Operation Gladio - Korea Part 4
1:40:13
Transcript
0:00
Hey, Sarah, I have to tell you, there's nothing that tickles me more than whenever I send you a link and you're already there. Thank you, buddy. OK, I'm going to get us hooked up on StreamYard real quick and we're going to be rocking and rolling. Thank you very much. Thank you so much. So we are on part four, but I can guarantee you already there's going to be a part five.
0:47
And that's just as good. We'll close out the week on Korea because, as we've said repeatedly, it's foundational for the rest of the information. And the more I look, the more I find. So it's gotten crazy. By the way, ma'am, doesn't it cheer? Yay! I see that. Is she done for the day? Can we invite her to be?
1:18
I'm done. Okay. All right. Let me bring you up as a co-host. Yeah. Yeah. I'm waiting for the day on plumber because yesterday went so well. All right. We're up and running on stream yard. Now let me get back to my clicks. All right. So did you start the rumble session? I just did. Okay. Thank you.
1:48
Yeah, I didn't do it yesterday. I didn't have time. She's an egg. Got to watch her. Yeah, I know. I know. All right. So I want to start off with a research lesson. Bridget and Cousinet found this article way back when in from Brookings. And we know Brookings is a CIA front. But just with the.
2:18
Information that we already know. I want you guys to put your Gladio glasses on and we're going to walk through a maybe not the whole article, but I want you to begin to understand how to read this information. So they start off by saying the American intelligence community experience in the People's Republic of China and North Korea.
2:47
Began with a disaster. Well, first of all, we weren't actually in the People's Republic of China. We were in Korea. So step number one, and we're not even finished with the first sentence. But they want you to believe that we were. They categorize it as, quote, a catastrophic intelligence failure in the 1950 that cost the lives of thousands of Americans. Worse, it was a self-imposed disaster that.
3:19
the result of terrible intelligence management, not the poor collection or analysis of information. To add insult to injury, the government in India had warned the United States that disaster loomed, but we ignored it. Now, again, they said the disaster was a result of terrible intelligence management. That's horseshit. It was a disaster.
3:48
Because we wanted to do something and failed to do it. And what we wanted to do was install or control the entire peninsula of Korea. We got a little greedy. And then once we were on our way up to the border with China, we began attacking China. All this time, as you will see today.
4:17
Willoughby is telling MacArthur there's no way China's going to come in to the war. They were wrong. And as a result, they got their butt kicked. This was not a failure of intelligence management, but they're going to blame it on, and rightfully so, Willoughby and MacArthur. But that saying that limits the...
4:46
fallout effect onto the new CIA and the former OSS, which had already set up all the stay-behind units and are the ones that provoked the conflict to begin with. And before that are the ones that installed Reed and created a civil war in the South and killed tens of thousands of people down there. So they put a little bow on it with an article like this. So all you look at is this one tiny little failure.
5:17
The article goes on, Mao Zedong formally announced the creation of the People's Republic of China in 1949. The year after the creation, Mao decided that China would enter the Korean War. No, he was provoked because he was attacked. The war in Korea begun June 25, 1950. Now listen to this.
5:44
When the communist North Korea invaded the South, that's not what happened at all. We attacked the North and provoked the South to attack and provoked the North to attack the South. Within days of the crossing of the border, the North Koreans routed the Southern Army and captured Seoul. In September, MacArthur stopped the North Korean advance and then launched.
6:14
a counterattack recapturing Seoul. Washington was uncertain how to follow up on Seoul's liberation, but MacArthur was determined to go to the Chinese border. Mao, for his part, decided in early October to send his army south. He decided after he was attacked, which is left out of the context here. American army in Korea and Japan, the Eighth Army, was
6:45
poorly prepared for the war. The occupation troops in Japan, who were rushed to the Korean front, were not combat ready. The relative easy victory over the North at Incheon had reinforced a sense of complacency among the commanders that they would all be home by Christmas of 1950. MacArthur had always understood that if you control intelligence, you control decision making.
7:15
Unfortunately, MacArthur, and I'm not quoting this article at this point, but unfortunately, MacArthur had, as we discussed in a previous session, put yes men all around him. He wasn't interested in what the actual intel was. He was interested in yes men who told him what he wanted to hear. MacArthur's authority put...
7:42
America's new civilian intelligence agency, the CIA, in an awkward position. Now, see, they act like the CIA is new. The OSS is the precursor, and they've been there for years, at least five years by this time. There's nothing new going on here. They just changed hats. It's the same people. It goes on to say that the CIA was not permitted to have a representative in Tokyo because MacArthur wanted to control everything.
8:11
And during World War II, MacArthur had basically excluded from his command headquarters, not their entire presence in the theater, because there were CIA and OSS all over. We've already talked about Paul Helliwell shadowing Chiang Kai-shek all through South China, observing the Opium War. So they were crawling all over the place. They just weren't allowed to be anywhere MacArthur physically was.
8:42
There's much hay, as we'll see in a book later on, made about the fact that MacArthur would not stay a single night in Korea. He would fly back over to Japan, which, according to most people, provided even more problems. MacArthur's chief intel, General Charles Willoughby, who had been his commander.
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since his intel officer, not commander, that's a misprint, since serving in the Philippines in 1939, before World War II started, was an admirer of General MacArthur. And it was Willoughby that actually authored his 1,000, over 1,000 pages biography. That's how much in love with MacArthur this guy was. And in 1950, Willoughby assured,
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MacArthur that North Korea would not invade the South, despite alarms raised by then CIA Admiral Hillencocker, who was like the first guy before Alan Dulles showed up. In the fall of that year, Willoughby's office refused to believe or confirm reports that thousands of troops were in North, Chinese troops were in North Korea.
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Even when the Chinese prisoners were captured, Willoughby dismissed them as a few advisors. The G2 in Tokyo recognized that some Chinese divisions had been moved, but argued that they were not combat strength units. Willoughby basically doctored the intelligence that would permit MacArthur to go and do whatever they wanted to do.
10:41
And so you can kind of get the I don't want to read this whole article because it's very one sided. You can kind of get the gist of where we're going with this. These are the things that are out there supposedly from think tanks on what actually happened. And you can also understand how people.
11:06
get the impression of what our history actually is. But I did want to read this one part because it talks about India's part in this. And it says that India had tried to warn America that Chinese forces would enter the Korean War if attacked. From the start of the war, India tried to...
11:34
broker a truce. As early as July 1950, Prime Minister Nauru's government had suggested that the allies, to the allies, that China might press North Korea to accept a ceasefire, which they would have because they didn't want to go to war. Everybody had just stopped fighting World War II. Nobody wanted to go back to war. And said if the Americans allowed
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China to have a seat on the UN Security Council, who they had granted a seat to Chiang Kai-shek from Taiwan as the Chinese representative. So mainland China with hundreds and hundreds of millions of acres and tiny little island, Taiwan.
12:33
At the beginning, the U.S. had given the quote unquote Chinese government of Taiwan the seat on the Security Council. And China, mainland China, said, yeah, that ain't going to work. So we want that seat. And basically, we told mainland China to pound sand and then attack them across the border. India, which refused to send combat.
13:03
combat troops as UN representatives into Korea with the US, formerly recognized mainland China, and had an ambassador in Beijing. The Indian ambassador was an experienced diplomat and had written several books about Western imperialism of Asia. So you see who we're dealing with. They're not going to take any shit. In September 1950,
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The Indian military contacts in Beijing began to warn him that they would not sit by and be attacked. The Indian embassy in Beijing reported that trainloads of troops were going to the border. So he told the Americans through Nehru, the prime minister, that no kidding.
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China is going to kick their ass if they, like, shoot one bullet into China. They're coming over. The British was also worried that provoking China and Korea would lead to a Chinese attack on Hong Kong. Because, of course, at that point, the UK still had authority over Hong Kong. And they supposedly had sent words of caution.
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To the U.S. However, all of this intelligence was 100 percent dismissed. So that's why I'm saying when you start off at the top and say, you know, it's an intelligence failure, it is not an intelligence failure. They had all of the intelligence there was. The CIA did prepare a national intelligence estimate, the collective opinion of the entire.
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Intelligence Community in Washington, November 6, 1950, titled Chinese Communist Intervention in Korea, however, it assessed that there was only 30,000 Chinese troops on the border. An update on November 24, which is like not even a little over two weeks later, put the number at 70,000, you know, just a little off by like half.
15:33
And in any case, the CIA, assuming the communist world was monolithic, said that they would not intervene unless the Soviet leader, who they were at the end of the war, in withdrawing and setting up the actual permanent government in North Korea. So the Soviet Union is kind of like hands off at this point.
16:10
So, again, you've got this total shit show going on where they have the right intelligence. They know exactly what is going on and they ignore anything that doesn't fit conveniently within what they've already planned to do. So that's the bottom line of it. All right. We're going to move on to the next thing. The next thing is an article that was actually written by the CIA.
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It says, less than three years after its creation, the CIA became involved in its first hot war after North Korea launched an invasion into the South. Not true. The new agency conducted an array of espionage and covert operations unilaterally and in support of the armed forces of the UN coalition. And we're going to use quotation marks around that UN coalition.
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The most persistent controversy about the CIA and Korean War concerns whether the agency warned U.S. policymakers that the North would attack its southern neighbor. It is typical in situations involving warnings. The reality is complex, and a collection of declassified CIA documents helped dispel widely held assertions that the agency committed a serious intelligence failure.
17:39
Korean troops supported by Soviet-supplied tanks, heavy artillery, and aircraft crossed the 39th parallel and invaded the Republic of South Korea. Notified at his home in Missouri, Secretary of State, I guess he was on leave, Dean Atkinson, President Harry Truman, act quickly and decisively instructing Atkinson to contact the UN to seek a resolution continuing.
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invasion, because we're not going to condemn the attacks that happened before that. By all appearances, North Korean attacks seem to have caught the Truman and MacArthur and the fledgling CIA by surprise. Within days, the congressional critics charged that the agency had not fulfilled its duty to forewarn the United States of an imminent attack, probably because then they'd have to explain that it was provoked by them.
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Critics of the CIA before and after the Korean invasion focused on a relatively few references to Korea in intelligence reporting. Focused on a few references to Korea, like the entire embassy staff in India going, hello. Yet contrary to what historians have written in many decades, CIA analysts did report frequently on.
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Korea in the pre-war years, probably about all their stay-behind units that they were setting up. Although from a perspective that highlighted the Soviet Union's involvement rather than local Korean events, at the time, America viewed the communist movements around the world as being controlled from the Kremlin. Therefore, events in Korea were seen as just one of the fronts of the Cold War, closely interrelated with the Soviet-induced crisis.
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I'm sorry, this is hilarious. While analysts consistently and accurately provided current intel on Korean developments, the reports did not emphasize that the increasingly dangerous situation there represented anything extraordinary beyond the routine Soviet mischief. The Agency Office of Research and Reports did, however, provide an ominous prediction and indicated the possibility of a regional crisis.
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from 1947 through 1950. But in the world menaced by communists everywhere, and I'm not kidding, that's what it says, CIA reporting on Korea didn't stand out. So what happens when Chicken Little screams communists everywhere? There's no communist that rises to the height of concern because they're everywhere.
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The CIA was a small organization in 1950 and lacked the robust collection, but they still were able to create havoc in Korea and stage stay-behind units in northern Korea that were all assassinated. It was formed in 1947. It had only 5,000 employees. 5,000 employees.
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by 1950. Overwhelmingly, analytic products that did appear came in a form of current intel, which was filled with lower-level customer demands but did not meet high-level policymakers' needs. Oh, gosh. Starting in 1949, the CIA reporting on the potential war in Korea became more explicit, especially after long-sought
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military proposals for withdrawing U.S. forces from the peninsula came closer to reality. The CIA warned that removing U.S. troops would lead to war. See how that works? You're fine as long as the troops are there and they're getting slaughtered. And they're using the U.S. military to teach the locals how to kill each other. But the minute the U.S. military goes, yeah, I'm not okay with this and we need to come home, oh my God, the sky is going to fall.
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And if you remove the troops, there's going to be a war. And you know what the CIA did? They made sure there was a war because it was the CIA and their instigators in their stay behind units that are the ones that encroached over the 39th parallel into northern Korea and provoked northern Korea. And we've already established that. So the CIA started getting hints.
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that the DOD wanted their people back home and not being killed. And the CIA goes, okay, well, then we'll just make sure you stay here for even longer. The CIA's Office of Reports and Estimates put together a series of reports on Korea, because now they're going to get Syria, which often appeared to be monthly assessments of current intel reporting called the Review of the World Situation. One of these reports
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was February 1949, titled, Consequences of U.S. Troop Withdrawal from Korea. And this is a quote. In the absence of U.S. troops, it is highly probable that North Korea alone or Northern Koreans assisted by other communists would invade Southern Korea and subsequently call upon the USSR for assistance. Soviet control or occupation of Southern Korea would be the result. So, we took it upon ourselves.
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to decide that we are going to decide the kind of government that Korea is going to have. And we did that years before this. We did this in the immediate aftermath of World War II. The report concluded that withdrawal of U.S. forces from Korea in the spring of 1949 would probably be followed by an invasion, timed to coincide with the communist-led South Korean revolts by the North Korean.
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People of Army, possibly assisting in a small battle-trained unit of communist Manchurians. U.S. troop withdrawal would probably result in the collapse of the Republic of Korea. So notice what this says here. Time to coincide with South Korean revolts, like the ones that the CIA were instigating already.
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In the spring and summer of 1950, reports of the ORE reaching the U.S. military headquarters in Japan and top policymakers in Washington indicated probable trouble ahead, but they were vague. January 1950, CIA noted a continuing southward movement of North Korea's army and their acquisition of heavy equipment.
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Still, the review contained little information that could conceivably be construed as a pending attack. And then, of course, we have the invasion. And it says once North Korea came across the 38th parallel, and there was a failure to note that anywhere, the CIA analytical offices dramatically increased their reporting. Better late than never.
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And that's about it for that story. Now, there is a book, if you guys are interested in this at all, for a lot further, like very detailed information. A guy by the name of David Haberstam. The book's called The Coldest Winter. I do recommend it. It is a very, very long book.
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But if you have a long drive, you can put it on audio. It is free on archive.org. And I have read through it. I did not read the entire book. He does a fairly good job. I want to read to you a brief review of it to give you an idea. Because it basically kind of comes across with what I...
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got out of the book as well. A small Asian nation divided into, this is the review, divided into a communist North and a non-communist South commences a civil war with the communists attacking the South. The U.S. decides to send ground combat formation to protect the South, which they were already there, and the government they installed.
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The war is unpopular in the U.S. and goes badly. It costs the president a chance at a second term. This is not Vietnam. This is Korea. The Korean War is a very bitter memory for Americans. Even though a non-communist South Korea was preserved, it was a very unpopular war in America, shortened Truman's presidential aspirations, ended MacArthur's career, and set America on an endless military journey.
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I had always thought that Korea marked MacArthur's career peak in Chan Landing and that the Chinese invasion had been a complete surprise. In other words, MacArthur didn't see the Chinese was prepared to invade until it happened. And his demand to use nuclear weapons was what got him fired. Now I know that that is only half of the story. MacArthur knew.
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He ignorantly and arrogantly underestimated the resolve of the Chinese. He wasted American lives because of his dereliction, and the blood is on his hands. And he was responsible for much more than American forces. His egregious performance also endangered international forces. David Haberstam has produced a very revealing account of what happened. He begins with a description of the world as it existed at the end of World War II.
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and clearly describes the events that culminated in the North Korean invasion. His writings, and I don't know, I didn't go to that particular chapter, whether he talks about it being provoked, but we already have the CIA document that proves that now, and I don't know without looking back at it when the copyright of the book was, so that may have come out afterwards. His writing, as always, is first rate, and he tells a very engaging and informative tale.
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The communist victory in China was the pivotal event affecting the first Korean War, basically. And then also the second, we already know about that, which we're going to talk about next week, which is Vietnam. I had always wondered why the U.S. didn't take away any lessons from the involvement in Korean War.
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It was not a happy outcome, even though a non-communist government was preserved. The war was very unpopular and ended in an armistice, not a peace agreement. America's involvement was plagued by mismanagement and dereliction. The whole affair was overshadowed by partisan political concerns. Sounds so familiar. President Johnson, on a White House tape of a conversation in 1964, this is what he said, quote, the more I think of it, Vietnam,
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I don't know what in the hell, dot, dot, dot, it took me, it looks like to me, we are getting into another Korea. I don't see what we can ever hope to get out of there. I don't think it was worth fighting. And I don't think we can get out. Now, I want to tell you how, I will go back to the review in a second, but I want to tell you how revealing that is.
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That tells you right there everything about what we've been saying about the international syndicate and the control. Johnson has no control of Vietnam. Everybody talks about Johnson being the one picking targets. He's not the one that decided we were going in, and he's not the one that decided that we were coming out. The international syndicate decides that for him, and they came out when they had no other choice.
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after it was forced on them because of a collapse of what they were doing in Vietnam while they were taking all of that opium and selling it around the world. They stayed there as long as they possibly could and got the last penny worth of opium that they could control. And they continue to get opium out of there via Taiwan, but they wanted to be able to control every aspect of it. And they stayed there as long as they could.
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is so telling. And this book makes that very clear. I needed to know more about this conflict. I had no idea anyone in the Johnson administration was even thinking about Korea before the decision to put boots on the ground of Vietnam. U.S. involvement in Korea established a permanent burden on the U.S. military, and Johnson was right. Vietnam would either become another Korea with a permanent U.S. military involvement, or we'd have limited involvement.
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and get her ass kicked like we did in Korea at the end. That was my part. Growing up during the 60s, I had always thought of Korea as a victory or at least a draw. As I delved into the history of the Vietnam War, it became obvious there were very similar and there were similarities and differences. But this book makes it clear that Korea should have provided an overarching cautionary tale for Kennedy and Johnson, especially Johnson with respect to Vietnam.
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Because we know Kennedy already had those cautions. He wanted out. He had already announced that he was withdrawing from Vietnam. That's another element. That was another nail in his coffin. David Halberstam tells the complete story from Xi'an's loss of the Chinese Civil War and how Truman was successfully blamed for that outcome. And this is very important. To how the U.S. then became the grantor of the Republic of China.
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i.e. Taiwan, security. Because what happened was the China lobby, which is basically the Taiwan lobby, it's a mislabel, had all of the stars in it. And we'll go into that because it's very important. They had the Flying Tigers, the Claire Chennault, all of those guys.
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A lot of movie stars were in on the China lobby. All of the CIA media time, Newsweek, all of those guys were in the China lobby. So they crafted the narrative that because Chiang got kicked out of China, we are now responsible for Chiang. And we had to protect him when he was in Burma. And then we had to protect him.
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and give him Taiwan. And then once we gave him Taiwan and he was going to run the drug operations from there, we had to protect him. And they crafted this entire narrative that his failure was tied around the neck of Truman and therefore we were obligated to protect him. That's why this PR mockingbird media thing is so damn dangerous. So.
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So Habersam calls them the China firsters, but it's actually the China lobby who convinced the American public that Truman and the Democrat Party really lost China to the communists, looked on a war in Korea with the catalyst to reignite the war between the communists and the nationalist Chinese. Now, again, see, I made the speculation several days ago and I got it several months ago when we first began looking into this.
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It is clear to me, and Halberstam makes the argument as well, Korea was going to be used as an avenue to reinsert Chiang Kai-shek back into China. I am absolutely convinced of it. This is a long story of denigrating and underestimating the resolve and the ability of the Northern Koreans and the mainland China.
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and overestimating the abilities of the nationalists on Taiwan. He concludes with this, I guess Korea had to be fought, but the progression of the war after Incheon did not need to follow the course it took. No, the war didn't have to be fought. We could have minded our own damn business, got the Japanese out of Korea and came home, and let them figure out their own civil war. That's what we should have done.
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All right, so that concludes that. Next up is a very interesting article. It talks about true lies, filthy and filthy rich. And I'm only going to, we're going to go more into this when we move over to Japan.
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But this talks about, I just want to read this first couple of paragraphs because it came up yesterday. When World War II ended and the Allied forces under MacArthur surveyed the wreckage of the Imperial Army rampage across Asia, meaning Japan's rampage, they uncovered evidence of enormous quantities of money, precious metals, and stolen treasure, mainly from
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Not mainly. I mean, it was from everywhere. Every place they, Indonesia, Taiwan, China, Korea, Philippines, all over the Asian theater. It included tons of gold from the treasury of Chinese nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek, assets from British, French, American, and British colonial authorities because he had been their opium supplier.
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He had tons and tons of gold. It included raiding Buddhist temples across the region and millions of gemstones, foreign currencies, art. Any antiquities at all was stolen. They even stole kitchen sinks so they could use them in barracks. Not kidding. It was done under the direct supervision of the imperial family.
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It was oversaw by Harry Vito's brother, Prince Chichibu, which we covered in our book review of Golden Warriors. Where this booty ended up is the subject of a recent well-documented, and this is actually in this document I'm reading, because they mentioned Gold Warriors, the book, by Sterling and Peggy Seagrave. It notes that, let's see.
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The Seagraves report the shipment of huge hoards of gold to Japanese-occupied Malay and later to the Philippines. The shipments were melted down and buried with, they weren't melted down, they were actually just buried with other treasure in 175 storage sites along with thousands of slave laborers because they used slaves and our military to bury the treasure and then they blew the caves shut.
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with the laborers in them, so no one knew where the locations were. Most of the rest was lost or destroyed in Allied bombings, but the authors say the enormous amount survived the war, and it's referred to sometimes as Yamashita Treasure, who was the commander of the Philippines at the time, basically charged with guarding all of this while the princes that were there oversaw the
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actual burials and stealing and creating the map for where these 175 locations are, Yamashita was responsible for the island's security. Agents of the OSS, the forerunner to the CIA, found out about all of this, which was later inspected by General MacArthur himself. He didn't actually inspect the treasure because they still had not located even as late as some...
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You know, like in the 1990s and 2000s, they had not located all 175 locations by far. And so what it did, though, and people need to understand this, is as it was retrieved from the Philippines, it was done so at least initially on the black market. And all of those black market funds was used.
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to fund Operation Gladio. That's where they got the money to do all of these weapons trafficking. And that's the reason why they set up banks like Castle Bank, BCCI, and all of those banks, because they needed a multiple layer of banking in order to money launder. They used the Vatican Bank. They used BCCI. They used Nugent Hand, which I have to get back and finish my expose of them as well. I kind of got sidetracked on Oliver North.
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I got so many balls in the air. Okay, so I just wanted to mention that so you can keep that in the back of your head because you got to ask at some point, how the hell did they afford to do all this shit? Well, they did it with that in large part, but that's a bigger ball of wax and you really have to go look at that book review in order to get the whole ball of wax. Okay, so there's another article that came out of a report.
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of the investigation of facts concerning bacterial warfare in Korea. It is a very long report. We're not going to read the whole report. I'm going to read you a little bit about it though. Back in the early 1950s, the U.S. conducted a bombing campaign during the Korean War, dropping hundreds of thousands of tons of bombs and napalm on North Korea.
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The bombardment, worse than any country had received up to that point, excepting the effects of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, wiped out nearly every city in North Korea. It contributed to well over a million civilian deaths. Because of the relentless bombing, the people were reduced to living in tunnels. Even normally bellicose General MacArthur claimed to find the devastation sickening, but he ordered it.
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It's important to understand this because you can't fathom, because for us, we look at North Korea now and it's a dark thing on a map full of light. And we think, oh, well, we're the reason why it's a dark thing on the map of light because of this right here. What we did, and you remember me telling you at the beginning of this study, the North was the industrialized area of the Korean country.
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It was like carpet bombing New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Virginia all in one swoop where not a single light is left on. That's what this would be like. Taking the entire area and carpet bombing it. The most controversial.
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Both North Korean and China alleged that by 1952, the U.S. had began using biological and germ warfare weapons against the North and the China area, the border area. The U.S. government denied that. Nevertheless, captured U.S. flyers told their North Korean and Chinese captors about the use of these weapons.
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Later, after the prisoners were returned to U.S. custody, counterintelligence experts and psychiatrists interrogated them. They were told under the threat of a court-martial to renounce their confessions about the germ warfare. They all decided to keep quiet. The Army Criminal Investigative Division, officer in charge of interrogating returning prisoners, including airmen who confessed to using the biological warfare on the North, like downed airmen, was Army counterintelligence specialist Colonel
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Boris Pash, P-A-S-H. Pash had previously been in charge of security for the most classified operations of the U.S. government in World War II. He was in charge of security at the Manhattan Project, Berkeley Radiation Laboratory. In the immediate aftermath of the war, military intelligence officer Pash led the Alsos mission, A-L-S-O-S.
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which searched for Nazi and Italian nuclear scientists and feasible materials, as well as gathering intelligence about any enemy scientific research applicable to his efforts, including biological and chemical warfare. Later, Pasch worked for the CIA and in the 1970s was called before a congressional investigation about his alleged participation in agency assassinations. To convince the world of the truth,
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of their claim that the U.S. had dropped biological weapons on their countries. And after turning down the suggestion that the International Red Cross look into those charges, the North Koreans and Chinese sponsored investigating commission. Because keep in mind, the Red Cross is under the control of the CIA. Using the auspices of the World Peace Council, they gathered together a number of scientists from around the world, most of whom were sympathetic.
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Most surprisingly, this commission, which came to be known as the International Scientific Commission, or ISC, was headed by a British scientist by the name of Joseph Needham, N-E-E-D-H-A-M. The ISC included scientists from a number of countries, including Sweden, France, Italy, and Brazil. You know, the same ones in the UN delegation under the coalition forces of the South.
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The Soviet Union representative was a Dr. Huckel. Oh, I don't even know how to say that name. We'll go on. Had been the chief medical expert at the trial of Unit 731 Japanese officers, which in case you don't know, that was a very infamous biological bacterial experimentation, which was worse than anything that the Germans did.
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As far as experimentation, it was gross. They conducted hideous experiments on all of their prisoners. Needham himself, though pilloried in the Western press for his opinions on the controversy of the U.S. use of biological weapons in the Korean War, remained highly lauded scientist for years after the ISC report.
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He was elected a fellow in the British Academy in 1992. The Queen conferred on him a companionship honor. The ISC traveled to China and North Korea in the summer of 1952 and by September produced a report for the investigation of the facts concerning the bacterial warfare in Korea and China, which corroborated the Chinese and North Korean claims that the U.S. had used biological weapons and experimental fashion on civilian populations.
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The summary report was only some 60 pages long, but the ISC included over 600 pages of documentary material comprising statements from witnesses, airmen involved in dropping the weapons, as well as captured enemy agents, reports from doctors, journal articles, autopsy reports, lab tests, photos, and other material. Some of this documentary evidence has been
47:03
all but inaccessible for decades, with only a handful of copies of the ISC report in a few scattered libraries in the United States. The report concluded that the U.S. had used a number of biological weapons, including anthrax, plague, cholera, disseminated over dozens of different devices or methods using spray-in porcelain bombs, self-destroying paper canisters,
47:32
with a paper parachute and leaflet bombs, among others. This article is not meant to examine the full range of opinions or evidence about whether or not the U.S. used those weapons. It is instead an attempt to publish essential documentation of claims and the documentation that proved it. The charges of U.S. use of biological warfare in the Korean War have long been subject of intense controversy, you know, because the CIA lies about it all the time.
48:02
The reliance in part on testimony from U.S. prisoners of war led to U.S. charges of brainwashing. These charges later became the basis of a cover story for covert CIA experimentation into the use of drugs and other forms of coercive interrogation and torture that became the basis for the 1960 through Kubark manual on interrogation. And much later,
48:27
a powerful influence on the CIA's post-911 enhanced interrogation program. Establishment Cold War scholars have been quick to debunk the ISC report. The most notable attempts in recent years included the publication of purported letters written by officials of the Soviet Union discussing the lack of evidence and the decision to manufacture the evidence to fool the West. Subsequently, a 1997 memoir, the former director of the Chinese
48:55
People's Volunteer Army Health Division was published declaring U.S. use of bacterial agents in the Korean War may have been a false alarm. As two Canadian scholars who spent years researching the biological claims have noted, if these documents were to be true, then it would go against the bulk of evidence, including interviews with witnesses in both in the boat.
49:23
the U.S. and the China that was included in the original report. Some of this, including the CIA declassification of a good deal of formerly top secret information about the Korean War. And then there's an addition that says, read the brand new evidence about the use of biological warfare in the Korean War published in September 2020. A new article contains analysis of two dozen declassified CIA.
49:53
communication intelligence reports from 1952 that describes the U.S. cryptotologist intercepts of military radio communications from North Korean and Chinese military units who are reporting being under attack by germ warfare. These are described as smoking guns in the CIA reports and are downloadable. The cables dealing with the North Korean claims of biological warfare
50:22
were basically dismissed out of hand, but there's now obviously proof that they did it. And that's the reason why understanding history is so important. And the reason why I went to the length of going through almost this entire particular article is what happened today? What happened today? We were told months ago that Russia blew up their own pipeline. Then today,
50:52
We're told that Zelensky ordered the destruction of the pipeline and the CIA had nothing to do with it. Well, every single thing that comes out of the CIA's mouth is a lie. So if they told you they had nothing to do with it, they had everything to do with it. Because they're liars. That's what they do. They lie. They're the ones that said Russia did it. They lie. Any single thing they say.
51:22
is a lie. They don't ever tell the truth, ever. So keep that in mind. That's why understanding history and knowing. They would go to their fucking grave lying to your face, all the while your tax dollars is paying them. Keep that in mind. They are paid and trained to look you in the eye, not even blink and lie to you. All right, we got one more.
51:53
That we will get to today. And then I have several to get to tomorrow. This. Let's see. Hold on just a second. I'm going to save this one for tomorrow. We need to start tomorrow with that one. Because it's a little longer. All right. This is a short one. This is a cable.
52:31
That was classified. That starts off, and this basically kind of puts, we're going to kind of span out at the end of this session to a bigger picture of where Korea fits in the overall scheme of things. You have to understand the context, which is why we use those maps.
52:59
of where Korea is next to Japan, next to China, and how everything contextually works, and where Taiwan fits in all of this, and their creation of the World Anti-Communist League. So I found this classified document that has since been declassified very interesting in that regard. It's an FBI document, and it's...
53:27
Talking about November 1987, billed by the Japanese press as the godfather of Japan. And we're talking about Sasagawa, conservative businessman tycoon. Sasagawa Ryouchi, he was 87 at the time, is one of the Japanese most controversial business figures. Sasagawa built his U.S. dollar eight.
53:58
billion dollar empire as a gambling impression who operated motorboat racing concessions and only privately owned legal gambling operation in the entire country of Japan because remember they set up these entities that are family oligarchs besides being one of the country's wealthiest men he is a former war criminal motorboat gambling czar and leader
54:29
of the anti-communist efforts inside of Japan. He was a political power broker. Sawakawa has been closely identified with quote-unquote right-wing causes, which is basically their name for anti-communists. During the 1930s, he organized a nationalist group involved in several political assassinations in the pre-war years. Now keep in mind,
54:59
Korea, which is why this is relevant, was a Japanese colony at this time. This guy operated in Korea. His involvement with this group, plus a stint in the Diet, which is their government, during the war years, earned him more than three years in prison as a suspected war criminal. In the 1960s, he established the Japanese chapter of, you guessed it,
55:27
World Anti-Communist League. There is no information that would confirm or deny any presence or connection of Sawagawa with the Japanese underworld gangster organization called Yakuza. But, I mean, come on. He's the gambling guy of the entire country. Do you actually need a smoking gun to say that he's in contact with gangsters in Japan?
55:57
In 1979, however, Sasakawa received an award from the Japanese emperor. The award was for Sasakawa's philanthropic activities in Japan and at the United Nations. The award probably would not have been given if his current record were not free from unsavory associations. As head of the Japanese Shipping Foundation,
56:26
Sasakawa is reported to have contributed over $1.35 billion to charities worldwide, including $50 million to the UN, $45 million to establish the U.S. Japanese Foundation, and endowments to where? Harvard Medical School, Oxford University, and other academic institutions.
56:55
The Martin Luther King Peace Prize, the UN Peace Prize, and the Linus Pauling Award for Humanitarianism, but have not yet captured the object of his lifelong pursuit, the Nobel Peace Prize, because that's where you want more criminals. As a result of his activism, he has developed ties with many international leaders, including John Paul II, former President Carter, and...
57:24
the former Chinese leader. So this kind of just put the cherry on the top for me for today, because all of these people in the international syndicate, which truly he is, use the wealth that they accrue in these shipping entities, because you know that
57:54
there's a huge likelihood that his ship building foundation has everything to do with providing all of these entities, ships that are not scrapped and used to then do whatever they want with. And it's a great guise under charity.
58:17
work to be able to have them and interesting that Oxford and Harvard would be the two that are MI6 and CIA controlled so just very interesting correlations there so with that we're going to open up the floor and then we're gonna let me move this over so I remember that I've already covered that and then we will start
58:51
tomorrow with the last couple of articles that I have for Korea. What do we got, everybody? Hey, Trumpfrog. Hey, Stellar. Hey, Froggy. Hey, Stellar. What's up, Colonel and ladies? How are you? Esther, I appreciate your longevity and having your hand up. All right, Esther. What do you got, Esther? Anything? Maybe she didn't have a question. Yeah, maybe.
59:32
Well, Froggy, you had a great space last night. Yeah, I thought the co-hosts did a great job. I was a little fired up, tired of all the negativity and all the whining and complaining. Maybe took it a little too far, but it just spills out sometimes, so I can't help it. Yeah, my phone died in the middle of it. Just good you can hear it from all these so-called maggot people. They whine so much. It's like, watch and pay attention to what's happening.
1:00:01
I mean, if you believe what you're seeing from the news, then you haven't learned anything in the last eight years. And that's what, there was some parts to that that was just tough. Because, you know, it's like, I think Cousin It was the one that, she's like, you know, we try and we try to help people. And then it was great. Like, Kimmy immediately, with her Gladio glasses on, saw right through stuff. And she's like, boy, I saw right through it. Just like.
1:00:29
Look at those glasses shine, boy. I just loved it. Exactly. It totally is. And that's the thing that's so mind-blowing is now that we're seeing, or at least for me, and I'm sure that everyone else is the same way, now that we can see these different patterns and they're, you know, they're getting more rapid, if that makes sense. You know, it's happening faster and faster with different places. Or maybe news is coming out faster. Who knows? But whatever it is.
1:01:01
And still blown away by Korea. I mean, holy cow. I have even more respect for my mom's family. You know what, Stellar? I can't decide. You bring up a very interesting point. I don't actually think it's happening faster. I just believe we're comprehending it faster. So we don't have to wait 30 years for something to be declassified. Because it's almost like a mind-numbing...
1:01:31
stupor that the Mockingbird media has kept us in for the last 70 years. They slowly leak information. And once you short circuit, it's like having the two car cables to the battery. And when you put the positive on and it sparks, you now have a complete circuit. And we short circuited their 30-year dribble.
1:02:02
So now we're getting things at full speed as opposed to a slow drip. Absolutely. Also, too, it just seems like also as, you know, like when you were pulling up stuff from like Italy back a long time ago, a lot of the articles that you guys have been putting up for the different places just you've already spoken about. So it seems like the news, you know, the mainstream media might say something. And maybe back then I'd maybe.
1:02:31
I didn't recognize it as much, but, you know, especially now, especially with the glasses on and off, you know, it seems like you see a headline somewhere and it's like, oh my gosh, you read the article a little bit more like, holy crap, these are similar players. Oh my gosh, these are similar people. Oh my gosh, this is similar agencies. This is similar departments. It's like, holy cow. Every time. And that to me is the ability to look at things now completely different.
1:03:01
It's literally big. And again, I'm a concept person. So it's like drinking out of a water hose for the last 30 years and then trying to drink out of a fire hose.
1:03:14
And go one step farther. You go out to get alcohol and you're getting the cheap or the, you know, the alcohol free beer. And then all of a sudden you get the real alcohol and it's like, wow. Now, you know, you get hit by that. Boom. That's I mean, that's kind of how I'm looking at it. There's a rule here. Yeah. We don't talk about alcohol in front of Cousin It because then she's going to start talking about me and her liquor and all that other shit. So don't even bring that up. It's the bourbon. She's all about the bourbon.
1:03:40
Okay, well, we're going to have to make sure we send you a really good bottle of bourbon. Well, I think we lost her, too. Her little microphone thing's not on. Let me take her down and bring her back up. SR-71, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel, and thank everybody for contributing and joining the space and all those that attend the Rumble session. I do have...
1:04:11
I guess part of what's bothering me here, and I never really understood this, is I didn't realize we actually use biological warfare in Korea. We did. Well, that's become evident. A lot of it. And it seems that it's been a lot of it. And what puzzles me more than anything else now is how they keep trying to hide all of our labs and everything else that's going on.
1:04:42
I'm more in line now with understanding or beginning to understand where the next big deal is coming from. And I have this idea concerning monkeypox as well, which happened in Africa. I'm beginning to wonder if that was not by design as well. And it wouldn't surprise me if it was. Your thoughts? Yeah, I think everything's by design.
1:05:17
And didn't, was it MERS? Is that the one? Because they had SARS and then they had MERS. Wasn't one of them from Africa also? Well, understand, and we didn't go into this. South Africa had one of the largest biological programs there are. And they used, and it was done, it was headed by the personal doctor of the last apartheid South African government.
1:05:47
His personal doctor was the head of their biological program. And they used that biological program on blacks throughout the continent of Africa in experiments. There's a lot of documentation out about that. And when it started coming out after the apartheid government fell, there was a whole bunch of dead bodies as a result of it. They were knocking off everybody that had anything to do with the labs. They were killing them. I mean, they were like dropping like flies.
1:06:17
And we didn't go into that, but that's all part of this as well. They've been experimenting on Africa for a very long time. Makes you wonder, because, you know, the doctors that were going to be exposing the rapid, you know, the mRNA, the rapid cancer, whatever they called it, you know, it makes you wonder if they had data that they were doing stuff as well that they didn't want released to the public. You know, there's just so many shady things going on. Well, it's...
1:06:47
It's always been. That's why we covered MH17. MH17 had the AIDS doctors going to a conference, like over 100 of them on that airplane. And they had evidence that Fauci was involved in the release of AIDS in Africa. So, yeah. And then the recent news, the other plane goes down. And as soon as the manifest comes out, we all see. And it's like, boy, patterns, patterns, patterns.
1:07:18
You know, when it came out that day that the plane had gone down, you know, the video and stuff like that, you guys had to face that, you know, that date as well. And that was the first thing we said, oh, that's terrible that happened, you know, and the people that had passed. And that was the first question that we asked was, yeah. And the first question was, who was on that plane? Yep. Because that is the question now. I mean, we actually said it during the session. Who was on the plane?
1:07:44
Because that is the first question now that you have to ask, because it is a pattern. There will be somebody assassinated on every one of them. What is your opinion, Colonel, may I ask, about the Japanese? I think we covered it, but I don't remember what you answered or I missed it. About the Japanese, was it the prime minister or whatever that stepped down? You mean the recent? Yes, yes.
1:08:20
I still am pulling a couple of pieces together on that. I've got some conflicting information and a friend of mine that is still an active Intel analyst, not classified in any way at all because it's not even his area of expertise, had some interesting takes on that that I'm kind of chasing down. So I'm going to hold.
1:08:50
my opinion on that until I can run to ground a couple of things that he told me. Cousinette, what do you got? Somebody mentioned booze. No one mentioned that. You're hearing things. Yeah, you do still owe me, actually. One of the things about the monkey pox and all sorts of debilitating diseases.
1:09:22
If you follow those diseases, they are located conveniently close to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundations and also bio labs that we have actually set up in Africa, which I'm sure it's just a coincidence that there's a trail of dead bodies where Gates is.
1:09:46
Well, that must be the same coincidence that the labs are in countries that have baby farms, too. Exactly. Yeah. It's all a coincidence. Absolutely. Yeah. Just like the Spanish flu is just a fluke. But yeah, if you start following the patterns, you're going to find that most of it leads back to Fort Detrick. In this case, Fauci and Bill Gates.
1:10:14
And that's really the end of story. And they tried to get us all paranoid about the monkeypox last year until they couldn't explain why it was only people that participated in orgies that was getting it. And then disgustingly, the children that they bought and paid for. And sometimes even their pets would show up with their monkeypox. So, yeah. And now they're saying that, oh, yeah, it's this big, huge deal.
1:10:44
So we'll see what happens. But they're going to absolutely try something. They have to. I agree. Bridget? One thing that came up last night in Froggy's pond and that I wanted to point out, but at the time I was getting ready for bed and couldn't, but it was an interesting take. Someone had said that now they're talking about at the DNC convention.
1:11:16
They're going to be masking up because of the breakout of monkeypox or H1N1 or whatever they're calling it now. And that's a pattern. The last time they did that, 2020. Are they going to be wearing adult diapers? How are they masking for monkeypox? Yeah, apparently they're going to start doing the six-foot rule. Now they're talking about the six-foot rule again.
1:11:43
And they're talking about going, but even though this has already been proved, that it didn't do a difference. You ain't got to be six feet. Well, they're calling it a super spreader. The convention is going to be the super spreader. So we're waiting for everybody to have to wear face diapers. So we're making face diapers for...
1:12:08
a sexually transmitted disease. Right. And I'm calling it out early. I'm saying that Kamala is going to be campaigning from her basement. Go ahead. You're talking about the booty juice virus, right? The monkeypox, the one that was only susceptible to one group of people. Where do you come up with this?
1:12:34
When Joe Biden was trying to talk about Pete booty juice, that's what it said. When he says booty judge, it sounds like booty juice. So it was perfect. Yeah, that's garbage. I'm seeing people wearing the face diapers, you know, in public, and it's really sad. I see them wearing them in cars. I thought Portland was the only place that had that problem. But apparently, if you live in Western states, you're completely brainwashed because the masks only make you sick. They don't protect you at all.
1:13:04
from any virus. And we already know that monkeypox, you don't get from breathing anything. It's no super spreader unless you're getting bent over like booty juice. So I don't know what they're talking about. It was, it was, it was just one group of people. So maybe it's just going to be a giant orgy. I guess that's their plan. He's not kidding. It's 103 degrees here, 105 to 103 degrees any given day. All right. And it was even hotter before. And they are masking up here, literally masking up. Sorry.
1:13:33
And if you talk about the midget Nazi that created this whole thing, Dr. Fauci, any virus doesn't spread once the temperature gets over 75 degrees. He brought it up himself and they're saying, oh, we're going to stem the tide or whatever their stupid tagline is that they were using. But you can't get COVID or the booty juice virus or any of that stuff.
1:13:59
If you're in Las Vegas or Phoenix, Arizona or any place where it's Sodom and Gomorrah hot here, it's ridiculous how hot it is. I want to punch people in the face. It's so hot. Even though I wouldn't. I just have to say that because I'm dying out here. All right. SR71, what you got? All I can say is you people are cracking me up today because now I've got this vision of the opening ceremony of the Olympics for the convention.
1:14:29
It's either that or they want six foot apart so they can get enough people outside to say they drew a crowd. I can't decide which. Well, that may be a good point that the six foot rule would keep their crowd size manageable as far as the people not showing up. So, yeah, that's a good point. Hey, SR, I posted a bunch of stuff on your biological weapons in Korea and Japan and China.
1:14:58
for you, the different units and what have you. And then with the, I was going to say also with the convention coming up, I put up on top that GPS's Tony Saruga had written something stating that over 30,000 international, I know that you guys saw it already, but you know, it's the Antifa people. It's, you know, it's just insane. So I guess they're going to have a lot of fireworks. Yeah. What I tried to tell them is they're not Antifa. That's just a new name.
1:15:31
But you're right. $150 a day. Yeah, thank you for posting that, Stella. That's very appropriate. Sunshine, go ahead. Yeah, well, Trump already said it. If you just stay out of people's butts, you won't be getting a monkey pox. Well, apparently that needs to be said. Right. And I thought, man, maybe we might want to watch this DNC just to see.
1:16:00
It might be better than Saturday Night Live. Who knows? This could just be a great show. Oh, it's going to be explosive. I think Joe Biden's going to blow them up and come back and try to get his electoral votes back. Something crazy is going to happen. I can tell you that right now. He's angry. I agree. They fucked him. Which he needed to be, by the way.
1:16:25
You never know. Maybe that explains why he wasn't in the public for a while. Maybe that's why he had to get rushed to the hospital in Vegas. I still think the man is dead in a freezer. I'm sorry. I've got to find that one video. There is a video that was leaked out. It was like within a couple of days after the incident happened here in Vegas. And they were talking. There were people that were talking. I think they've pulled them all because I can't find them now.
1:16:54
employees that were working there that described his fall. And it was a fairly bad fall from my understanding. So, and they were supposed to ship him to, that's when they were, the police were on call saying, okay, well, we've got that 421 because they had no idea what was going on because after it happened in the beginning part, they had mentioned going over to UMC, but I don't think it was ever finalized. They ended up taking him to the plane instead. So there's something else going on with that story.
1:17:23
Yeah, I listened to all of that audio and they basically was going to airlift him somewhere. And then they were like, no, no, we're going to take him to Air Force One. But that was not the doctor's recommendation.
1:17:36
Exactly. And there was, like I said, there's some videos in the beginning from the employees from the Michelinda. I don't know how to say it properly, but from the restaurant where it happened that were not police or anything. So it was just like regular employees. Like I think it was the server or some servers that were talking about it and someone was recording it and it got leaked out. But now it's been taken off because I've been trying to find it for golfing. So I've been looking through.
1:18:07
This biological report. This is devastating. I mean, they released fleas and ticks and mites and flies and mosquitoes. They infested trees with all kinds of funguses. It's pretty damn devastating. Just sick. These people are just sick, you know? Yeah. And some of the things that they dropped.
1:18:39
there that were infected are only found like this one particular fly is only found in the united states so it's obvious where the shit was coming from so it's kind of what they're doing to us now for the last decade i'd say they've you know there's like very unusual um insects and stuff like that that keep you know showing up here or something like that it's probably the same kind of stuff yeah it may be very interesting to go through this with a little bit more detail um
1:19:08
Just to see the corollaries between what they did and things that could be happening now. You're right. There definitely seems to be some similarities there. And then when I was in Europe a few years ago, I want to say probably a decade ago.
1:19:28
there was like this new thing that was coming out in Europe and it was the tiger mosquitoes or something like that. Normally a mosquito will just bite you one time, but these ones were biting multiple times and a lot of people were getting sick from them. So now I'm wondering if that was another biological thing because those things were not from Europe either. Some of them are now here in the United States, I saw. So there's a lot of fishy stuff going on. Stellar, two and a half miles from my house in Florida, they are building.
1:19:55
a $14 million mosquito research facility. It scares the hell out of me. That's creepy. Yeah. So right in Sarasota, the south part of Sarasota, they are building a mosquito factory. All government funded. Yeah, it's already dumped a ton of mosquitoes down here as much as we tried to fight it. Oh, no, it'll be fine.
1:20:26
Yeah, that's how we got love bugs. Yeah. And they did the same thing. Wasn't it out in California? Yeah. In order to control the mosquito population, they released a mosquito that was a hybrid. It was lab created. Something along the lines of it would become fatal to for the other ones to breathe with. And like, ironically, this whole thing just made circle.
1:20:58
It makes you wonder about the Africanized bees and stuff like that, you know, because those don't, I mean, like they're trying to kill the bee population as well. The natural bees have gone down considerably as far as like their habitat and stuff. Makes you wonder because, you know, it seems like these Africanized bees are the one, you know, and those have been around for a couple of decades. But look at the population of bees throughout the world. Kind of makes you wonder that too. Yeah. Well, they've been spraying chemtrails too.
1:21:26
which is another, quote, conspiracy theory, right? It's such a conspiracy theory that all these states banned them. And then somewhere I was reading that they were saying that Lyme disease is also a lab-created thing, because I think that there's patents on these things. There's patents. Literally, there's patents on this shit. The AIDS virus has patents. Yes. The Lyme disease was actually released, and it absolutely is a biological weapon. It was released in the San Francisco area.
1:21:56
Created in Fort Detrick, wasn't it? It is well documented. Created out of Fort Detrick, wasn't it? Yes. Yeah, most everything was created out of Fort Detrick. And then you've got Black and Veatch, which is another name that comes up, and they're actually in Kansas. Oh, crap. Who's the other one?
1:22:18
The Russians actually found all the paperwork because when they went into the Ukrainian territories, the first thing they did was go into the biolabs. And of course, they knew where all the biolabs were because they're old Soviet era biolabs. So it wasn't like they weren't able to find them. And they actually recovered a lot of paperwork, even though they were seen, even though the Ukrainians were seen on, what was it, sea?
1:22:47
CNN or somebody that was doing a report from Ukraine back a couple of years ago. And they were showing unknowingly everybody burning paperwork in front of one of the biolabs. But they didn't do all of them because the first place that Russia went to were those biolabs. So they got a ton of stuff. And actually on my Rumble channel, I did post.
1:23:13
um a couple of their reports because they went to the bioweapons convention and they exposed a lot of these people but you won't find it and that's why when i come across these videos stellar i immediately upload them and i put them on my rumble channel and that way they don't disappear from there good to know yeah i'm just thinking that you know how we thought you know do the
1:23:36
tribunals, you know, and stuff like that, either hang them, shoot them, electrocute them, whatever the ways that they said was okay. I'm now thinking that that biolab research place for the mosquitoes in Sarasota, maybe we just stick them in there and let them just get stung and then give them the AIDS virus and stuff and just let them stay in there until they're all like deceased. You know, I don't know. These people suck. All right. On that note. Yes, they do.
1:24:04
Did Esther, were you ever able to figure out how to make your speaker or your mic work? Did you have something? I don't guess so. Okay. If we don't have any other questions on anybody, tell her. I was just going to say thank you guys again so much for all that you do and all the research and coming in here and educating us. And I also want to do a huge shout out to SR7.
1:24:35
I don't know all the numbers behind it. That's all that shows. But phenomenal researcher as well. Learning even more stuff. His research with your guys' stuff makes it even more clear than it ever was. I just got goosebumps. So thank you to SR also. Okay, Stellar. There's an aircraft called SR-71 that looks like his picture. That's what his call sign is, SR-71. So that's what you can call him. And it was very cool. I did do research after he, after.
1:25:07
And that is a cool, cool aircraft. So my first time I saw an SR-71 was at the Miramar, excuse me, El Toro air show, which is a Marine base in Southern California when I was stationed at Los Angeles. I never saw one. I love them. I have the book, the coffee table book from the SR-71 program. Coolest plane ever. It was my favorite.
1:25:37
right up until I got my F-16 ride. But because it was highly classified, you generally never saw them. They were never allowed to land like in air shows back in the day. And so you could see them. They would occasionally do a flyover. Generally, somebody had to know somebody in order to get that to happen, though. But the most incredible thing was it was a mile past
1:26:07
air show before you ever even heard the plane. And it did a very low flyover. It was the most humongous honking airplane just other than the B-52, which flew right over the top of my car coming around Carswell just outside of Dallas and Texas, which shook the entire freaking ground. The SR-71 has one of the most
1:26:37
enormous blast as it comes because it is a supersonic kick-ass airplane. And it's just an amazing, amazing airplane to see it actually fly overhead. And they actually have one on display at the Air Museum just outside of Dallas.
1:26:56
If you guys ever get the opportunity, if you're in the D.C. area, I highly suggest you go see it because you can literally up close and personal just like stand under the. I have pictures of me with it in the museum. We went there last summer. Cool airplane. Go ahead, SR-71. Thank you, Colonel. Just a little note behind the SR-71 and the plane itself. It went into production in 1966. And you're right. It is an.
1:27:26
awesome, magnificent piece of machinery ever devised by man. Given that, what people don't, I think a lot of people don't know about SR-71 is it was our spy plane over Russia. It is faster than a speeding bullet. The Russians could not shoot it down. That was the big complaint. And when satellites went up, of course, all that changed. So it is retired.
1:27:56
And yes, Colonel, I visit that plane every chance I get at the Udbar-Hazy Museum. Yeah. Thank you very much. It's an amazing airplane. It flies at very high altitude. It's one of those like spaceship, spacesuit wearing like the U-2s because it was a surveillance reconnaissance aircraft. Supersonic, as he said. Just an amazing, amazing, amazing airplane.
1:28:27
I will see if I can find the picture real quick at the Air Museum. But does anybody else got it? Oh, I was saying Tallulah requested a mic, so I was going to see if she had a question.
1:28:52
Hello, thank you for the space and for offering me the mic. I was just thinking when you said about the aircrafts flying over and how they thunder the ground and anything below them. I lived near Camp Pendleton for a long time. So yeah, I'm very familiar with that. But something that it brought to mind was 9-11 because I lived on the coast. I'm sure like many of you that live on the coast that day when those aircrafts after the buildings were hit, just flying.
1:29:19
Along the coastline, that was the most eerie feeling I think that I've ever felt as a United States citizen, other than like what we're seeing. Excuse me, now I had a hiccup. But anyway, I have a great love of aircraft also. Yeah, growing up or at least living near San Diego with all of the Navy aircraft flying around there, you'd have to love it.
1:29:47
Yeah, absolutely. I lived in San Clemente. I don't know if you're familiar with that city, but it's very close to Oceanside and Camp Pendleton. Yeah, my aunt lived in Escondida or not that. Hold on. I'll tell you where she lived. Well, she still lives there, actually. My uncle, who was my mom's brother.
1:30:09
uh was stationed at Camp Pendleton and met her there and um then got out off of active duty she lived in yeah Encinita okay yeah I know where that is yeah you go down there all the time every weekend my daughter and I drove down there oh awesome it's so beautiful my dad was in the Marine Corps there too he retired as a sergeant major out of Camp Pendleton so
1:30:34
We're a military family. But anyway, I just wanted to say thank you for the space and also talk about the day when those aircraft flew along the coast and just wondered if anyone else had that same feeling. Yeah. I don't even want to talk about that day. That day is very. Yeah, it's that day is very emotional for me. I was stationed at U.S. Central Command on that day and my two best friends were at the Pentagon. So I'm so sorry. Yeah.
1:31:04
Memories of that day is very difficult for me, just in general. But anyway. Blah! Yeah, I'm sorry. Back on a good note. No, that's fine. I just posted the SR-71 pictures under the space so you can see them. Oh, cool. Thank you.
1:31:30
Well, I had a good news. Resorts World, which is also a Hilton, they have three hotels in one. It's a big one here in town. Not very full. Didn't even really know people really stayed there much. I think golfing's been there. When he came over, when he used to work before, he stayed in the hotel and stuff like that. But they're in trouble for laundering. And it's serious. I put it up in the pill. Well, hold on. Is Resorts World?
1:32:00
different than Resort International? It's probably the same company. Because Resort International is Operation Gladio. That was the money laundering. Okay, well, I just put it up there. I'll double check, but I believe it is the same company. It's Resorts World International. I believe it is. And we just call it Resorts World here. And they've got three different high-end hotels that are under the same building or whatever.
1:32:29
Um, but yeah, there, um, I just put it up on top. Um, so I just thought you guys might find that interesting. I didn't do the whole, there's like, it was almost like a little bit of a thread, but, um, yeah, but it was for laundering, um, gambling business, money laundering and subscribing to fault is because of their taxes. They weren't reporting the right taxes or whatever, but they're in trouble and it's very, very serious.
1:32:54
Yeah, they are definitely CIA. They go back to a company called Mary Carter Paint Company. I did a whole thing on these a long time ago. And that Mary Carter Paint Company delved into and basically transformed into casino real estate. They were money laundering for the mob. That was basically what they were doing. And they were buying all these assets and then they consolidated in Resorts International.
1:33:22
But they were a mob entity out of this, you know, basically money laundering CIA profits as such. Drug money. Big time. I'll check into it to see if it is the same company and things like that. They had something in New York, too, but I know that they're under the umbrella of Hilton. So I'll just double check because I know that they've got several locations throughout the world. But yeah, just thought I'd.
1:33:52
throw that in for you guys. That just happened today. It was just released in the news today. Wow. That is interesting. All right. Well, let's close this up. Hold on. I think we lost Cousin It. She has her hand up. She has her hand up and so does Tallulah. All right. Cousin It, can you hear me? I think she just dropped out.
1:34:29
All right. All right. Go ahead and let's do Tallulah and then we'll try to bring her back up. Real quickly, earlier I heard some conversation in here about
1:34:47
Biden coming back to fight what's happened to him. And I'm just wondering if you really believe that's something that is realistic. I don't think he has the mental capacity to do anything. And I don't think there's anyone around him that would support that kind of movement. So I'm just wondering about that. I'm the one who brought that up. Can I jump in, Colonel? I think how he's going to fight back is drop the sauce. Since they're going after his son, a father's love knows no bounds. That's a Q drop.
1:35:18
But the truth is, he'll do anything to save his son. So if they're going to screw him over with what they're doing with his son now after saying it was a hoax that whole time, I just think he's going to spill the beans and say, OK, here you go. Here's everything that they've been doing that I was a part of since Obama and prior. And I truly think that is going to happen. And Donald Trump keeps hinting at it, that Biden's not done and Biden's angry. So he's tweeted about it multiple times.
1:35:46
Wouldn't that be something? Oh, my goodness. Thanks, Trump. Cousin It. Can you hear me now? Yeah. Oh, God, Twitter sucks. Somebody was talking about 9-11, and I know that it's a difficult day, but just so you're aware, I was located at the time on Cape Cod, right next to Otis Air Force Base.
1:36:18
And that's where our barn was. And so I was at the barn with no communications at all and very used to the jets flying overhead. And I can tell you that day that every single plane left and hit the speed of sound over that barn. And you could see the missiles on the planes, which was unusual.
1:36:44
All the planes left, the helicopters left, the cargo planes left, all of them left. And to the point where they were flying so low and hitting the speed of sound that the horses were panicking in the pens. And we had no idea what happened. And a friend of mine was out on a trail ride and she came back and she's absolutely in tears.
1:37:10
Because apparently people were walking around the neighborhood and somebody had had the TV on and they heard what had happened. But that is, you're right, that's a day that I will never forget. Just for that reason. Because all those planes that were the first to arrive in the areas were from Otis Air Force Base. So, yeah, that was really kind of interesting. And as far as, oh gosh.
1:37:40
The planes, my friend, I have to give a shout out to one of my dogs. He was a canine handler and he was, he was, is over at Pendleton and he's actually got a book. And I wish I could remember the name of the book that tracks down all the planes that were used and where those planes are now.
1:38:06
So I did just text him real quick to find out, you know, hey, what the heck's the name of your book? Because if anybody's interested, I can get that information. But it's fascinating. He follows all the planes from World War II to today and where those planes are still currently registered. So it's really kind of cool. Thank you. Stellar? I was going to say, yes, Resorts World Las Vegas is part of the Resorts World.
1:38:35
the international one that you were talking about. It's a Genting. Genting is the one that owns and manages. They have cruise ships and all kinds of things all over the world. Yeah. Well, now you know the rest of the story. Thank you so much. Sure.
1:38:55
So maybe there is some action going on, you know, the executive definitely is. So, I mean, that's a huge one right there, you know, because like I said, I mean, that's a huge thing in their international. And so, you know, if they're cleaning and we've always talked about Las Vegas being, you know, like where they wash the money and stuff like that. So this is huge. This is huge. Resorts International. It is. I mean, it's in Whitney Webb's book. It's it is a big CIA.
1:39:25
Money laundering apparatus. Yes. Very big, actually. Okay. Thank you for my glasses. You're welcome. Last takes, anybody? All right. I was just going to say I love your space, Colonel. These are absolutely awesome. You're just dropping pearls onto people. Hopefully they pay attention and listen and don't get caught up in all the stuff going on. So thank you. You and your team. Love you, Bridget. Love you. Sister from another mister. Thank you very much.
1:40:04
Thank you. We will see you guys tomorrow, four o'clock. Close out Korea. We'll be moving on to Vietnam.
Entities here
Korea25CIA21United States20China20Douglas MacArthur13Korean War11India7Vietnam7Harry S. Truman5Lyndon B. Johnson5Soviet Union5Charles Willoughby5Resorts International5Japan4September 11 attacks4United Nations4Office of Strategic Services3Chiang Kai-shek3Anthony Fauci3David Halberstam3South Africa2Joe Biden2Donald Trump2Nellis Air Force Base2Robert Gates2Hunter Biden2China Lobby2Mao Zedong2John F. Kennedy2United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases2Jawaharlal Nehru2Beijing2Lyme disease release1Whitney Webb1Cape Cod1Brookings Institution1Lyman Lemnitzer1Paul Helliwell1United Kingdom1Hong Kong1
Claims made here
CIA front_for
Brookings Institution host_asserted
▶ 1:48
“Yeah, I didn't do it yesterday. I didn't have time. She's an egg. Got to watch her. Yeah, I know. I know. All right. So I want to start off with a research lesson. Bridget and Cousinet found this arti…”
United States carried_out_attack
China host_asserted
▶ 3:48
“Because we wanted to do something and failed to do it. And what we wanted to do was install or control the entire peninsula of Korea. We got a little greedy. And then once we were on our way up to the…”
United States installed
Chiang Kai-shek host_asserted
▶ 4:46
“fallout effect onto the new CIA and the former OSS, which had already set up all the stay-behind units and are the ones that provoked the conflict to begin with. And before that are the ones that inst…”
United States carried_out_attack
Korea host_asserted
▶ 5:44
“When the communist North Korea invaded the South, that's not what happened at all. We attacked the North and provoked the South to attack and provoked the North to attack the South. Within days of the…”
Douglas MacArthur spied_on
Chiang Kai-shek host_asserted
▶ 8:11
“And during World War II, MacArthur had basically excluded from his command headquarters, not their entire presence in the theater, because there were CIA and OSS all over. We've already talked about P…”
Charles Willoughby member_of
Douglas MacArthur documented
▶ 8:42
“There's much hay, as we'll see in a book later on, made about the fact that MacArthur would not stay a single night in Korea. He would fly back over to Japan, which, according to most people, provided…”
Charles Willoughby covered_up
China host_asserted
▶ 10:10
“Even when the Chinese prisoners were captured, Willoughby dismissed them as a few advisors. The G2 in Tokyo recognized that some Chinese divisions had been moved, but argued that they were not combat …”
CIA covered_up
Korean War host_asserted
▶ 10:10
“Even when the Chinese prisoners were captured, Willoughby dismissed them as a few advisors. The G2 in Tokyo recognized that some Chinese divisions had been moved, but argued that they were not combat …”
United States appointed
Chiang Kai-shek documented
▶ 12:05
“China to have a seat on the UN Security Council, who they had granted a seat to Chiang Kai-shek from Taiwan as the Chinese representative. So mainland China with hundreds and hundreds of millions of a…”
India spied_on
China host_asserted
▶ 13:32
“The Indian military contacts in Beijing began to warn him that they would not sit by and be attacked. The Indian embassy in Beijing reported that trainloads of troops were going to the border. So he t…”
CIA carried_out_attack
Korea host_asserted
▶ 21:58
“And if you remove the troops, there's going to be a war. And you know what the CIA did? They made sure there was a war because it was the CIA and their instigators in their stay behind units that are …”
United States targeted_for_regime_change
Korea host_asserted
▶ 23:26
“to decide that we are going to decide the kind of government that Korea is going to have. And we did that years before this. We did this in the immediate aftermath of World War II. The report conclude…”
CIA funded
Korea host_asserted
▶ 23:57
“People of Army, possibly assisting in a small battle-trained unit of communist Manchurians. U.S. troop withdrawal would probably result in the collapse of the Republic of Korea. So notice what this sa…”
David Halberstam exposed
Korean War book_quoted
▶ 27:44
“He ignorantly and arrogantly underestimated the resolve of the Chinese. He wasted American lives because of his dereliction, and the blood is on his hands. And he was responsible for much more than Am…”
Lyndon B. Johnson spied_on
Vietnam documented
▶ 29:03
“It was not a happy outcome, even though a non-communist government was preserved. The war was very unpopular and ended in an armistice, not a peace agreement. America's involvement was plagued by mism…”
China Lobby member_of
Flying Tigers host_asserted
▶ 32:28
“i.e. Taiwan, security. Because what happened was the China lobby, which is basically the Taiwan lobby, it's a mislabel, had all of the stars in it. And we'll go into that because it's very important. …”
China Lobby member_of
Claire Chennault host_asserted
▶ 32:28
“i.e. Taiwan, security. Because what happened was the China lobby, which is basically the Taiwan lobby, it's a mislabel, had all of the stars in it. And we'll go into that because it's very important. …”
Resorts International front_for
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:32:00
“different than Resort International? It's probably the same company. Because Resort International is Operation Gladio. That was the money laundering. Okay, well, I just put it up there. I'll double ch…”
Joe Biden covered_up
Hunter Biden caller_asserted
▶ 1:35:18
“But the truth is, he'll do anything to save his son. So if they're going to screw him over with what they're doing with his son now after saying it was a hoax that whole time, I just think he's going …”
Donald Trump exposed
Joe Biden caller_asserted
▶ 1:35:18
“But the truth is, he'll do anything to save his son. So if they're going to screw him over with what they're doing with his son now after saying it was a hoax that whole time, I just think he's going …”
Nellis Air Force Base supplied_arms_to
September 11 attacks caller_asserted
▶ 1:37:10
“Because apparently people were walking around the neighborhood and somebody had had the TV on and they heard what had happened. But that is, you're right, that's a day that I will never forget. Just f…”
Whitney Webb exposed
Resorts International host_asserted
▶ 1:38:55
“So maybe there is some action going on, you know, the executive definitely is. So, I mean, that's a huge one right there, you know, because like I said, I mean, that's a huge thing in their internatio…”