_asserted ▶ 31:04
“helped to get Wilson CIA approval and funds to start a covert operation. With $11,000 in CIA money, Wilson set up shop at the foot of Capitol Hill. He called his company Maritime Consultants. That was…”
Edwin Wilson recruited Rafael Chichi Cotero host_asserted ▶ 32:32
“to be paid through Wilson's company and to operate under Wilson's control. His top agent was Rafael Chichi Cotero. Now, guys, they have placed a cell of Gladio under Edwin Wilson. That's what I just t…”
Otto Skorzeny assassinated Patrice Lumumba host_asserted ▶ 33:53
“portrayed to him from the inside of the operation. Now, we all know that Patrice Lumumba was not a Marxist. He was not a communist. And that it was the CIA that created the insurgency in Congo to over…”
Otto Skorzeny carried_out_attack Congo host_asserted ▶ 34:59
“Separate the area where the uranium and all of the gold and diamonds in Congo was located. Right. And so that area of Congo, what Otto Skorzeny was tasked with setting up the largest to date NATO base…”
Patricia founded Asia Research Organization book_quoted ▶ 36:53
“The Congo operation proved that Wilson was more than just a man with a touch for business. Wilson became the new Paul Helliwell operating around the world. He set up the Asia Research Organization, wh…”
James Cunningham headed Air America book_quoted ▶ 38:51
“unquote. No, you are a terrorist working for the CIA. Wilson was being very modest about his role. Another of the several thousand CIA officers supporting the secret war in Laos was James Cunningham. …”
Richard M. Bissell Jr. member_of Pentagon book_quoted ▶ 39:52
“Von Marbog, who officially worked at the Pentagon Assistant Comptroller at the time, was in fact making certain that the logistical pipeline for the secret war was running smoothly. Harry Adderhall wa…”
Richard M. Bissell Jr. appointed Harry Adorhall book_quoted ▶ 39:52
“Von Marbog, who officially worked at the Pentagon Assistant Comptroller at the time, was in fact making certain that the logistical pipeline for the secret war was running smoothly. Harry Adderhall wa…”
Patricia founded Consultants International book_quoted ▶ 41:17
“Consultants International and set up an office on K Street Northwest next to Washington's super lobbyist. You just can't make this shit up. Robert Keith Gray. Now, who is Robert Keith Gray? Robert Kei…”
Robert Keith Gray headed Hill and Knowlton host_asserted ▶ 41:17
“Consultants International and set up an office on K Street Northwest next to Washington's super lobbyist. You just can't make this shit up. Robert Keith Gray. Now, who is Robert Keith Gray? Robert Kei…”
Tun Shin Park member_of CIA host_asserted ▶ 44:30
“Had as much to do with the CIA wanting to know why Gray was associating with the Korean spy, Tunsin Park, as it did with mutual business interests. Now, let me just rephrase this because this is bulls…”
Patricia supplied_arms_to Muammar Gaddafi host_asserted ▶ 48:05
“OK, so basically they wanted Wilson gone and they frame Wilson, who at this point and they don't even talk about that either here. I thought they did later on and maybe they do. Wilson is selling arms…”
Joe Biden member_of United States host_asserted ▶ 57:35
“Senator Biden got to the Senate in the 1970s. And James Eastland, I mean, think about this for a second. You have this Democratic coalition, right? And we know how much emphasis is on race. And to me,…”
James Eastland member_of United States host_asserted ▶ 57:35
“Senator Biden got to the Senate in the 1970s. And James Eastland, I mean, think about this for a second. You have this Democratic coalition, right? And we know how much emphasis is on race. And to me,…”
Ihor Kolomoisky laundered_money_for PrivatBank host_asserted ▶ 1:04:30
“ill-gotten gains like baby farming over in Ukraine, that billionaire guy owned a whole bunch of crap here. Ihor Kolomoisky basically owned all of Cleveland. And the way he did that by taking the World…”
Hunter Biden member_of Burisma caller_asserted ▶ 1:06:53
“That the beneficiary of the trust is his wife. And I was just, like I said, doing some of the research and it was setting off some bells and whistles. And boy, we've come across this so many times. Ye…”
Mossad supplied_arms_to Angola host_asserted ▶ 1:19:24
“Our CIA went to Mossad and said, hey, here's the money. We need you to send the weapons to Angola. We need you to send the weapons to the Contras because we can't do it legally. And they did it with F…”
Mossad supplied_arms_to Contras host_asserted ▶ 1:19:24
“Our CIA went to Mossad and said, hey, here's the money. We need you to send the weapons to Angola. We need you to send the weapons to the Contras because we can't do it legally. And they did it with F…”
France supplied_arms_to Israel host_asserted ▶ 1:19:50
“But they also supplied all kinds of Mirage jets, helicopters, missiles to Israel to further deploy into like former French colonies that the French people said they did not want. They wanted to grant …”
U.S. Department of Homeland Security carried_out_attack Phoenix Program host_asserted ▶ 1:39:55
“The Homeland Security has been implementing behind the scenes for the last, well, ever since 9-11. That is when this jumped into high gear. It's not that it hadn't been going on before that, but it de…”
Operation Gladio carried_out_attack Donald Trump host_asserted ▶ 1:44:49
“Right. There's a reason that the Democrats are giving us senators like Kristen Gillibrand, who's completely mute. Right. They want people to not pay attention. And that was a fundamental threat to as …”