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Operation Gladio - Angola, Portugal and arms dealers

1:53:20

Transcript

0:00 Okay, everybody. Thanks for being here. I gave Bridget the co-host thing. I don't know why she doesn't have it. I on it phone glitch. All right. So let me cancel it and I'll give it back to you. All right. So this is going to be a crazy show. So in.
0:43 Looking at Europe, for the most part, it's very difficult to discuss the countries there in Gladio perspectives without understanding some of the colonial spillover. I was going to do France today, and then you can't really do France without covering...
1:13 Algeria because the preponderance of France's Gladio capability and the shock troops and the OAS were all employed in Algeria, their colony that wanted freedom. And the same is true with Portugal. But I had more material with me to do Portugal.
1:42 And I have always wanted to research Angola because when we were doing Cuba and Central America and South America, because Angola popped off at the same time, there's so many references to the same CIA people being in and the Cuban exiles and everybody being in Angola. And I'm like, what the hell is that?
2:11 in angola i mean i knew about it but i never actually looked into it um africa was not my area of study in air war college um southeast asia um was my specialty and so i just didn't know that much about it so over the past couple of days i've been doing a lot of research into it because i already knew all about the
2:38 Operation Gladio efforts in Portugal. And there's some going in positions that you have to understand about Portugal. At the time, at the end of World War II, there was a dictator there by the last name of Salazar. And just like in Spain, we had Franco. But for some reason, Portugal...
3:05 was almost immediately allowed to enter NATO with a dictator in charge, which to any outside observer would make you scratch your head. It certainly did me. And if we're allowing dictators in because we have no quote unquote democracy requirements, then why wasn't Franco allowed in? Well, there is actually a reason for that because Franco.
3:34 and Spain, because they were not part of NATO, is where NATO hid all of their crap. That's where they hid Otto Skorzeny. That's where they hid all of the training camps that they did on the continent, as opposed to on an island off the continent, because they had terrorist training camps for Gladio operators all along the French and Spanish border.
4:02 There was a plausible liability. If Spain's not in NATO, then you can say, hey, that's not part of NATO, right? And so it wasn't until after Franco's gone that Spain eventually ends up in NATO. So you have to keep all of those things in mind. And at the time, Portugal had colonies, one of which was Angola.
4:35 I want to read a couple of things to you, one of which is, well, first of all, let me talk about the map for just a second. You can't look at a current map and know anything about the dynamics back then. If you look at an old map, and I mean a really old map, like before World War II, you will realize that
5:01 South Africa basically controlled the entire southern tip of, not South Africa, colonial powers, the whole south, of which South Africa was one. So when you get up into after the World War II, you have an overwhelming, like Rhodesia.
5:32 South Africa, and then what was back then called Southwest Africa, Boswala land, all of those entities between the Brits and Portugal, all of those had like UK ties, and then you have Mozambique and Angola.
6:05 Lo and behold, one of the very first things you realize when you look at the map is Angola, entire north and half of their east border is the Congo. Well, that's weird because when we did the Congo.
6:36 We found out when they murdered Lumumba for him wanting independence for his country, that the CIA went into the Congo and, you know, in the scenario where we don't ever change the borders that were created after World War II, changed the borders and created a brand new country called Katanga. And why would they do that? Oh.
7:05 Because the Katanga had all of the natural resources in the Congo. And they didn't want Lubamba to have access to it and make his country successful in its independence. So they not only created a new country called Katanga that had the uranium, the diamond mines, and all the other stuff.
7:36 They created the world's largest NATO military base there to guard all of that stuff and to kill any Congonese who came in and tried to take their country back. So a couple of days ago when I looked at this old map and I'm like, oh, son of a bitch. So Angola, north and northeast, is 100% right along the same lines as Katanga.
8:07 Which means what? That they're going to have all of the same resources that the Congo has. They're going to have diamonds. They're going to have oil. They're going to have all of that stuff. And they're going to have it all in the northern area of Angola to include uranium. So immediately...
8:38 I'm like, oh, oh, and look, the only way that the Congo can get to the Atlantic is through Angola. So who had interest in, from the international syndicate perspective, who had interest in Angola with their petroleum, diamonds, iron ore, manganese, copper, gold, phosphates?
9:10 uranium, coffee, timber, cotton, and food. Angola was self-sufficient in food, which of course, when I told my husband, I was looking at Angola and he goes, isn't that where all of the starving people were when we were like in elementary school and they kept telling us you had to clean your plate because the people were over there starving. And I'm like, yeah, except for they were completely self-sufficient in food until we started messing with them.
9:38 And then, of course, you have to look up who had the interest in the food sources, the oil, the diamonds, blah, blah, blah. And you come up with two people, Standard Oil and all of the diamond exchanges that just so happened to all end up in Israel. Oh, well, then.
10:05 I'm looking at this this morning and I'm like, well, crap. If you guys watched the show with Alpha last night, you realize that Israel is basically a large weapons dealer. And anybody that we wanted to sell weapons to that we couldn't be caught selling weapons to because of congressional oversight or laws or whatever, we just sold them through Israel.
10:33 We're giving aid to Israel, and Israel's selling guns to the Contras and the Guatemalans and the Costa Ricans and the El Salvadorians and blah, blah, blah, to the point where they're actually setting up arms manufacturing plants in their countries using military aid that we gave them. And then so they make profits off the guns when we're actually the ones paying for them, and we don't get jack squat except for the debt.
11:02 They were also selling tons of weaponry, aircraft, everything to, Israel was, to South Africa, apartheid South Africa. When none of the West could be seen selling to them, Israel did it for all of them. The French is the one that was basically helping all of them with their nuclear weapons program to include South Africa and Israel.
11:32 A lot of the other Europeans were doing this as well. And of course, during back in this time, Israel was sending a boatload of weapons to Iran. You know, the people that they supposedly hate now who ended up with all the weapons that Israel sent them. Yeah. So that makes what I'm about to tell you all the much more interesting. And you have to understand all of that.
12:01 in order to make any of this make sense. So let's go back to, I'm going to first read to you an interview with the former station chief for the CIA in Angola. This is an interview that was done, and there's a couple of very important parts. So I want to read.
12:33 Most of this verbatim. And I'm going to start off by saying that there are three factions in Angola. When they get ready to have their revolution for their independence. And those three factions are.
13:02 Let me pull it up here so I can make sure I get the letters. And I'm just going to do them by letters. You guys can look them up later on. You have one who, if your motives were pure and you really wanted what was best for Angola, you would have supported this particular one. I'm trying to find it.
13:33 M.P.L.A. All right. So M.P.L.A. M.P.L.A. And I'll go through this guy's interview goes through why they would have been the logical choice. They were highly educated, most of them educated inside of Portugal. Very articulate, very savvy when it comes to.
14:00 fighting strategy everything they had the most capability to actually run a government because again they were all very educated the leader at the time this was going on was actually married to a Portuguese citizen and had traveled back and forth his mentor was from Portugal spent a lot of time in
14:31 Angola, blah, blah, blah. So they were hands down the best ones. So, you know, we're not going to pick them. The next group was called or were called FNLA. FNLA is the group ran by Holden Roberto.
15:05 Holden Roberto is the brother-in-law of the CIA-installed president of the Congo, which had temporarily changed its name to Zaire, President Mobutu. And you remember me talking about him because he's a freaking criminal when we talked about...
15:36 how they killed Lumumba. So when they murdered Lumumba, they installed Mobutu. Mobutu. And this guy's married his wife's brother is the leader of the FNLA. And guess where it's located? It's located all along the border.
16:05 of katanga and all of the natural resources so he's basically a drug lord a weapons lord um taking uh diamonds out of the country illegally he's he's a crook so you know damn well that's who the cia is going to fund in this whole thing and as i was reading it i hadn't even got to the part where the cia picked and i knew you just know by reading who these people are um
16:34 who the CIA is going to pick. He was also stupid, and he was the least capable of being able to do anything with Angola after they decided they were done stealing all of the resources. So, of course, people like Rockefeller and Standard Oil and Israel and the people in the mining companies...
17:01 are going to want the stupidest guy that's the most corrupt because they can obviously pay him off and he doesn't give a crap about the people in the country. And then there is a third one called UNITA, U-N-I-T-A. And that was kind of like a spoiler. And that group, while it represented the largest grouping of people,
17:31 They were also the most rural and uneducated. So by rank order of the population, you had UNINA with about a high 30% of the population. You had around 40%. You had the MPLA. They had the second highest majority.
18:00 And then the corrupt idiots that were sitting on all of the mines up there had the least amount of people that they represented. So again, by any measure, they would have never been the pick. But of course, it's going to be the pick. Because one of their strategies in all of this for a long time, it goes back 100 years, is, and the French were like champions of this, you pick the minority.
18:30 tribe in these rural areas, and you put the colonizers' military behind them because they had been beat up on for centuries, and they're merciless. Their opportunity to get revenge on the majority of the population, it's kind of like the bully.
18:55 and the little kid that gets beat up all the time. Well, the bully tribes, which were the majority, had suppressed the minority tribes for centuries. And then you, for one period of time, so that the colonial powers can steal all your shit, you're going to go in and arm the minority and let them beat the hell and kill all of the majority because you don't care. You're stealing all their crap. And then at the end of the day, when these colonial powers pulled out,
19:24 Then you had all of these minority tribes that had been so brutally nasty to the majority of the people. They all got slaughtered. There was a Canadian general that three star that was deployed to one of these African countries that this happened in. And when the French pulled out, he was part of a U.N. peacekeeping mission that went in to try to.
19:52 minimize the destruction and the majority tribe didn't care they went in and literally was hacking up anybody that had served in the government um and had basically um uh authorized the the brutal um murdering and was in bed with the french they just like would in large scales hundreds of people at a time just hacked them up in pieces and this guy um after his deployment
20:21 came home and like three months later, they found him almost dead on a park bench. He had had a nervous breakdown and it destroyed his life. And you can imagine why the brutality of some of what was caused all in the name of the international syndicate getting rich and screw everybody else. All right. So.
20:48 That should be enough background to read this first interview. All right. So here's the question. What kind of knowledge did the CIA have of the Angolan liberation movement prior to the outbreak of the Civil War? The answer given by the former CIA station chief, an agency office was established.
21:14 In 1964, chiefly to report on various African liberation movements, since Angola was a Portuguese colony, Lisbon provided the actual intelligence coverage. This office was closed in 1967, mainly, as you suggest, to humor the Portuguese. In the agency, was forced to rely on offshore coverage, mainly from Ken Sasha.
21:44 which is in the Congo and from Lisbon. Responding to the worsening crisis following the Portuguese revolution, the agency decided to send a few officers to Luanda and on temporary duty in March of 1975. The guy being interviewed said, I quickly followed. Arriving in August, to the best of my knowledge, the bulk of the CIA reporting in 1974 and 5,
22:16 did in fact come from Kenosha, which again is the Congo, which is a CIA-installed stooge government that is going to be reporting information in Angola in support of the president's brother-in-law whose territory in Angola borders Katanga that I just described. So everything he's going to be told is through that filter.
22:50 Holden Roberto was well known to the U.S. government, which enjoyed good access to Roberto and his chief lieutenants, facilitated by his father-in-law. Now, here it calls him his father-in-law. The other one called it his brother-in-law. But whatever. He's related. On the other hand, we had little contact with UNITA. And that guy that's in charge of UNITA is Savimbi.
23:20 S-A-V-I-M-B-I, until Unina emerged as the third major power player. Also, you mentioned in your study, Siam B was not trusted because of his Chinese communist contacts and his flirtation with Mao. The Luande Consulate, again from the Congo, reported in 1974,
23:50 that he was sympathetic to Maoism. The embassy in the Congo also reported that he was pro-Chinese and a racist. The CIA took issue with these reports and argued that he was just a nationalist. He was getting equipment and resources from the Chinese. He was not a Maoist. The next question, what is your own assessment of Neto?
24:22 N-E-T-O. And his first name is like Agostinho Neto. N-E-T-O. And he was the guy that was in charge of the MPLA. I came to share Tom Killoran. And Tom Killoran was also the U.S. Embassy Consul in the country. His last name is spelled K-I-
24:51 L-L-O-R-A-N, its assessment that MPLA was the best qualified movement to govern Angola. Many of the leaders were educated at the university, and a few even traveled to Patrice Lumumba's university in Moscow, although many, which, you know, right away would be a red flag for the CIA, although many outwardly embraced a,
25:21 European version of socialism, they were much closer to nationalism as opposed to any other philosophical like compared to Marxism or anything like that. Lucio Laro, a Moleto intellectual, was probably a convinced socialist in the Cold War sense, which basically meant
25:52 that he believed that labor had a bigger seat at the table than what the colonial powers were willing to embrace at the time. You know, that's their label of communism, is giving people decent wages. Netto, the undisputed leader of the MPLA, however, was moderate. A Protestant minister married to a Portuguese.
26:19 and had many close Portuguese friends. His trusted doctor and unofficial advisor, Armento Ferreira, was Portuguese and lived in Lisbon. Other senior MPLA members were impressive, and he names several of them who have crazy names, and were smart political operatives. They were good military commanders. In addition, the MPLA was the least tribal.
26:49 of the three movements, meaning that they would be able to govern more fairly. Netto and most of the top cadre were Mbundu, but the MPLA welcomed many different tribes, unlike the FMLN, which consisted of only one tribe, and UNITA, which consisted only of one tribe. Despite the uncontested
27:20 social leaning background of many of the MPLA leaders. They were the most effective, better educated, better trained, better motivated. The rank and file were also better motivated, particularly the armed combatants who fought harder and with more determination. Portuguese Angolians overwhelmingly supported the MPLA.
27:45 Unfortunately, the CIA's association with the FNLA and UNITA tainted its analysis, as is frequently the case when intelligence collections and analysis are wedded to covert action programs, objectivity and truth become victims of political expediency. That's a much nicer way of saying what I said. I believe this was the case with Angola. No one wanted to believe the consulate's reporting.
28:12 and Killoran's courage and accurate analysis was ignored. He sacrificed his career at the State Department when he refused to bend his reporting to Kissinger's mantra, and he actually resigned in protest. God bless him. In the interest of candor, I must admit that Killoran and I frequently were at loggerheads over what I initially perceived as his MPLA bias.
28:41 And this is very important, this part right here. So he thinks that this guy that's talking got all of his information before he hit the ground from the CIA station chief in the Congo, who we already know is corrupt. And he thinks because he's being told by Killian that the MPLA is the better choice to manage the country.
29:10 better equipped to lead, blah, blah, blah, that he has, he sees his bias, but he doesn't see his own bias. And that's so important in all of the discussions that we have. So it says that convinced me of the urgent need to stop the MPLA from taking power.
29:36 fully agree with the U.S. policy objectives, and he's basically saying that he agreed with what he had said, and Killerman was trying to tell him there's a different perspective. And also, the U.S. policy objectives that had been articulated to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee by Kissinger. Since the MPLA was receiving Soviet assistance because the U.S. refused to help them, I believe that we had no choice.
30:05 but to add our assistance to their opponent. It says it was only after three months that I realized what was really happening. I had little direct contact with UNITA. My knowledge of this movement was very basic and thus not worth your consideration. As you are aware, UNITA had little presence in Luanda.
30:38 either politically or militarily during the time I was there. I was deeply concerned, nevertheless, that United purported ties with South Africa and the resulting political liability that that would carry. I was unaware at the time, of course, that the U.S. would be eventually begging South Africa to directly intervene because they have all of the weapons from Israel.
31:07 I admit that I developed a bias against the FNLA and its leaders, which I never tried to hide. Its ties to MUBATO, the CIA-installed stooge in the Congo, merely added to my assessment that this organization was led by corrupt, unprincipled men who represented the very worst of a radical African racism. My personal experience
31:35 only served to reinforce my opinion. I was disgusted by the briefings and my meetings with FNLA leaders and contacts. As an aside, which underlines my assessment, FNLA contact in Luanda tried unsuccessfully to use our sensitive facilities to transport stolen goods. Now, this part's incredibly important
32:07 The sensitive facilities that they're talking about are basically the CIA, like they have covert houses, like safe houses that they occupy and protect. And there's a network of those. And obviously, the FNLA's knowledge of the fact that they had them would have been gained by the network of these.
32:37 in the Congo, right? And they were using them or wanted to use them in Angola for stolen goods. And let me tell you, the stolen goods are weapons, drugs, and diamonds. What was your, here's another question. What was your opinion about the CIA covert action program codenamed IA Feature? So it's all one word, capital I, capital A, and then the word Feature.
33:09 Simply put, I was opposed to the covert action program in Angola because I was convinced it would not succeed and would badly damage our ability to work in the future with moderate elements in Africa. We were not prepared to spend the necessary resources to assure victory. Or, more fairly put, we should have realized that our adversaries
33:34 which he saw at the time to be Moscow and Havana, were more determined and much better positioned than we were, and they did not have a hostile Congress controlling purse strings. Nat Davis said it distinctly in his notes to Cisco on July 12, 1995. This is a quote. Kissinger was determined to challenge the Soviet Union, although no vital U.S. interests were at stake.
34:04 We held bad cards, as Davis argued. I like your conclusion. To pass when no vital interests were at stake and the cards in one's hands were bad could be seen. Therefore, a sign of maturity, not weakness. But it was not Kissinger's style. His United States must play and win. How sad. Because...
34:36 Kissinger is not playing for the United States. Kissinger was playing for Standard Oil and the rest of the international syndicate. That's what just frustrates me to death about even the people that write today. Obviously, most people weren't as well informed back. I'm sorry if I'm breaking in, but did we lose you, Colonel? Can you hear me now? OK, sorry about that. SR 71, tell me where I am.
38:55 lost my sound like that's this is another topic we're not allowed to talk about i'm sorry colonel but exactly where you lost your where i lost you was about five minutes ago i don't know how many other people lost you at that point um i think everybody because i think that was on my end um so basically um let me go back to that basically the guy that they're interviewing said um that
39:28 One of the big things in history, if you go back and you just start reading generic stuff about Angola, the American version of history is that they had to go in there and do something because the Soviets and the Cubans were already in there creating havoc and they had to stop the communist wave. That's kind of the generic version of history. When in fact, if you go and talk to any of the actual station chiefs,
39:53 And the CIA and the people that resigned in protest over what we actually did in Angola, every single one of them will tell you that's a bold-faced lie. There was no significant presence of either Soviets or Cubans being in Angola until after the CIA picked a winner. And it was the corrupt people that were an extension of the Congo and were stealing all of the diamonds that the other people came in to help.
40:22 After they were requested to do so because the actual people were being abandoned for the corrupt government that the CIA was trying to install. So that's kind of the summary of the last five minutes. And along those lines, I had pulled up the current ambassador, which you guys will not be at all surprised.
40:51 um with his history he has done um assignments in the foreign service in niger who just had a coup in the republic of congo which of course we cooed papua new guinea which of course we cooed um he also served in the peace corps um so you you understand where i'm going with this and then also
41:17 He was in a whole bunch of other, like Mozambique and Morocco and Malaysia and a bunch of them, Kuala Lumpur, a bunch of them had coups as well. So he definitely is part of this international syndicate. And the most telling of all of them is his assignment at the Office of Intelligence and Research inside the State Department. If you guys remember, back in the day, in the immediate aftermath of World War II,
41:44 You had John Foster Dulles in the State Department, Alan Dulles at the CIA, and their sister basically ran the Office of Intelligence and Research, which is the CIA embedded in the State Department. It's kind of like their coordination office. And this guy, of course, worked there as well. So there you have it. I did want to let me go back to my other sources.
42:13 And there's a couple of things that I want to go over here because there's so much here. This is just a short tidbit that says on November 11th, 1975, Angola became a free country after 500 years of Portuguese colonialism.
42:38 But independence so far has meant only a violent civil war for Angola, as three competing African liberation movements, each massively supported by outside powers, vie for power in the country. Indeed, foreign intervention has turned Angola's civil war into a potentially explosive Cold War confrontation. The actual conflict in Angola, however, does not easily reduce itself to a struggle between communists and capitalists. All three movements
43:08 say they favor some form of a European-style socialism. And basically what they mean by that is just workers' rights, because these people have been enslaved. They just want to have some rights. So labeling that as communism is such bullshit. The author continues, the Popular Movement for Liberation of Angola, the MPLA, led by Neto,
43:38 is generally recognized as the strongest and the least radical of the three. MPLA was founded in the mid-1950s and began armed resistance to Portugal in 1961. It draws its primary support from the Kimbundu people.
44:11 And that tribe alone made up 23% of the country, but they had multiple other tribes. They were the only entity, political entity, that had multi-tribal abilities to manage. The other ones are very one tribe specific. And of course, they go on and talk about that they're the most educated one as well. The Soviet Union, Cuba.
44:40 Algeria, Mozambique, and Guinea-Basel all recognized MPLA's claim to legitimacy and all had furnished it with military support at some point in this effort. The MPLA started receiving modest amounts of support from outside entities in 1960s to fight the Portuguese domination.
45:09 after first having been refused support by the United States. So they asked the United States first, just as Lumumba did, just as so many other countries did. But there you go. However, it was not until April 1974 revolution in Portugal.
45:35 And most recently, since the spring of 1975, that the Soviets began truly providing any level of assistance. And the most Cuban advisors, quote unquote advisors, that went to Angola was a total of 3,000. The FNLA, which is the one Holden Roberto that's related to Mbato in the Congo, was based.
46:07 solely among the Bakongo people who make up 13% of the population, again, with these minority tribes. Roberto is closely aligned, and this is the one that calls him the brother-in-law of President Mobutu of Zaire, which of course is the Congo, and has spent most of his adult life outside Angola in Zaire.
46:36 Most of the territory controlled by the FNLA is in the north, all along the Congo border. On November 11th, the FNLA and the third independent group, UNITA, formalized an alliance that basically, if you read other stories, was brokered by the CIA so they could attack the MPLA because
47:02 their covert actions against the MPLA was not getting them anywhere. So they were trying to broker a deal in order to gain more support and more power. So most of the FNLA aid over the years has flown through the Congo, the U.S. being the majority of all outside support.
47:33 The FNLA is now also receiving aid from Belgium, West Germany, France, the Congo, and South Africa, which of course is basically saying it's NATO. The Chinese provided assistance to Zaire and the FNLA until a few months prior to the publishing of this article, which was in the 70s. When they began withdrawing their support,
48:02 So basically, the Chinese and the U.S. was both funding the corrupt people. UNITA, which stood for National Union for the Total Independence of Angola, was formed in 1966, and its current leader, Zabimbi, its base was among the Abimbandu people, who comprised 38% of the population.
48:30 United strength was in the southern part of Angola. United did not receive significant outside help during its nine years of struggle for independence until earlier the year this was written. And that was from the US and Britain and South Africa. So let's delve into this just a little bit.
48:59 There was a little bit of involvement. The story kind of starts from obviously what was going on that we've already covered in other forums in the Congo. And with what I started off with, our involvement in Katanga. And so all around Africa at the time.
49:26 There was this huge independence movement going around. And in secret, the CIA was already subsidizing a lot of groups that were trying to get their independence from Portugal because what they saw, even though Portugal was another NATO member,
49:53 They saw this wave of independence happening and they were trying to buy the people at the beginning so that the U.S. and the U.S. syndicate players would have a leg up on any of their European counterparts. And there was some information that came out of the White House back at the time. And this is a quote. The CIA had the habit of picking out single.
50:21 individuals and making them, quote unquote, our guys, somehow assuming that they would turn out all right. It was mainly a cash in the envelope kind of thing, conscious money to show Americans good intentions, unquote. Basically, they're buying the winners. In 1969, the Nixon administration decided to end the secret program aid to the independence groups as part of a larger decision to improve America's relationships with.
50:51 other countries in South Africa, like Rhodesia and South Africa. According to the State Department, the CIA did not totally drop Roberto. They basically ignored Nixon and later the Senate's hold on aid to Angola. And when it became clear that Angola would receive independence from the new government in Portugal, so at the
51:21 at this particular time in the 70s, is when Salazar goes bye-bye. They have what's called the Carnation Revolution, and Salazar is basically in a non-violent coup, is overthrown, and Portugal would become a democracy. And at that time, that was a clear signal.
51:49 that with the disorienting events in Portugal, that that was going to be the best window of freedom for Angola. And the CIA wanted to be in the middle of it. Thus, with Roberto already safely inside the American camp because of his relation to the president of Congo, President Ford's key decision last spring turned on whether to start funding a second independence group called UNITA.
52:19 And in a couple of other shows, we've talked about this thing that Henry Kissinger set up because it was the key factor in the 1967 USS Liberty. It was a thing called the 40 Committee. It was a committee of 40 of the top people in government when Henry Kissinger was in government that basically controlled everything. And so this 40 Committee.
52:48 already had approved $300,000 in secret subsidies to go to the head of UNINA, and the president personally approved that action, according to the administration of President Ford. The source stated that both the president and Kissinger were aware that adding UNINA to the U.S. account constituted a major step in a commitment to Angola and against MPLA.
53:17 The source recalls that Kissinger pushed hard for an increase in the CIA's intervention. Henry wanted to be told why we should intervene, said the official, not why not. Many within the government were opposed, including Nathaniel Davis, then the State Department's highest staffer on African affairs, and he had been formerly the ambassador to Chile.
53:46 When we did the revolution down there and he left, he was so disgusted with what we were doing in Chile. He left Chile. He basically got. It's not that he was fired. He just left because he wouldn't go along with anything they were doing. So they stuck him in some hellhole staff job at the State Department, which happened to be all over the Africa Bureau.
54:13 And as a result of that, here he is again, and he's going to go up against the CIA and Henry Kissinger yet again in their globalist garbage. The Secretary of State's African Bureau in June recommended almost unanimously that the U.S. stay out of Angola. Moreover, Davis, according to officials, directly warned that either Roberto or Savin
54:46 neither of them are good fighters. In fact, they couldn't fight their way out of a paper bag. It was the wrong game and the players we have are losers. That was his quote. Since President Ford's decision, the U.S. has maintained a two-track policy towards events in Angola. Secretary Kissinger continues to publicly say that
55:12 The Soviets and the Cubans are intervening and we absolutely have to do something. And on the second track, the U.S. government itself intervenes by sending funds in arms to UNITA and FNLA. In addition to this covert assistance, the administration is requesting an unprecedented increase in open aid to the Congo. So again, a money laundering opportunity. Do you see how this works?
55:40 They increase the, okay, so they'll ask for a little bit of aid for Angola, but they're really getting all of their real aid through the Congo or Zaire at the time. And they're going to ramp that budget up and then basically milk all of that aid into Angola. The administration has come close to admitting that this assistance will also be used in Angola in spite of the congressional prohibition in providing aid.
56:10 to the countries when it passes through third parties. Angola is strategically located in southern Africa. And basically, as I mentioned, it's the port for Congo, Zaire. The railroads all run through them, through Angola for Congo slash Zaire.
56:42 And they have all of the copper that was coming out of there, the uranium coming out of there is all transiting Angola. So that answered the question for me. And then it says here, foreign investment. The Portuguese lead in foreign investment in Angola. American corporations have approximately $240 million. And this is back like in the 60s.
57:12 90% of it is Gulf oil, which is Rockefeller. Texaco had a small operation there as well. So that tells you basically everything that you need to know. And here's an interesting one. The following exchange took place in the Senate between Daniel Inouye, a Democrat from Hawaii, and Kissinger in 1975.
57:43 Inouye says, is Zaire, Congo, providing military and economic assistance to any of the warring factions in Angola? Kissinger responds, I think Zaire, Congo, has a major national interest in the future of Angola since its major outlet to the sea goes through Angola. And therefore, the orientation that controls Angola will have a sort of stranglehold on Zaire too.
58:12 So I believe that it is certainly giving some economic assistance in a way says, if that is the case, would you say that we are providing some indirect subsidies to Angola insurgents? And Kissinger says, I think that would be correct. So it's interesting that even Kissinger gives up, you know, says the quiet part out loud. The uranium oil.
58:42 and diamonds that was coming out of the Congo was transiting Angola. And they couldn't continue to rape, pillage, and rob the Congo if they didn't control Angola. So you see, they really had no choice but to go into Angola. And everybody thinking that we did that because we're just dumb is retarded themselves.
59:12 We did that because whoever was going to be in charge of Angola was going to control the Congo. And the Congo had a whole bunch of crap that we wanted. Let's see. Then we get into a really interesting part of the story, and that's the South African intervention. And the reason why this becomes increasingly interesting is because now we know that.
59:43 Israel is taking our aid, transitioning that into an arms program that they were sharing at this very time with South Africa. And then South Africa is using that weaponry slash aid to work for the destabilization of all of their neighbors.
1:00:15 Another article that I found, the author was talking about the outside power with the largest direct involvement in Angola was the white supremacist government of South Africa. South Africa troops entered Angola and the defense minister, who would eventually become the prime minister, Botha, B-O-T-H-A.
1:00:46 admitted that his country's troops had secured an electrical plant that was on the inside of Angola's border. So they're definitely operating there. The South Africans then escalated considerably, according to U.S. intelligence reports, and they basically started...
1:01:14 moving deeper into angola and keep in mind the unina people were on the south part of so they're basically the south african units are going to be falling in on the cia supported unina people the fnla is up in the northeast and the mpla are basically in the west kind of along the port authorities and the more developed urban areas the more
1:01:43 profitable areas in Angola so it talks about spotting South African troops all over the southern part of Angola South Africa begins censoring their own press anytime they tried to write anything about Angola and let's see also talks about these forces were supplied from
1:02:17 South African military bases all along the south part of Angola and that there were regular C-130 aircraft flying deep into Angola to resupply the UNINA troops. It also says that basically we had entered at that point into an alliance with South Africa to overthrow or to install
1:02:47 puppet government in Angola based on the weapons trade and the cargo aircraft. And in one article I was reading, it was saying that both in the Congo and in South Africa, we were flying in C-141s after C-141s, which is at the time probably the biggest cargo aircraft we had at the time.
1:03:17 full of U.S. weaponry into the area to be used in this civil war. And then it says the U.S. and South African cooperation in Southern Africa had happened before. In the 60s, South African intelligence worked closely with the CIA to recruit mercenaries for the Congolese Civil War, and that's when they were fighting against Lumumba. This collaboration,
1:03:48 was part of what three independent administration sources described as close liaisonship between South African and the CIA for a very long time. And you're going to find also that the South African government had a CIA counterpart. They also had paramilitary gladio capability. They also did biological weapon experiments on large portions of their Black population.
1:04:17 The South African government has done so many atrocities. And the fact that in endeavor after endeavor, and the CIA knew all about all of this. But if you look, just search on South African weapons program, and one of the guys that was most notorious for doing it is this Batha, who served as the defense minister and then becomes the prime minister. His personal doctor.
1:04:47 was kind of like the Goebbels when it came to experimentation or Gottlieb for the CIA. He was that guy. And it was the personal doctor of the prime minister. However close the cooperation between the U.S. and South Africa, the extent of the South African intervention in Angola has already caused tremors throughout.
1:05:17 Africa at the time. And again, this is back in the 1970s. Uganda's President Idi Amin, who had severely criticized the Soviet intervention in Angola, warned the FNLA and UNINA that the African states may have to review their positions on the Angola situation and their attitude to the two parties in particular, because basically they were getting in bed with the CIA. Both Nigeria and Tanzania
1:05:49 Tanzania. Important African states now recognize the MPLA government and had changed their position from neutral once they too found out that the CIA was trying to bring about a corrupt government. And so you had two people that, two countries that were sitting on the sidelines that now have lined up against the MPLA, which is the better potential government.
1:06:16 And it eventually called a meeting of the Organization of African Unity, the OAU, and they basically all come out in favor of the MPLA as well, which again is the exact reason why they're not going to, the CIA is not going to let them in because they're not going to be corruptible. So one of the authors,
1:06:47 ask, who is the CIA basically hiding this information from? And it says that the CIA's intervention in Angola is not a secret to the combatants there, to the leaders of the African countries, or to the Soviets. The primary victims of secrecy were Congress and the American people. The covert intervention enables the president to avoid submitting his policy to the public scrutiny.
1:07:15 Generally, a president faced with a hard or controversial choice in foreign policy must address many audiences. You have debates about it. All of this is avoided with secret policies. Covert action projects usually originate in the clandestine service branch of the CIA and are approved by the 40 Committee, which was basically Kissinger. An interdepartmental committee generally appropriate.
1:07:43 Intelligence analysts in the CIA and country desks of the State Department are not consulted or informed. Any disagreement with the bureaucracy is closely guarded and severely restricted. Finally, a covert policy simply avoids congressional and public discussion. Let's see. The ability to act secretly has policy consequences. A president is much more likely to decide to intervene simply because it can be done.
1:08:16 without spending any time trying to rationalize it. The decision to intervene in Angola illustrates this clearly. Angola presented a situation in which a national liberation movement, equipped and armed, eventually, not at the time that we decided we were going to intervene, by the Soviets, was competing with other movements for power in a country not of a vital concern to the U.S.
1:08:44 which I've already argued it is only because we are stealing all of the crap out of the Congo to include their uranium. The response could have been to intervene to protest Soviet's intervention or do nothing. The African Bureau of the State Department was almost unanimously opposed to intervention. Since Kissinger was ardently in favor of intervention and served as chairman of the 40 Committee, it was difficult to believe that the objections received much consideration at all.
1:09:14 President Ford chose to intervene, supporting the FNLA and UNITA initially with $50 million, and then it just escalated from there. Given the current absence on the consensus of foreign policy, it is at least doubtful that he would have made that same decision if he had been required to win congressional and citizens' hearts and minds. Because keep in mind,
1:09:41 This is in the immediate aftermath of the Vietnam War. And again, it goes to the saying that I have said since I started this Operation Gladio, we have went from World War II till today, never once ever not being at war, ever. These people have kept their pockets full with our taxpayer money.
1:10:10 And this covert operation of selling drugs and trafficking arms and people to do the black ops side of it as well since the end of World War II. And, of course, in all of these things, our U.S. service members die. We lose aircraft. People get killed. CIA agents gets killed.
1:10:40 It does not seem that any of the people care about any of that. Let's see. And of course, I have to remind everybody, because I looked this up, who was the CIA director when all of this was going on in Angola? William Colby. The CIA intervention in Angola was no longer a secret. It continues in spite of being revealed.
1:11:12 The fact that it continued in spite of it being revealed eventually suggests that the secrecy was not directed at the Angolans. Overt, covert action may become a new weapon of the president's arsenal, one reporter had said. And anyway, I think that gives you the overview of the instability.
1:11:43 That is created as we end up pulling out of these colonial entities around the world where the CIA is trying to recolonialize them under the U.S. We saw that happen after the Spanish-American War. We talked about that quite a bit with the Philippines and Cuba.
1:12:11 In Puerto Rico, it is literally these colonial powers. And every time they get kicked out, we go in and we don't go in to grant them their freedom. We basically recolonialize them under some horrendous situations, especially throughout Central and South America. And now we're going to look at as we go through Europe.
1:12:39 some of these satellite situations, because they're still causes for consternation in many cases. And it kind of highlighted for me the interwoven part of this, where you have the CIA using Israel as the cutout for weapons trafficking, and then they're funneling
1:13:06 funneling them onto South Africa for manufacturing, um, and then into these, um, covert. So there's, you know, there's, and Aiden, uh, Shako, uh, Kostogi is in the middle of all of this. Um, he may made bank off of all of this. Um, so did Robert Maxwell in the whole, um, uh,
1:13:34 selling of the software promise to corrupt all of these countries' banks so that they could track all of their transactions with the promise software. I mean, it's just one thing on top of another. And then keep in mind crypto AG, where we were monitoring all of their message traffic from their embassies to their country. So it's overwhelming, actually.
1:14:00 But basically, that's kind of what we got for today. I'm going to open it up for questions. If anybody wants to ask questions, go ahead, SR71. Yes, Colonel. Welcome back from your trip, by the way. You mentioned China and all of this, and unless I misunderstood something, were we working together with the Chinese at that point? We were.
1:14:33 Now, that blows my mind. It shouldn't. There's been many instances where that's the case. And let me also just caution you on that. That was an article that was written back in 1975. And back in 1975, the difference between China and Taiwan is not the same as it is today. You have to keep in mind, it could have actually been Taiwan.
1:15:03 Because Taiwan is a Chinese island and it had a Chinese general called Chiang Kai-shek in charge of it. So whether it's Maoist China or Chiang Kai-shek's Taiwan China would be open for debate. And I have read articles talking in the 60s and 70s.
1:15:31 Because basically Taiwan at the point was under martial law. There were some reporters and some articles. Only when they started mentioning cities did I realize they weren't actually talking about China. They were talking about Taiwan. So just keep that in mind. And on another note, where you actually left off was you were explaining Kissinger's role in all of this when all of this started.
1:16:01 was selling arms to Israel, selling arms to Iran. And that sort of blows my mind as well. Why was Israel selling arms to Iran at that point? So because we overthrew Iran. So we got rid of Iran's prime minister. And that was the story we told about Kermit Roosevelt in the CIA.
1:16:29 And they did basically a Gladio operation where they got all of the students and everybody out in the streets. They all basically bum-rushed all of the police departments. And they have agents, provocateurs, all over Iran at the time. And then a bunch of them, after they've got the police and the army headquarters overrun, they all team up and start heading towards the prime minister.
1:17:00 of Iran, they basically overrun the palace. He gets away. He gets locked up for the rest of his life under house arrest. And they basically reinstate the Shah, who was part of the whole coup to begin with. And if you remember, that's when I was telling you that the Norman Schwarzkopf Sr., who was a major general,
1:17:25 is the one that came in and basically convinced the Shah to go along with it. And he's the one that set up the Savak, which is kind of their secret police. So Iran at the time was a puppet government of the CIA too. So anybody else have any questions? Jeff, I know you requested to speak. So do you have a question? Guess not. Kind of a quiet group tonight.
1:18:10 I'm sorry, guys. I just was having trouble lining it up. Good afternoon, Colonel. Good afternoon, Bridget. So then, all of these operations around the world for several decades, I do believe has forced Russia and China and Africa to form BRICS.
1:18:40 At this particular juncture of the game with all of these operations that are going on. And so there's been a shift away from the American petrodollar like with Saudi Arabia in the last couple of days. They've have dismissed the U.S. dollar. China has sold their U.S. treasuries at a discount rate. And so what we have here is we have a.
1:19:11 We have a huge book issue with the debt of all of this at $35 trillion, a trillion dollars with an interest a year, or excuse me, 100 days. And so when is the United States going to put a brake on these double-sided operations paying both sides of the fight and the third party in the middle and start realizing that the numbers are not going to match up?
1:19:42 And the politicians and the elites are not going to have their pockets packed full of cash if everything goes upside down. And I see it going that way. And I was just asking the colonel what is the best solution to halt this operation and all facets of it and then try to reverse it. And I'll end there. Thank you. Well, exposure.
1:20:11 Obviously, number one. And the petrodollar agreement expired, as you mentioned. They didn't like do that themselves, but it expired. And you're right in the fact that in anticipation of that expiration, I do believe BRICS was formed as a way to allow the people that have been part of this.
1:20:40 dictatorial operation for the last 70 years to have as soft a landing as they can have amongst themselves. At some point, there will be a financial reckoning here in the United States. Now, the good news part of that is that we have the resources when they are opened.
1:21:09 up in order to be able to work ourselves out of that. But there has to be someone like a Trump that, number one, recognizes it, admits it, can explain it to the American people and us to be able to work through it. It's going to take all of us, which is why we began this educational process, to educate our peers on exactly why this is happening.
1:21:39 So that we don't have our own revolution. Because as soon as things get tight and people start getting uncomfortable, that becomes one of their go-to options. I don't think it's going to be necessary at all. Because I do believe that the transition started a long time ago. And that there are enough people that are preparing us as well.
1:22:08 It's just not as visible right now. Well, that sounds good. My second thought that I was thinking about since a question was posed to us yesterday is the security threat that China has imposed on the United States by us allowing ourselves to get 80% of our antibiotics.
1:22:35 And many more prescriptions were solely reliable on China for a lot of our prescriptions. And two, China with the chips. Why can we not take a secure building like the old IBM building or the Kodak buildings in Rochester, New York, and convert those buildings into chip manufacturing companies for the security of the United States? And I'm wondering what we could do to get something like that started. Well, obviously, unless you've got a lot of capital.
1:23:06 We're not going to be able to do that. We here in this chat room, but there's no reason why. And I've made this point repeatedly. Most people in this group have heard the fact that we in the mid 1980s decided to place chip manufacturing in Taiwan for a reason.
1:23:33 And the reason is called strategy of tension so that we can now cause, quote unquote, fear around the world and use it to leverage to control people. Anytime they want people to get back into control, there will be a flare up between Taiwan and China and it's all orchestrated.
1:23:56 That flare up, then we're told, puts chips in danger. So you just have to give up all your freedoms in order for them to be able to placate this quote unquote flare up, which they in fact made. It's called manipulation. It's psychological operations. It's everything. They did that on purpose because if you know anything about the history of Taiwan, you know that for its first 40 years, it was under martial law, under a dictator.
1:24:25 It would have been the last freaking place you placed a vital element like chips. But that's what they did. And they did it for a reason. Again, I started this off and I can't say this often enough. When everything they're doing makes no sense, you have to reassess your paradigms, not theirs. They're doing stuff that makes sense to them. You have to figure out what it is. To me.
1:24:51 Operation Gladio and its strategy of tension explains it all perfectly. We are being manipulated. We are being manipulated by conscious choices at the same time in the 1980s is when they began moving all of our manufacturing jobs to China. So you've got all the manufacturing jobs on China, which makes it critical. And you've got all the chips in Taiwan, which makes it critical. And they're going to F with us between those two as often as they can.
1:25:18 In order to scare the hell out of us and make us all fearful so we can be controlled. And that's the kind of crap that we have to stop playing into. It's a complete and total front coming at us from all sides. I agree with that 100%. Colonel, thank you so much for coming in here and giving us the history of the whole operation. You're welcome. And listen to Bill Ellimore talk about the...
1:25:50 And, you know, the MKUltra is another great topic that fills in and connects all the dots in between the dots that you're connecting. And we just appreciate all of that. And America needs to wake up and realize what's going on. And the numbers don't lie. Thank you so much, Colonel. I appreciate you. Thank you, ma'am. SR71, go.
1:26:16 Thank you, Colonel. If I may, I can add some insight as to what went on at IBM because I worked with IBM for almost 25 years. And the deal with IBM is IBM took the path of becoming a service industry. So they sold all of their hardware and outsourced every bit of it to the BRICS nations. It went to Brazil. It went to China. It went to India. It went.
1:26:45 to Mexico. It went everywhere. IBM's idea was they were going to become a service industry and consult. So that gives you an idea of what some of these major companies have done. IBM is continually closing buildings here in the U.S. today. So whether or not you're going to get any of these major industrial places to
1:27:15 invest in the u.s i don't know how you're going to do it but we've got to do something thank you go ahead benjamin no i was just going to say colonel how jeff asked the question earlier about what we wanted to do or what we needed to do to fix this and you said awareness that that's why i keep the colonel on my account because
1:27:41 Just realistically, you know, all of us sitting in here listening to the Colonel all the time we have, you know, she has a way of articulating herself and showing different levels of what's going on. She's on a different scale than the rest of us when it comes to knowledge of these particular subjects. So, like, I prop the Colonel up all the time, you know, because I understand that, you know, we got to get people.
1:28:05 up to the same level as to what level of the game we really are in. We've been told for years, at least for me, since the JFK assassination, we've been told a certain storyline of how the world really is, and now we're coming to the degree that that's not how it really was. So that's why I...
1:28:27 prop the colonel up and the girls, you know, the team, you know, because this is what your everyday American citizen needs to hear. You know, the things that Trump says, you know, like this election cycle is unlike any election cycle in my life. You know, the degree at which this election cycle is important is beyond, you know, normal comparison to past elections in my lifetime. You know, like Trump is one of those guys.
1:28:56 that has been telling us the truth. He pointed things out. He showed how they broke up the American middle class with the industry and outsourced jobs overseas. So that's why we have to be talking to people we know and get people up to the same level you are. Thank you, Colonel. Sure. Thank you, Benjamin. Bridget, go ahead. Yeah, I just wanted to let everybody know that I posted a bunch of the
1:29:29 A link to everything that you covered down in the feed below. And that way, if anybody wants to research it any further, look at it, go over anything that you did cover. It's down there. Thank you, Mike. Go ahead. What's up, guys? Good afternoon, Colonel. I just wanted to also add to what Benjamin was saying with regards to helping circulate the message and everything.
1:29:56 Um, everybody that's listening, it's not just retweeting and like liking the space. It's also like the interactions that you guys give within the space, like this 100 symbol or the fist up or whatever, like those kinds of interactions are meaningful within the algorithm and it will help push the, uh, the spaces conversations high up, higher up in the algo. So it's not getting buried. Um, especially cause like there's different aspects of these spaces getting buried. There's, there's the aspect of you have to scroll farthest to the right to get to it.
1:30:26 But there's also the fact that like oftentimes, uh, Colonel's spaces over these topics, they don't even show up in that banner. So you have to like, and you can't even go to the spaces button on the left to find it. Like you have to go directly to either the Colonel's profile or, uh, Bridget's profile or any of us that are sitting in here and you have to know what's happening. So just keep like, yeah, keep spamming all this stuff to help get it up in the algorithm. And then there was another thing I wanted to add. keep in mind that like,
1:30:56 I know the things that Colonel talks about as far as like the resources and the different countries between Africa and South America primarily that's going on with Gladio. Also keep in mind that I'm going to say it again. I'm going to say it as many times as I feel is necessary that when you're talking about Operation Gladio, you're also involving the Vatican and the mafia. So if all these operations are relating to the Vatican and the mafia and the intelligence community and the military.
1:31:25 You have to also consider what kind of nefarious other dark markets they could be involved in. And one of those would be what I tagged the Colonel in a couple of days ago. If you guys listen to the Joe Rogan experience, Tim Dillon was talking about Pizzagate and those kinds of nefarious activities. And I'm not going to tell you what to believe, but I would just recommend considering that all of these things are playing into the very same Operation Gladio umbrella structure.
1:31:54 to provide funding so they can pull off these operations around the world. Absolutely, Mike, and that's very well said. I have, for new people that are in here, I have oftentimes said that Operation Gladio appears to me to be a wagon wheel in which human trafficking, to include child trafficking, the Pizzagate, all of that kind of stuff, the MKUltra experiment, is in one part of it.
1:32:22 The weapons trafficking is yet another part of it. And the drug trafficking is the third spoke. And it's the blackmail that's associated with all of that that keeps the wheel turning down the road. And every aspect of that generates black covert money. You're absolutely right in the fact that the Vatican.
1:32:51 was one of the initial banks used to wash the money as they began setting up all of the banks in that BCCI, New Japan, Castle Bank, all of those that we have talked about at Nauseam, all part of that. And the whole reason why you would go into a place like Angola or Vietnam and you basically
1:33:21 create war um is to create refugees and then refugees become unaccounted people and then you can do whatever you want with those refugees because there's no accountability um and it's this perpetual and i believe with everything in my soul that from the end of world war ii they they understood that if they kept the world in perpetual
1:33:50 military conflict that it allowed them to accomplish all of those goals. And that's what we've been dealing with. Go ahead, Sally. Hope everyone is having a great day listening to our favorite Colonel. Make sure that you guys are following everyone that is up on stage. They usually add value and make sure notifications are turned on. One, having notifications turned on also does help a person in that algorithm.
1:34:15 Bookmarking their stuff helps boost them. So I have a folder that's just down of all the stuff I'm going to cover from her. That helps boost as well. Yes, I know. I took a picture of it because I was like, I'm a nerd. I'm like, I'm going to cover this. I've got to cover this. I've got two parts to this, maybe just one. I'm covering kind of the MKUltra angle, trying to tie the knots together. Colonel focuses a lot on the paramilitary, so I'm kind of going on a different angle.
1:34:44 And I'm also doing a little bit of the child trafficking stuff. I've covered it before I started covering Gladio. But on my profile, I did an interview with two whistleblowers that cannot get any type of a big journalist to take them up. You guys should watch that interview that's pinned. Because when I was doing the interview, I'm like, oh my gosh, this is so Gladio. This is so Gladio. And the involvement with HHS with it is absolutely insane. HHS is facilitating.
1:35:11 these children to be trafficked but that's not our topic right now we're talking about gladio um last night i was in a space and people were going back and forth and fighting about uh the the protests at cal state and i finally was got near the end when there's a lot of people in the room i'm like i'm like you guys just really need to read this book you need to start following these people and now i've got people messaging me about gladio and how to get more information so
1:35:35 That is how you get the ball rolling. And you don't do it in a way. It's like, oh, you're wrong. It's like, you know what? If you would really just understand Gladio, you would understand all these conflicts. And then you would stop blaming each other for each other for these conflicts. You'd blame the correct people and band together and become one. And I just everything you're teaching me is so amazing. And I woke up today making sure I have to set alarm because I stay up late.
1:36:00 I woke up at 10 something like, oh, crap, I'm a half hour late. And then I realized that you were starting later. So that was awesome. And that's a very important point, because what you should realize in the exposing of Operation Gladio is their worst fear is us coming together. That's why they went in and created and fund different factions within the same revolution is the instigation of division.
1:36:30 is what they thrive on and that's so true go ahead stellar yeah i was gonna say the same thing and as you go into spaces like i know like last night there were people that came into the pond and you know they were concerned with the things that are going on they're not seeing that there's any hope or anything and it's like no um i actually told people to um
1:36:55 Follow you, Bridget, and Cousin It, and all that other stuff. There's someone by the name of Dante that will be reaching out to the three of you as well, and probably Sally as well. He lives in Italy, and he's got a lawsuit that he's putting together right now. He's not an attorney, but he's very, very, a lot of the stuff that you talk about, he has. And so I was trying to explain to people in this space last night.
1:37:19 The past is proving to be the future or present, and these operations are still ongoing and things. And so, you know, what I'm trying to do is show abnormalities within the polling for the mail-in ballots here now. So, you know, all we can do is just, you know, understand what's going on, be educated. As people are scared and things like that, actually, honestly, refer them over to Colonel Towner, Cousin It, and Bridget.
1:37:46 And Sally, because a lot of these things they've covered already about it. And all we can do is just, you know, with that understanding that it's the same playbook over and over again. And it's just being used here in the U.S. That's all. Thank you so much. And Bricks, baby Bricks. Yeah. And Stellar, thank you for recommending him. He did send me some stuff that I'm going through right now. I was looking at a little bit of it this morning. So I appreciate that. Bridget, go ahead.
1:38:15 One of the neat things that, you know, one of the reasons why we do this is to equip. It's not just to show you guys what has happened. It's also to show you what is still going on. And it's also equipping you to go out and have the confidence to call these people out for what they're doing.
1:38:45 What they've gotten away with for so many years is doing this in the shadows. And when you shed light on, you know, I saw a post not long ago and I brought it up to the Colonel because someone had taken a screenshot of something she had posted about an organization. And when they said they were hiring someone special, blah, blah, blah, they came up and they posted it. And they said, look.
1:39:15 You've done this before. And last time it was a child trafficking organization. And it's already been proven in court. This is what they fear. This is how we get our country, not just our country, our world back. This is not just the U.S. It's not just Europe. And the more people that have their eyes open and the more we work together to...
1:39:45 spread the light, the less these cockroaches can hide and breathe. Absolutely. Valkyria, go ahead. Hey, Colonel Tower, can you hear me? Yeah, I can hear you. Okay. I had my AirPods in, so I wasn't sure. I finally got to join a space with you. I'm so excited. I actually have a question for you concerning the tie-in with Kissinger.
1:40:16 And what we were talking what you were talking about earlier. How does this tie in to because at the same time, all of this was taking place. He was actually doing the international summits, which was the precursor to the World Economic Forum. So all of this was transpiring at the same time. Is there any tie into what he was doing at Harvard at the time to what was going on in Africa?
1:40:46 So it would be hard to pinpoint any specific, but let me give you a couple of generalities. At Harvard, the creation of the JFK International School there is kind of like they're spitting in the eye of having assassinated JFK. Because what you start finding as you investigate these people,
1:41:13 So that international school is one of the, it's like an equivalent of Stanford and Oxford for them educating people in a recruiting venue for the CIA. That's number one. They bring international people in there and they do it to vet them to be able to figure out which ones.
1:41:32 And they run CIA agents at these people while they're attending school there. They basically vet them before they even invite them as to whether their personalities are going to work for the CIA to try to co-opt them. That's the whole reason that school was set up. And them naming it after JFK is, again, a spit on his grave. So because it was done on purpose. The recruitment that has went on.
1:42:00 That's the reason why Epstein was at JFK, because all of these international leaders that they bring in, and they do it on scholarship, so that they invite them in any potential, either a mid-20s or even the 30-year-olds that are state senators in their countries or whatever on their way out, like anybody that would be a newly elected federal senator here.
1:42:29 they bring in and they go through this grooming process and they weed out who they think would be good infiltrators back into that country so that they can use them as part of their intelligence network. And that's basically what the WEF is. And it was modeled after, as you perfectly articulated, Kissinger having set up this system.
1:42:55 More from a national perspective where it was hosted and it has to be outside of the U.S. So it's disassociated, that whole plausible deniability garbage. And they go to specifically, always their choice is Switzerland because of its quote unquote perceived neutrality, when in fact it has nothing. It is not neutral. It's never been neutral. It's part of the global. And that's why all of the global entities.
1:43:25 in large part, are set up there. The Bank of International Settlement, the World Bank, the IMF, blah, blah, blah. So yes, it has everything to do with that. The WEF is the logical follow-on to Kissinger's setting up of the 40 committee and then the program at Harvard and then the WEF. It provides them the ability to meet.
1:43:50 The same way with the Bilderberg's meeting, the Committee of 300, Club of Rome, the CFR, all of those things, the WWF, it provides them venues to meet and plot and plan and blackmail people and set them up and all of the above. Sally. Oh, go ahead. So while I was.
1:44:17 So while I was digging on originally digging on this international summit and how it transformed into the WDF, I also found that they have restarted the international summit meetings. The international summit program is now at Stanford and it's ran by the Hoover Institute. And I just wondered if you had any opinions on is this.
1:44:43 Just a continuation. And why are they bringing it back on U.S. soil? Potentially a loss of control. As far as I'm concerned in the digging that I have done, anything that's at Sanford is suspect times about a million. And specifically the Hoover Institute.
1:45:04 Because when I was digging on stuff that happened in the Southeast Pacific and some of the research that I did during my master's at Air War College, the Hoover Institute has tons of information that is still classified and they won't give anybody access to it. And it has been.
1:45:27 And as a matter of fact, Anthony Sutton will tell you, he used to be on staff there. He left because they wouldn't publish the stuff that he was writing because it didn't go along with their approved narrative. So I don't, and that's the Hoover Institute. I don't have any strong opinion of it as far as it being a good place. And I have zero, I give zero credibility to Stanford at all.
1:45:57 So anyway, Sally, go ahead. Okay, I'm going to say something and hopefully this is taken the right way. So the international syndicate, so you are someone who has a voice with a lot of knowledge. So on this platform, they will find trolls and they will send them after you. One way to get your account to be boosted is negativity.
1:46:23 on your timeline. So when you have an account that has maybe less than 500 followers, they're not verified and they're going after you nonstop. That is their goal. They're trying to bring your account down. So either mute those people, block them. Muting is preferable. Blocking deboosts you as well. And I boot and deboost them. But muting does not impact your account.
1:46:45 Because it's so tempting to want to respond because you know the truth. And it's just so easy to have a group of people go and go after that person. That's what they want. They want that negativity on your timeline because that deboosts you in the algorithm. And that's just advice. You can do what you want. I've been paying attention to how this thing works for over six months trying to learn the ins and the outs. So I know Bridget tries to advise me as well.
1:47:14 And I appreciate that, Sally. There's some, I would say I'm good at about 90% that I can let go. There's some things, and General Flynn's kind of my punch button, and I do know that they know that. But I'm just not, as a senior officer, going to allow those things to stand. And it is a sword I'm willing to die on that we just don't do that.
1:47:44 And there's way too many, as I pointed out repeatedly on these broadcast, corrupt general officers in our military. You're not going to take out the good ones. There's way too many bad ones. And I give you their names every day. And if you purposely ignore them, I know you're a troll. So I'm not talking about. OK, so let's clarify. I'm not talking about like defending and standing your position. That's not what I'm talking about. Yeah, I know.
1:48:16 Okay, Jeff, go ahead. Colonel, I wanted to elaborate on the connection between the intelligence agencies and the FBI with Ivy League colleges, you know, Harvard, MIT, Yale, Columbia, and many other liberal universities that are the breeding grounds of these intelligence.
1:48:46 Several CIA directors, many of whom are on the Atlanta Council, come from these colleges. And I find it a real oxymoron, and I know the answer, why these are the colleges that are protesting so vigorously around the United States. And I'm wondering if these are the places where intelligent recruits. And I see the connection.
1:49:15 And I'm sure you see the connection as well. I wanted to bring that point to everybody's attention. Yeah, that's an excellent point. There is a reason why those happen where they happen, because they have the largest contingent of control and infiltration at those locations. And so that's an excellent point. And I think that kids are easily manipulated.
1:49:45 That's why they, and we all don't like to see the terrible pictures that many people have seen. And I've hated to see them since I was 10 years old, seeing the Holocaust pictures of people starving and pictures of the baton death march and listening to the old timers, the World War II guys talk about those things.
1:50:16 Some of it can be pretty, pretty, pretty sad and terrible, you know. And, you know, I understand that the kids' emotions are overriding their logic by screaming death to America and death to the Jews and breeding this. But I'm not even sure those are students. That's the Operation Gladio tactics is to pretend that they're students. The majority of them that are doing that are not students. They are paid.
1:50:45 provocateurs that are infiltrated into those locations to make it appear that they're students. Correct. And the same thing with Antifa where piles of bricks and bottles and rocks were delivered to the riot areas where they broke out in riots as well, the same modus operandi. And you're connecting all of it. All of it is connected. And people think that you're crazy that
1:51:12 Ukraine is connected to Brazil. Well, it is through the BRICS, I mean, or through drugs or through weapons transfers or many, many other deals that we know nothing about. And it's all connected. And I think that the 1% of these people are trying to still control 99% of American places around the world. And it's time that we wake up and smell the coffee. Yeah, I agree.
1:51:42 All right, guys, we're at our two hour max. So, oh, go ahead, Stella. I was just going to let Jeff know when I was mentioning BRICS, it wasn't a bad thing. There's a war on the monetary system as well. Fiat as well. And then BRICS is the gold backed currency. Fiat is part of what the shady shyster stuff is and how they launder all of their money and just print new stuff and keep us in a perpetual debt. The BRICS, you know.
1:52:12 Their whole thing is about the gold and then tracking the tokenized versions of the gold or silver or any of these precious assets so that that way it could be tracked when they do the laundering. So when I mentioned the BRICS stuff, I'm just meaning the gold-backed currencies, which will be trackable.
1:52:32 you know, eliminate and bring to justice the child traffickers, the money launderers, the, all the bad shady stuff that seems to be funding a lot of these Gladio operations. So I just wanted to clarify that. Sorry. That's okay. Agreed. A hundred percent. Thank you. All right. Thanks everybody for being here.
1:52:55 We'll have one more tomorrow in it. We are in Georgia on our way back to Florida, so it may be a little delayed as well. I appreciate you guys being patient with me as I'm moving around, but we'll be back on track next week. Thanks for being here. Thank you, Colonel. Thanks, guys. Appreciate y'all. Thanks. Thank you. Love you guys. Be safe. You too.

Entities here

Congo32Angola25CIA22South Africa21China19MPLA19UNITA18Portugal17United States17Henry Kissinger16Soviet Union13FNLA13Operation Gladio12Israel10U.S. State Department8Cuba7France7Holden Roberto7BRICS6Committee of 406Tom Killoran6Mobutu Sese Seko5Jonas Savimbi5North Atlantic Treaty Organization4Patrice Lumumba4Hoover Institution4World Economic Forum4Harvard University4Iran4Gerald Ford4Agostinho Neto4Spain4Luanda4Francisco Franco3Nathaniel Davis3Mozambique3Standard Oil3MKUltra3Stanford University3Leopoldville3

Claims made here

North Atlantic Treaty Organization trained Otto Skorzeny host_asserted ▶ 3:34
“and Spain, because they were not part of NATO, is where NATO hid all of their crap. That's where they hid Otto Skorzeny. That's where they hid all of the training camps that they did on the continent,…”
North Atlantic Treaty Organization supplied_arms_to Spain host_asserted ▶ 3:34
“and Spain, because they were not part of NATO, is where NATO hid all of their crap. That's where they hid Otto Skorzeny. That's where they hid all of the training camps that they did on the continent,…”
North Atlantic Treaty Organization funded Congo host_asserted ▶ 7:36
“They created the world's largest NATO military base there to guard all of that stuff and to kill any Congonese who came in and tried to take their country back. So a couple of days ago when I looked a…”
Israel supplied_arms_to Guatemala host_asserted ▶ 10:33
“We're giving aid to Israel, and Israel's selling guns to the Contras and the Guatemalans and the Costa Ricans and the El Salvadorians and blah, blah, blah, to the point where they're actually setting …”
Israel supplied_arms_to Costa Rica host_asserted ▶ 10:33
“We're giving aid to Israel, and Israel's selling guns to the Contras and the Guatemalans and the Costa Ricans and the El Salvadorians and blah, blah, blah, to the point where they're actually setting …”
Israel supplied_arms_to El Salvador host_asserted ▶ 10:33
“We're giving aid to Israel, and Israel's selling guns to the Contras and the Guatemalans and the Costa Ricans and the El Salvadorians and blah, blah, blah, to the point where they're actually setting …”
Israel supplied_arms_to South Africa host_asserted ▶ 11:02
“They were also selling tons of weaponry, aircraft, everything to, Israel was, to South Africa, apartheid South Africa. When none of the West could be seen selling to them, Israel did it for all of the…”
France supplied_arms_to South Africa host_asserted ▶ 11:02
“They were also selling tons of weaponry, aircraft, everything to, Israel was, to South Africa, apartheid South Africa. When none of the West could be seen selling to them, Israel did it for all of the…”
France supplied_arms_to Israel host_asserted ▶ 11:02
“They were also selling tons of weaponry, aircraft, everything to, Israel was, to South Africa, apartheid South Africa. When none of the West could be seen selling to them, Israel did it for all of the…”
Israel supplied_arms_to Iran host_asserted ▶ 11:32
“A lot of the other Europeans were doing this as well. And of course, during back in this time, Israel was sending a boatload of weapons to Iran. You know, the people that they supposedly hate now who …”
Holden Roberto headed FNLA host_asserted ▶ 14:31
“Angola, blah, blah, blah. So they were hands down the best ones. So, you know, we're not going to pick them. The next group was called or were called FNLA. FNLA is the group ran by Holden Roberto.…”
Holden Roberto member_of Mobutu Sese Seko host_asserted ▶ 15:05
“Holden Roberto is the brother-in-law of the CIA-installed president of the Congo, which had temporarily changed its name to Zaire, President Mobutu. And you remember me talking about him because he's …”
Jonas Savimbi headed UNITA book_quoted ▶ 22:50
“Holden Roberto was well known to the U.S. government, which enjoyed good access to Roberto and his chief lieutenants, facilitated by his father-in-law. Now, here it calls him his father-in-law. The ot…”
Tom Killoran exposed MPLA book_quoted ▶ 24:51
“L-L-O-R-A-N, its assessment that MPLA was the best qualified movement to govern Angola. Many of the leaders were educated at the university, and a few even traveled to Patrice Lumumba's university in …”
Agostinho Neto headed MPLA book_quoted ▶ 25:52
“that he believed that labor had a bigger seat at the table than what the colonial powers were willing to embrace at the time. You know, that's their label of communism, is giving people decent wages. …”
Henry Kissinger ordered_assassination_of MPLA book_quoted ▶ 29:10
“better equipped to lead, blah, blah, blah, that he has, he sees his bias, but he doesn't see his own bias. And that's so important in all of the discussions that we have. So it says that convinced me …”
Henry Kissinger targeted_for_regime_change Soviet Union book_quoted ▶ 33:34
“which he saw at the time to be Moscow and Havana, were more determined and much better positioned than we were, and they did not have a hostile Congress controlling purse strings. Nat Davis said it di…”
Agostinho Neto headed MPLA book_quoted ▶ 43:08
“say they favor some form of a European-style socialism. And basically what they mean by that is just workers' rights, because these people have been enslaved. They just want to have some rights. So la…”
Cuba supplied_arms_to MPLA book_quoted ▶ 45:35
“And most recently, since the spring of 1975, that the Soviets began truly providing any level of assistance. And the most Cuban advisors, quote unquote advisors, that went to Angola was a total of 3,0…”
Holden Roberto headed FNLA host_asserted ▶ 45:35
“And most recently, since the spring of 1975, that the Soviets began truly providing any level of assistance. And the most Cuban advisors, quote unquote advisors, that went to Angola was a total of 3,0…”
Soviet Union funded MPLA book_quoted ▶ 45:35
“And most recently, since the spring of 1975, that the Soviets began truly providing any level of assistance. And the most Cuban advisors, quote unquote advisors, that went to Angola was a total of 3,0…”
Holden Roberto member_of Mobutu Sese Seko book_quoted ▶ 46:07
“solely among the Bakongo people who make up 13% of the population, again, with these minority tribes. Roberto is closely aligned, and this is the one that calls him the brother-in-law of President Mob…”
CIA funded FNLA host_asserted ▶ 47:02
“their covert actions against the MPLA was not getting them anywhere. So they were trying to broker a deal in order to gain more support and more power. So most of the FNLA aid over the years has flown…”
South Africa funded FNLA book_quoted ▶ 47:33
“The FNLA is now also receiving aid from Belgium, West Germany, France, the Congo, and South Africa, which of course is basically saying it's NATO. The Chinese provided assistance to Zaire and the FNLA…”
China funded FNLA book_quoted ▶ 47:33
“The FNLA is now also receiving aid from Belgium, West Germany, France, the Congo, and South Africa, which of course is basically saying it's NATO. The Chinese provided assistance to Zaire and the FNLA…”
Jonas Savimbi headed UNITA book_quoted ▶ 48:02
“So basically, the Chinese and the U.S. was both funding the corrupt people. UNITA, which stood for National Union for the Total Independence of Angola, was formed in 1966, and its current leader, Zabi…”
South Africa funded UNITA book_quoted ▶ 48:30
“United strength was in the southern part of Angola. United did not receive significant outside help during its nine years of struggle for independence until earlier the year this was written. And that…”
Henry Kissinger headed Committee of 40 host_asserted ▶ 52:19
“And in a couple of other shows, we've talked about this thing that Henry Kissinger set up because it was the key factor in the 1967 USS Liberty. It was a thing called the 40 Committee. It was a commit…”
CIA funded UNITA book_quoted ▶ 52:48
“already had approved $300,000 in secret subsidies to go to the head of UNINA, and the president personally approved that action, according to the administration of President Ford. The source stated th…”
Committee of 40 funded UNITA book_quoted ▶ 52:48
“already had approved $300,000 in secret subsidies to go to the head of UNINA, and the president personally approved that action, according to the administration of President Ford. The source stated th…”
Nathaniel Davis member_of U.S. State Department book_quoted ▶ 53:17
“The source recalls that Kissinger pushed hard for an increase in the CIA's intervention. Henry wanted to be told why we should intervene, said the official, not why not. Many within the government wer…”
Israel supplied_arms_to South Africa host_asserted ▶ 59:43
“Israel is taking our aid, transitioning that into an arms program that they were sharing at this very time with South Africa. And then South Africa is using that weaponry slash aid to work for the des…”
United States supplied_arms_to Israel host_asserted ▶ 59:43
“Israel is taking our aid, transitioning that into an arms program that they were sharing at this very time with South Africa. And then South Africa is using that weaponry slash aid to work for the des…”
P. W. Botha headed South Africa book_quoted ▶ 1:00:15
“Another article that I found, the author was talking about the outside power with the largest direct involvement in Angola was the white supremacist government of South Africa. South Africa troops ent…”
South Africa carried_out_attack Angola book_quoted ▶ 1:00:46
“admitted that his country's troops had secured an electrical plant that was on the inside of Angola's border. So they're definitely operating there. The South Africans then escalated considerably, acc…”
CIA covered_up UNITA book_quoted ▶ 1:06:47
“ask, who is the CIA basically hiding this information from? And it says that the CIA's intervention in Angola is not a secret to the combatants there, to the leaders of the African countries, or to th…”
CIA covered_up FNLA book_quoted ▶ 1:06:47
“ask, who is the CIA basically hiding this information from? And it says that the CIA's intervention in Angola is not a secret to the combatants there, to the leaders of the African countries, or to th…”
Gerald Ford funded UNITA book_quoted ▶ 1:09:14
“President Ford chose to intervene, supporting the FNLA and UNITA initially with $50 million, and then it just escalated from there. Given the current absence on the consensus of foreign policy, it is …”
Gerald Ford funded FNLA book_quoted ▶ 1:09:14
“President Ford chose to intervene, supporting the FNLA and UNITA initially with $50 million, and then it just escalated from there. Given the current absence on the consensus of foreign policy, it is …”
William Colby headed CIA host_asserted ▶ 1:10:40
“It does not seem that any of the people care about any of that. Let's see. And of course, I have to remind everybody, because I looked this up, who was the CIA director when all of this was going on i…”
Chiang Kai-shek headed China host_asserted ▶ 1:15:03
“Because Taiwan is a Chinese island and it had a Chinese general called Chiang Kai-shek in charge of it. So whether it's Maoist China or Chiang Kai-shek's Taiwan China would be open for debate. And I h…”
United States overthrew Iran host_asserted ▶ 1:16:01
“was selling arms to Israel, selling arms to Iran. And that sort of blows my mind as well. Why was Israel selling arms to Iran at that point? So because we overthrew Iran. So we got rid of Iran's prime…”
Kermit Roosevelt carried_out_attack Iran host_asserted ▶ 1:16:01
“was selling arms to Israel, selling arms to Iran. And that sort of blows my mind as well. Why was Israel selling arms to Iran at that point? So because we overthrew Iran. So we got rid of Iran's prime…”
Norman Schwarzkopf Sr. founded SAVAK host_asserted ▶ 1:17:25
“is the one that came in and basically convinced the Shah to go along with it. And he's the one that set up the Savak, which is kind of their secret police. So Iran at the time was a puppet government …”
Norman Schwarzkopf Sr. appointed Reza Pahlavi host_asserted ▶ 1:17:25
“is the one that came in and basically convinced the Shah to go along with it. And he's the one that set up the Savak, which is kind of their secret police. So Iran at the time was a puppet government …”
Operation Gladio funded Catholic Church host_asserted ▶ 1:31:54
“to provide funding so they can pull off these operations around the world. Absolutely, Mike, and that's very well said. I have, for new people that are in here, I have oftentimes said that Operation G…”
Catholic Church laundered_money_for BCCI host_asserted ▶ 1:32:51
“was one of the initial banks used to wash the money as they began setting up all of the banks in that BCCI, New Japan, Castle Bank, all of those that we have talked about at Nauseam, all part of that.…”
World Economic Forum member_of Henry Kissinger host_asserted ▶ 1:40:16
“And what we were talking what you were talking about earlier. How does this tie in to because at the same time, all of this was taking place. He was actually doing the international summits, which was…”
Henry Kissinger founded John F. Kennedy School of Government host_asserted ▶ 1:40:46
“So it would be hard to pinpoint any specific, but let me give you a couple of generalities. At Harvard, the creation of the JFK International School there is kind of like they're spitting in the eye o…”
Henry Kissinger founded Committee of 40 host_asserted ▶ 1:43:25
“in large part, are set up there. The Bank of International Settlement, the World Bank, the IMF, blah, blah, blah. So yes, it has everything to do with that. The WEF is the logical follow-on to Kissing…”
Antony Sutton member_of Hoover Institution host_asserted ▶ 1:45:27
“And as a matter of fact, Anthony Sutton will tell you, he used to be on staff there. He left because they wouldn't publish the stuff that he was writing because it didn't go along with their approved …”
Operation Gladio carried_out_attack United States host_asserted ▶ 1:50:16
“Some of it can be pretty, pretty, pretty sad and terrible, you know. And, you know, I understand that the kids' emotions are overriding their logic by screaming death to America and death to the Jews …”
Antifa carried_out_attack United States host_asserted ▶ 1:50:45
“provocateurs that are infiltrated into those locations to make it appear that they're students. Correct. And the same thing with Antifa where piles of bricks and bottles and rocks were delivered to th…”
Ukraine traded_network_to Brazil host_asserted ▶ 1:51:12
“Ukraine is connected to Brazil. Well, it is through the BRICS, I mean, or through drugs or through weapons transfers or many, many other deals that we know nothing about. And it's all connected. And I…”
Operation Gladio funded United States caller_asserted ▶ 1:52:32
“you know, eliminate and bring to justice the child traffickers, the money launderers, the, all the bad shady stuff that seems to be funding a lot of these Gladio operations. So I just wanted to clarif…”