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Operation Gladio- Prelude to Terror Chap 19

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0:02 They've already kicked me out, so they're back to their old games. Let me bring up SR71. And so I've got Bridget, I sent you the co-host, and I sent SR71 the co-host. And I'm going to go ahead and get started. We'll save the Korea topic to the end. And I'm going to apologize up front if we get interrupted.
0:34 My husband had to run an errand and he will be back sometime during this broadcast. And I have a severely depressed dog because he had to have a procedure done at the vet today and he's not happy at all. So he's got a cone on his head and is pouting. So we may get interrupted.
1:05 Poor baby. Yeah. He's not happy at all. Poor guy. Yeah, it's sad. But he's just laying in his pen looking at me with that cone on his head. Like, you bitch. I hate you. Poor guy. All right. Anyway, we're on chapter 19. We're going to jump right in because I do want to cover some of the recent.
1:39 events at the end. And I don't think, Bridget, I do want to say this, put this marker on the table. I don't believe that what we do is coincidence. And I can't imagine doing what we've been doing at any other time in our history. What about you? Amen.
2:09 I was thinking about that today. You know, we are talking about it with my husband last night. We are witnessing the most epic turn of events in our. And I do agree with Elon Musk had made this statement in our history since almost its foundation. Just amazing. See, I don't know about that part. I mean, I understand the sentiments, but.
2:39 If you were going to, I mean, even 10 years ago, if we would have stumbled across Operation Gladio and began talking about it, then people would have basically thought you were crazy. And I've had people that I've talked to in the last year who literally thought I was crazy. I think I'm crazy when I'm actually saying it out loud. And then.
3:07 Over the course of the last six months, they will occasionally call me and go, oh, my God, you were right. Oh, my God, isn't that what this is? So it's just an amazing time. That's all I can say about it. It's crazy, crazy. I know we're moving fast through, but I do want to share this because of what you just said. Years ago, my husband had a friend who was actually.
3:37 World War II vet who used to sell, he was a disabled vet who sold ammo out of his home. It was antique ammo that he would trade and barter. Anyway, long story short, we used to joke because we would go up there and he would go on and on about world events and he would talk about how the CIA was nothing more than a Gestapo and he would go on and on and on and when we would leave, we would laugh.
4:07 And we would say, boy, crazy old Bruce. Crazy old Bruce. And when we were going through the Operation Gladio stuff, and I would explain this, whatever we had found, to my husband, there came a moment when I looked at him and I said, you do realize Bruce was right. Bruce wasn't crazy. We were. Right. And it's like, and, you know, he has since a long time ago passed away. And it's like, oh, my God, I wish he was here.
4:36 I wish I could share with what he had known before we knew, you know. That's the conversation I had with my youngest daughter today is I asked her, we were talking about something along these lines. And I asked her, I said, so who in school did you, you know, she's a teacher. So she's went to college and stuff. I said, who in school in history class where you taught was the worst president? Jimmy Carter.
5:06 And who was the best president? Ronald Reagan. And so then, of course, we had to have the conversation. And she just looked at me and she goes, oh, just more lies, right? Yeah, pretty much. Right, right, right. All right. So chapter 19. Chapter 19 is the takeover. We are in 1978 and.
5:31 It was a big year for Ted Shackley and his colleagues that had created the Private Enterprise Intelligence Network. Shackley believed that Slatter, which is Edwin Wilson's buddy, could be turned into another Edwin Wilson and that Wilson basically could have everything that he had created taken away and then they could get rid of Wilson.
6:01 The use of Doug Schlachter by Shackley and Clines reveals the kind of poor judgment that had haunted Shackley's operation for years. Mike Pilgrim, said Wilson, was expert at recruiting talent for his businesses and using them within their own limitations. But when Clines and Shackley took over Ed's operation, they did not know how to leverage the talent. Wilson recalled a visit by Shackley to his farm.
6:30 Mount Airy in the spring of 1978. Shackley spoke seriously of how the agency was being destroyed by Carter and Turner and how the only hope they had was to take things private outside of the CIA. Wilson said Shackley was convinced that under George Bush's administration, he, Shackley, was going to get to be the head of the CIA. Things were looking good for Bush at the time.
6:56 And I knew that Shackley and Klein were meeting with Bush. Now, keep in mind that Bush ran against Reagan in the primary in 1980. Shackley suggested to Wilson that if he was willing to back a private company that would allow covert operations to be taken outside of the CIA, that Shackley would arrange for Wilson's legal problems to end and for him to be brought in to the organization.
7:27 He reminded me that under Bush, when he was the director of the CIA, that I was not a target of any grand jury investigation. But since the time of Lettier's publicity, that I had been a constant target. And Lettier, remember, is the guy that the CIA, with their Cuban assassins, blew up in downtown D.C. that was the former Chilean ambassador to Washington, D.C.
7:58 Larry Barcella, B-A-R-C-E-L-L-A, was after Wilson and that Wilson says to Shackley that he wasn't smart enough to figure out why. Wilson said that he agreed in principle to back this private intelligence operation as long as his around the world shipping, that's the name of the company, around the world shipping.
8:26 got any shipping business that came out of it. Wilson told Shackley that he wanted one more thing. Tom Clines is my good friend. I don't mind being in the trenches with him, but he has no head for business. If I put up any money, I want to run things, Wilson said to Shackley, to which Shackley agreed. That is when Wilson agreed to fund API, the company.
8:58 that would manage the Pemex account. And remember, Pemex is the Mexican oil company that George Bush was involved in. Wilson put up the money and Klein, Quintero, and Chavez were going to be the corporate officers. By the time Wilson's trip to Washington was becoming less and less frequent because he was working in Libya, Wilson did not like distractions that could threaten his business relationship with Libya.
9:25 which now amounted to more than $30 million in contracts, which while Wilson worked in Libya, more and more of his operations were taken over by Klein under a guy by the name of Don Lowers, L-O-W-E-R-S, management. Wilson's inability to manage his Washington and Libya companies at the same time was important for Shackley's plan to work.
9:54 And that was how he basically was going to force Wilson out of his own company. And one of those companies was the security firm by the name of J.J. Capucci, P-A, sorry, C-A-P-P-U-C-C-I, an associate. So the head of that company was a retired military guy whose last name was Capucci.
10:25 The man who, back in 1968, had recovered the Libyan crown jewels. Wilson had underestimated Capucci's connections and had never properly exploited them. Clines decided to exploit them. Department of Treasury records show that Wilson invested $300,000 in that company, the J.J. Capucci company.
10:57 Wilson moved the company into his townhouse and put Lowers in charge of it. Prior to his incarceration in Ohio on security fraud, Lower had been in the intelligence business. He had been with the Army counterintelligence. The combination of Shackley, Clines, and Lowers using Capucci to betray Wilson was one of Wilson's...
11:26 was one of the things that Wilson never understood about the setup. Mike Pilgrim, a longtime security operative who worked for J.J. Capucci, said, I wouldn't have trusted Don Lowers as far as I could have thrown him, but he seems to be a survivor. Pilgrim explained that Lowers not only sold Wilson out, but also was instrumental in setting up and establishing Barbara Wilson's divorce settlement. That's his wife.
11:57 According to Pilgrim, Lowers later masterminded an IRS settlement that cost the imprisoned Ed Wilson millions and millions of dollars. But Wilson, at this time, was still in Libya and thought Capucci, not Lowers, was the problem. What a jerk, this is a quote from Wilson, what a jerk Capucci is.
12:24 While I'm down in Libya, he took a contract to train the protection squad for Amwar Sadat. They were bitter enemies. We'd just been through a war between Libya and Egypt. I was afraid I was going to get in trouble. So I got him out. I said, holy Christ, I've got to get rid of this guy, you know, because he doesn't have any sense. So I pumped him off to a guy by the name of Neil Livingstone.
12:54 He bought that for me and went into partnership with Lowers and Slatter. It didn't last very long. Whatever this guy, meaning Livingstone, knows about security, he knows about it by reading about it. He's never been involved in it on the front lines. I just sold him that company. He never worked for me. I had $40,000. I know that. I knew at the time where he had $40,000. Sorry.
13:26 And Wilson is saying that he knew where he had gotten it. He said he got it from an inheritance from his mother-in-law. What Wilson thought was a brilliant stroke of salesmanship in pawning him off allowed Shackley and Clines to lay the foundation to take Wilson's business. Neil Livingstone is a Washington, D.C. enigma. His wife, Susan, is a political force in the family.
13:54 She would later hold prominent jobs in both the Reagan and Bush administrations. Livingstone himself, a man of medium height, was a well-established Montana elite family. He had cultivated his image to be a rogue adventurer. He lived on the edge of the intelligence community and then got involved in Israeli intelligence.
14:25 According to Mike Pilgrim, Livingstone and the legendary James Angleton came from the same hometown. And Livingstone had traded on that relationship with the Israelis who loved Angleton. Quote, he told me that he had hired Angleton's old CIA secretary who also worked for Wilson, Pilgrim said. Neal worked for the Israelis and had been recruited by Angleton.
14:54 unquote, which, if true, would surprise very few people in the intelligence community. And Livingstone never denied the accusation. Pilgrim said that the money Klein's, Lower's, and Livingstone put into the company J.J. Capucci to buy out Wilson did not come, as Wilson believed, from Livingstone's dead mother-in-law, but from the U.S. government through
15:21 insurance funds collected after an airliner that Livingstone and a partner had purchased was taking over basically by the Panama government through a CIA contract. So the CIA is paying this guy to set Wilson up is the gist of what I just said. After it was sold to Panama, the U.S. federal government
15:54 meaning the CIA, paid Neil Livingstone. The airline in question, called Air Panama, was every inch a badly ran CIA proprietary. Livingstone and his partner took it over in the hopes of turning a profit. Frequently, Colonel Noriega would use Air Panama as his airline, while Noriega
16:22 would be billed, Livingstone had learned enough about Panama not to press him for payment because he was basically doing CIA's business anyway. Livingstone had come to Panama via an arrest in Libya in 1976. Libyan authorities released him after he signed a confession confessing that he was a Zionist spy for Israel. That same afternoon, according to Livingstone,
16:53 The U.S. Embassy invited him to a celebration. Livingstone said that he met a well-connected Panama man at the celebration. In fact, the man Livingstone met was, your guy's going to recognize this name, I hope, Michael Harari. Michael Harari was the Israeli guy that was assigned to Panama that we learned about a long time ago. I'm trying to remember the book.
17:23 But what we learned about him is he's the guy that managed all of the cartels in Panama for that school that was the one year long school that. So what we found out about these schools is we had the School of America in Panama. Right. And all of the like junior ranking officers and senior NCOs on all of the countries that the CIA was going to coup and set up.
17:53 assassins in would go to the school of america once they took over the country they sent all of their officers to the schools of america there was another school that we either just talked about or we're going to talk about on wednesday night that taiwan set up and it was like a three or four month school and all of the latin america people to include panama
18:22 El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Chile, all of them. They all went to Taiwan to this like intermediate school. Then the kind of creme de la creme, if you were going to get like your own cartel network and you were going to run drug routes and like be a senior level manager, you went to a one year school in Israel. And Harari is the guy that arranged.
18:51 everybody to go to. So all of the people whose names we would recognize as running cartels basically all went to the one-year school in Israel, and they were taught how to manage assassins, not just be an assassin. And Harari is the guy that did all that. And you spell his name, H-A-R-A-R-I, and his first name's Michael.
19:17 Livingstone said that he was constantly scrambling for deals and the Air Panama deal was one that looked good. Intelligence work had gotten sporadic at best. Livingstone confirmed that he was present in Panama when Operation Watchtower was beginning in late 1976 and early 77. Drugs were not yet a big part of the smuggling. Livingstone said, sure, endangered animals, weapons.
19:46 Not a lot of drugs. Then when Watchtower happened, Noriega was in the thick of it from then on. Yeah, there was a lot of drugs even before that, but you wouldn't expect him to admit that. Livingstone acknowledges that Wilson was not involved in Watchtower. Quote, he was in Libya most of the time and never in Panama, unquote. Ask if Klein's involvement in Watchtower was part of his intelligence role.
20:15 Livingstone laughed. Are you serious? He did it for the money, and I can tell you who his partner was, Michael Harari. Michael Harari was much like Ed Wilson, a front man used by Mossad, and he had deep interest in his own personal profits. In 1977, after Noriega arraigned for the assassination of one of Livingstone's business partners, Livingstone was looking for a new way to make a living.
20:43 Two well-known quote-unquote businessmen with long ties to U.S. intelligence urged him to go see Don Lowers at Wilson's townhouse. One of those businessmen was the late James Cunningham. He had managed Air America for the CIA for years and had worked with Wilson for a very long time. Livingstone was quickly put to work in the J.J. Capucci operation.
21:13 Despite Wilson's claim that Livingstone never worked for him, he did in a roundabout way. Pilgrim said that General Capucci's biggest problem was that he wasn't a very bright guy. Joe was a nice guy and connected, but not bright. Next to Lennon and Karl Marx.
21:44 He was probably the world's worst businessman. Neal's job was to come in and teach him and Joe Collins how to run a business. Neal, if nothing else, was a hustler and a hell of a businessman. Livingstone rarely saw Wilson, but he said that Sackley and Klein was there all the time because they're trying to take Wilson's business away from him.
22:11 To Livingstone, Capucci was nearly senile and didn't seem to know what was going on. Capucci's only value to the operation was that he had rescued an Egyptian from Gaddafi's overthrow of King Idris, who rose to the highest ranks under Sadat in Egypt. It seems that in addition to saving the crown jewels, Capucci was responsible for smuggling out of the country a pine crate, an Egyptian,
22:41 who had acted as the chief financial advisor to the king. So he had rescued somebody. He has a great reputation, and he was good to be used as kind of a front guy. The Egyptian that was smuggled out was General Kamal Hassan Ali. He ended up becoming Ammar Sadat's defense minister. He was completely devoted to the general from then on. It was clear...
23:09 that Klein, Lower, and Slachter had intended to make the most of using the general. From a security expert point of view, Livingstone was assigned to organize the training program for Sadat, basically like their castle guard. That is how Livingstone met one of my most favorite characters in this entire story, Felix Rodriguez.
23:41 Does he not show up in every story? Yes, he does. So Livingstone was assigned to organize the training program for Sadat's guard for kind of like Secret Service, if you will. And Livingstone met Felix Rodriguez, who had been hired for the training program from Klein. According to...
24:06 Livingstone, Shackley and Clines had complete access to all of the security planning for Sadat through the office files, meaning the CIA files. A lot went on that Edwin Wilson didn't know, but Shackley had access as well as Clines. So Shackley came to the townhouse all the time to see Clines and Shackley was still at the CIA.
24:38 during this time. So he's basically bringing classified information into this front company ran by Edwin Wilson, who had a contract to provide training for the Egyptian Guard Force. But even when Shackley left the CIA, he remained in a position to supply Israel with critical intelligence. Oh, where's Cousin Ed? I didn't even know she was here. Oh, there she is, way down at the bottom.
25:10 She wants me to explain who Felix Rodriguez is. Felix Rodriguez is a Cuban exile assassin who comes up in every single story. He's been in every location. He was part of the training down in Miami.
25:26 He was in El Salvador with the death squads. He was in Honduras with the death squads. He was working on the CONFRA thing out of the Bush vice president White House for Donald Gregg, because Donald Gregg, who was the national security advisor for Bush as the vice president in the 80s, which we're coming up to. So this was pre him running the Iran CONFRA deal. Felix Rodriguez was the number two guy on.
25:54 the vice president staff running basically the operation for the conference. And he knew Donald Gregg, who was Bush's national security advisor as VP. And Donald Gregg had been involved in the Phoenix program in Vietnam. And basically, the United States had set up a program for all of the people that worked in the
26:25 Cuban overthrow of Castro, that if you joined the military, they would give you your citizenship. And so Felix goes over to Vietnam and works for Donald Gregg and then basically has ran as part of the CIA ever since then. Felix Rodriguez is also the guy that we found that had been shipped off to boarding school in the United States. He was from a very wealthy family in Cuba.
26:54 And his like junior year was sent to the Dominican Republic for a one year, almost like an advanced terrorist training camp, and then brought back to the boarding school, graduated and went to work for the CIA. So he's literally found in every operation, bar none. He was also about a, I don't know, probably six months, nine months ago.
27:21 interviewed by Tucker. And he not only lied throughout the entire interview, but he told the story of how he was present when the CIA found Che Guevara and executed him. And of course, he doesn't go into detail and said, you know, oh, you know, I didn't kill him or anything. I just was there. Well, in fact, if you read about the way the CIA executed
27:51 Che Guevara by starting at his feet and basically shooting him all the way up his body to include his arms. You will notice if you ever go back and listen to that Tucker interview that Felix Rodriguez said he was shot in his arms and he just volunteered this. Because again, anybody who knows anything about this knows that he was shot starting from his feet all the way up his body and the last shot was to his...
28:19 to the head. So they executed him in the most painful way possible. But Felix Rodriguez just offers up that the only reason that he had bullet holes in his arms was because he shielded himself, but he actually had his hands tied. He was restrained at the time he was being executed. So no, he didn't move his hands to shield his body. So again, just more lies.
28:49 That's Felix Rodriguez. Now I got to find where I was at. All right. So we've got the Israelis. We've got the Egyptians. And Edwin Wilson is in Libya. So got all the bases covered there. Wilson's business operations at the time was estimated to be multiple tens of millions of dollars.
29:21 And he had a horse farm in Virginia. He had small offices all over Europe that he was running these businesses out of. And he had at least a couple hundred people working for him in all of these businesses all over the world. So he also had high ranking generals and other military officers working in these operations. He also employed many.
29:51 quote unquote, former CIA and Defense Department people. And Wilson had upset the local people in his horse farm area of Virginia because he was supposedly bringing CIA people to the farm on a routine basis. And it says, this is a quote, I tried to concentrate.
30:19 on my more important contracts, for example, the ones in Libya that were dealing with the explosives and other covert stuff. I might have 50 or 60 people working for me at any one time, but I also had an additional core of experts and specialists that I would bring on from time to time, unquote. Wilson formed dozens of front companies, such as the ones that he had done while he was on the CIA payroll.
30:49 Each company might have one employee and may have several employees. And then it also had the ability to grow by leaps and bounds. So they were all able to expand and contract at will. By the end of the 70s, while Wilson was in Libya, he became a fugitive.
31:17 Tom Clines kept an office in Wilson's West End townhouse in Washington, D.C., where all of the U.S. operations Wilson had been running were based at. It was ironic that it was located next door to the Libyan embassy. I'm sure that's not a coincidence. In December 1978, Wilson returned home from Libya for Christmas.
31:48 and von Marbog were his business associates. Wilson recalled what he had told them. Quote, look, you guys, between you, Shackley, and Secord, you know every head of government, every intelligence chief, and every minister of defense in the world. I mean, the guy, Shackley, used to go to dinner with the king of Thailand because that's where they were running drugs from. I knew that if I could work...
32:17 Shackley and Klein's on the outside and I had friends like Secord and Monbarg on the inside, I'd make millions of dollars legitimately. I have a million balls up in the air. But finally, there comes a point when you've got to close. I would have forgot everything else and just closed that deal. Maybe take you two days, maybe take two weeks, but I don't want to hear anything about anything else. I want to close this.
32:47 deal. When that's away, you start back and then all of the balls can remain in the air. He's talking about the deal that he was working on for the security. And basically he went on to say that Wilson, Wilson went on to say that having Shackley and those guys working for him legitimized his intelligence operation.
33:16 With the CIA's backing. So we agreed that we would have a meeting to set up the structure for how they were going to move forward. Now, keep in mind, he doesn't know Shackley and Klein got fired. No one told him. The subject of the meeting was how Shackley, Wilson and others were going to profit off of the 1978 Camp David Peace Accords. President Carter had promised Anwar Sadat.
33:44 more than $4 billion to bring Egypt's military up to standard with Israel's. According to Wilson, there were millions to be made for the company that would be designated the shipper of all of these military goods. I wanted the group to be around the world shipping, and I wanted them to get the designated shipper deal. Wilson had every reason to believe that with Shackley,
34:15 he would be able to pull it off. Under the terms of the Camp David aid package, Von Marbog was an administrator for the Defense Security Assistance Agency, and he had to certify any shipper that was selected for the project. So Von Marbog's assistant, General Richard Secord, was going to be the approval authority. You see how they set these things up?
34:43 Wilson recalls that Klein rented a hotel room at Crystal City Marriott, stayed there many times, for their meeting. We all met in this hotel room, von Marburg, Shackley, Klein, and Secord, and myself, just the five of us. Wilson said he opened the meeting with a primer on how military aid shipments worked. They get an advance from the government and they are paid.
35:12 Then they hire their own shipping company or they do it themselves. Theoretically, 50% of it is supposed to go to the American ships. So I said, here's a great opportunity. Now, Israel has their own shipping. They're going to want to take care of some of it. Don't worry about getting involved in that. But Egypt, that may be a possibility.
35:38 Since payment for the shipping was based on a percentage, in this case 9.8%, of the cost of all of the equipment. That's almost like the money laundering, 10% to 15% that they were getting off of money laundering at the Vatican. There was a potential for tens of millions of dollars in revenue. Wilson said that everyone at the meeting expressed interest in becoming part of the operation.
36:06 According to Wilson, Shackley said that he would be getting out of the CIA in the next year and that Klein's would be holding his stock in the company in the meantime. Wilson and the other four agreed that Wilson could set up a company in Switzerland to hold all of the stock. Wilson said, quote, they asked me how much money I was willing to put up front on the thing to start it. To get it started, you don't need much money, he said, unquote.
36:35 He estimated that it would cost about $150,000. Wilson soon found that von Marbog seemed to be speaking for the rest of the group. He just got adamant right away. He said, I am not getting involved in some half-assed operation. If you can't put up $500,000, then forget it. Wilson said he asked for a moment to think about it, and then he agreed to put up the half $500,000.
37:04 under certain circumstances. The first was that he would play an active role in the company after he completed his work in Libya. The other four expressed concern over the Woodward Washington Post article and other publicity about Wilson that could hurt the new company. Wilson later said, you know, they're not leveling with me because they basically think I'm stupid. They think that I'm going to put up the money and get nothing out of it.
37:32 What I want out of it was legitimacy. I want to get a share of the profit. And pretty much what was later set up via the Iran-Contra by Secord was basically his company that they took over. Wilson admitted that the group decided to set up a proprietary, not simply as a selfless intelligence operation to provide information to the government. Von Marbog,
38:04 Secord, Clines, and Shackley were all still high-level officials at the time. They're all on the government payroll meeting to steal money from the government with a fake company. So according to Wilson and FBI records, they were there discussing how much that they could hide from the government. Because keep in mind, Secord and Von Marbog
38:34 are the contracting officers for this purchase, which they're going to be pocketing money personally as a result of it. The fact that Wilson's business partners accepted his second condition, let's see, Wilson claimed that Shackley had asserted to him that all of the men in the room, only Shackley had a realistic plan for how the new company was going to work on the intelligence side.
39:05 The fact that Wilson's business partners accepted his second condition caused him to pay less attention to the operation than he should have. That condition was the same one that he had made in setting up API two years earlier, that Shackley would take over the operation when he retired from the CIA the next year. Barba Rossotti, R-O-S-S-O-T-T-I, a Washington attorney used by Klein, was selected to draw up the paperwork.
39:35 for this new company, along with Ed Wilson's lawyer, Ed Coughlin, C-O-U-G-H-L-I-N. Wilson said that the exercise of setting up the Swiss company, which was called Arcadia, A-R-C-A-D-I-A, was one that he repeated often, so often that he could do it in his sleep.
40:00 The company would be divided five ways. Wilson expected to get his $500,000 back with interest in addition to his 20% share in the company. This operation was to work much like the company that he'd had before called API. The plan agreed to was Rosati to set up a Bermuda-based offshore company called International Research and Trade, IRT. And an American company,
40:29 of the same name. Funds would be transferred from Arcadia in Geneva to IRT offshore and then onshore to the U.S. branch. Wilson had a specific sense of what everyone in the room could contribute. Klein and Shackley could agree, could guarantee him the legitimacy to stay out of prison because they were on the CIA staff, and so he thought. And they basically could
40:59 vouched for him working for the CIA, so he felt like his six was covered. In addition, their ties to overseas was critical for all future business arrangements. Secord would be the Pentagon liaison handling all of the Middle East contracts. He would be what they refer to as the expediter. Now, you see, being the expediter, you've got all of the power in the world, according to von Marbach.
41:27 who also, of course, was part of this deal. Wilson left the meeting feeling like he had accomplished his mission. Quote, I really thought I was doing something patriotic. I really did. I don't mean to blow my own smoke, and I very seldom say this, but there is no other explanation. That's why I did it, why I took the risk. I put up $500,000, even though I was going to be managing it, so that I could be the vehicle.
41:55 and the proprietary vehicle used by the government. He didn't do it because he was patriotic. He did it because he wanted to make money and appear legitimate. He also goes on to say, I felt if I could get involved with these people, that they would, if they were going to eventually make more money, protect me. Instead of that, they threw me to the wolves, unquote. Shackley, Klein, and Flachter.
42:26 who set in motion their plan to betray Wilson a year earlier when Flachter had asked Ed Coughlin to establish his own new company called Delex International. D-E-L-E-X. It was funded in part by a million and a half dollars that Flachter had earned working for Wilson over the years. Flachter believed that he could replace Wilson because Klein had convinced him.
42:55 that that was the plan. The Libyans had taken a strong liking to Slater because Klein had given him the CIA intelligence on Egypt. You gotta love this. So they're working with Egypt and they're providing Egypt's security around Anwar Sadat. Meanwhile, they're backstabbing Egypt by sending Libya information on Egypt to ingratiate themselves with Libya.
43:32 Clines had gone further than just telling Slachter that he was a CIA agent. Before Clines left the CIA, he had gone to the trouble of getting Slachter several security clearances, according to Wilson and Clines. Hold on, let me go find Bridget. As far as Wilson knew at the time, the problems with Dell X began when Slachter told him he wanted to be based in Washington, D.C., and only...
44:05 visit Libya. On Slachter's trip back to the States, he had begun a love affair with a woman by the name of Tina Simmons. That was Congressman Charlie Wilson's former mistress. According to Ed Wilson, Slachter had fallen so deeply in love with Simmons that he wanted to be near her instead of the work in Libya. Wilson told him,
44:35 I don't need you in the United States. I need you in Libya. When he wouldn't stay in Libya, I told him I didn't need him at all. He went back to Arlington, hired a whole staff of people, and started his own company. In fact, Flachter simply moved into Deluxe, the company that he had already set up. Flachter hired Tina Simmons away from Wilson. Flachter's FBI interview shows that while he was working in Libya and traveling to the U.S.,
45:05 Climes debriefed him every time, saying he was doing it for the CIA. At about the same time, Shackley later told the FBI that he introduced Climes to an old colleague, Donald Jamison, J-A-M-E-S-O-N, for the purpose of putting together a company for handling logistics for items going to Iran? Huh.
45:32 Since Klein's had told Wilson and others that Around the World Shipping would receive new business in exchange for Wilson's financing Klein's company. This was very curious, unless one knew that Klein's and Shackley had already begun to look upon Wilson as an agent who was going to be gone very soon. At the same time, Wilson made what he considered an error in his dealing with Shackley.
46:01 On Wilson's next trip to the U.S., Shackley summons Tim to a meeting at the Albert Pick Hotel near Washington Post headquarters. Wilson had done small acts of kindness for Shackley over the years, like giving Shackley's daughter a horse. Now Shackley had asked him for $100,000. Over the years, Wilson had given money to Klein's, Decord, Von Marbog, and others.
46:29 but he had never given money to Shackley. When Shackley asked him for this loan, he made it clear to me that it was a loan and that it may not ever be paid back. Kind of like a perk. I told him that Libyans were very slow in paying at the moment and I didn't have the money. I should have written a check to him right then. That was one of the major reasons, according to Wilson, that he...
47:03 stopped protecting him, and started working to bury him, at least in Wilson's head. More important, he says, I wish I had just enough sense to do that one thing. Wilson, if you said, Wilson, what is the one thing that you wish you would have done differently? I wish I would have gotten him to sign that I was passing information back to them, one little paragraph that said I was actually working for them.
47:33 After Wilson had finished setting up IRT Arcadia deal, he learned that Shackler had hired an ex-Green Beret by the name of John Dutcher, D-U-T-C-H-E-R, who was training Libyans to put a hit out on me and have me killed. This is Wilson talking. Dutcher told me this and said it was confirmed by a woman by the name of Bobby Barnes.
48:03 Both Dutcher's correspondence and Barnes with the FBI confirms Wilson's statement. Once Wilson picked up this information, he decided to put Shackler out of business once and for all. Wilson had heard that Shackler bragged about doing this and what he was doing for the Libyans in feeding information to the Egyptians through General Capucci's old friend.
48:32 Colonel Senussi. On a trip to Brussels, Wilson arranged to tape record Flachter's bragging about how he was spying on the Libyans on behalf of the Egyptians. Wilson then played the tape for an enraged Senussi, who kicked Flachter out of the country and barred him from ever returning. Meanwhile, Frank Turple, his connection was coming back to haunt Wilson as well.
49:01 The FBI was after Turple, and that's spelled T-E-R-P-I-L. And when they raided Turple's apartment in England and got Flachter's briefcase, I don't know all of the stuff that they got on me, but there was enough material there for Larry Barcella, who was the federal prosecutor, to arrest Flachter.
49:26 and use him as a protected witness against Wilson. Also in the briefcase was an autographed picture of Billy Carter sitting on a reviewing stand with Frank Turple. Turple had asked Billy Carter if he was interested in joining him in importing machine guns into Libya, but the FBI never got a hold of Frank Turple. With Israeli assistance, he had escaped to Lebanon.
49:56 and eventually found refuge in Cuba, where he lived up until the time this book was written. So what's interesting about that, obviously, is you have the CIA pulling off this entire deal. They muddy up Billy Carter, because if you guys remember the whole scandal with Billy Carter and President Carter's...
50:22 brother, they implicated him in arms dealing with Libya, of which he had nothing to do with. And they used this picture as the evidence that he was dealing, because this Turple guy at CIA, and he was dealing weapons with Libya with Ed Wilson. So we were all led to believe that Jimmy Carter's brother was a weapons dealer, when in fact, he was just a proxy in the takedown of Ed Wilson.
50:51 And Turple was still protected by the CIA because their buddies arranged for the Mossad to locate, move him to Lebanon and then forward him to Cuba for safe protection. Which, interestingly enough, makes you go back to, you know that we've speculated and it's pure speculation.
51:20 On exactly what Cuba was all about. Because how do you get people that the CIA is protecting as well as Mossad is protecting into Cuba without the Cuban authorities going, hey, we don't want them here. Why would they let them in and help the CIA out? Seems a little weird, but.
51:47 That's one of those things that makes you go back and want to question the premise of some of the things that we've been told. Because oftentimes, as we've said here repeatedly, you're told a story, not the story. And I do think the whole Cuba and how.
52:11 I don't know. I don't know how you try to assassinate someone when the CIA doesn't seem to have a problem assassinating people. They're fairly good at it. How can you try 400 times and never get the guy assassinated? Does seem a little weird. But again, that's just an inside. So anybody want to talk about that? Because we're going to move into talking about Cuba or not Cuba, Korea for a minute.
52:47 take the break here if anybody has any questions about anything that we just read or any other people involved nope all right well if we don't have any questions then um we're gonna move on to um i gotta get back to my post let me see if i can find it real quick because i had reposted
53:22 a guy's post and i want to give him credit and a shout out um he's at nexta underscore tv next to tv it says it's a large eastern european media to let the world know um probably a good follow um i didn't look at any other other material just this what this person had done that posted this on next
53:50 was go back from 1948 in South Korea and went through all of the presidents that they have had. And I want to just briefly read this. You have Syngman Rhee, which we talked about. He's the guy that the CIA installed there after they killed all of the nationalists that were insisting on having a unified election to create a unified.
54:20 Korea after World War II. Because keep in mind that all of the actual nationalists in Korea, after having been a colony of Japan for 35 years, wanted their country back from everybody and all of the foreigners out. It was the U.S. that took over the South that had decided that wasn't going to happen. And they basically were going to use Korea as a launching point to put Chiang Kai-shek back into
54:48 And so they wanted all of Korea under their control. The problem they had was the nationalists in the North they couldn't get rid of and they couldn't buy him either, Kim. And so because they couldn't co-opt him, they created a false flag, set up stay-behind units inside of North Korea, which was under the jurisdiction at the time of the Soviet Union and in the immediate aftermath of World War II.
55:18 This crap in the dividing of the country, MacArthur got a little too big for his britches, instigated a false flag, used it as the pretense to go north, went all the way to the Chinese border and passed it, pissed off the Chinese who then got into the war and pushed them back to basically the lines that we have drawn there today. And once that happened.
55:48 And they knew they were only going to have the South. They installed a sigmanry. And he lasts as a dictator for 12 years. He gets couped. And this young Bun Sung, it comes in only there for a couple of years. He also is the dictator. He gets overthrown. Park Chung-hee is the guy from 62 to 79. This is the guy we read so much about. He's the guy.
56:17 that works with Reverend Moon in the Unification Church and the setting up of the World Anti-Communist League with Chiang Kai-shek out of Taiwan. Park makes multiple trips to the United States. He meets with Johnson multiple times, very much into the Korea Gate and all of the other things. So he gets assassinated.
56:45 And the Choi guy from, he's only there for, I don't even think he's there a full year. He gets overthrown. And keep in mind, this entire time, they are a dictatorship. They're not a democracy at all. None of these people have been elected. Chung comes in in 1981. He stays till 88. He's basically there the whole time Reagan is there because they're working on the anti-communist league together.
57:15 So he gets sentenced to death after he leaves the presidency in 1988 because he's basically a crook. And it was during that time in the 1980s, the early part of the 80s, that they actually began having elections. Not that they were fair elections, but they were actually having them and not having the CIA basically install a stooge.
57:42 So they went to the window dressings of elections. And then the next guy who's the president from 88 to 93, he basically gets sentenced to 22 years in jail after he gets out because he was a crook too. Sensing a pattern here. Then the guy that Kim Young-sam, who is the president from 93 to 98, because they have five-year terms there, he gets sentenced to prison.
58:12 During the time that he's president. But in the middle of this, some of these guys, there's one or two of them that's actually good and their convictions actually gets thrown out later on. They have another president. They're on number eight now from 98 to 03. He's imprisoned under president number three. So when he was younger and he was sentenced to death.
58:43 but he didn't get put to death. Then President No. 5 later pardoned him, and he goes on to win a Nobel Peace Prize. In 2003 to 2008, Roh Moon-hung was impeached, which was later overturned, but he was investigated for a whole bunch of corruption and commits suicide.
59:13 2008, we're on number 10, to 2013, gets arrested for corruption after his presidency and sentenced to 15 years in prison. That's Lee Mung Bok. Then another park is in from 2013 to 16. They get impeached and sentenced to jail for 24 years. President number 12 is Moon Kai-in.
59:45 And they were president for the whole five years and didn't get sent to prison afterwards. And that's like a first. And again, this is like in the last 10 years was the first time they had a president that didn't get put to jail or committed suicide or assassinated or overthrown or impeached or whatever. They are not a democracy. They are a mafia family that has been.
1:00:15 ran in close proximity to the CIA through their KCIA. And keep in mind, Korea is what gave us the Unification Church, right? So the whole Unification Church is the Moonies that had over, the highest number I've ever seen in any book was 15,000.
1:00:42 paramilitary people trained and deployed all over the world, much like Columbia does now. And then the guy who just claimed martial law, I guess that's how you pronounce his name. He just decided to get up today and implement martial law. Now, there's a lot of rumors as to why that happened.
1:01:08 that supposedly during martial law that suspends all constitutional government. So what does the parliament do? They all decide to come in and vote for no martial law, which they did. And there's already videos out. I just love X. There's already videos out saying that the military that mobilized to basically break up the parliament that was trying to get into the building that they were voting on to basically suspend the martial law.
1:01:37 Someone has already got pictures of the weapons that they were supposedly carrying were basically practice rifles. The guys that had their handguns pulled out, they don't actually have the casings in the handguns. There's basically no cartridges for the bullets.
1:02:05 like the stock of the handgun is empty, the hole where you put it in. So again, just having X and not having people thrown off of the thing where they upload their videos, because there's obviously people in the streets in South Korea uploading information throughout this entire ordeal. And it's very interesting to see all of the different stuff.
1:02:34 That's being posted about that. They were talking about different, even some of the like M16 type AK-47 guns that they had, how they have special markings on them, indicating that they are basically used for the UN, US, NATO kind of exercises that they have there near the DMZ and that they weren't real military weapons.
1:03:08 Take that with a grain of salt. I'm just telling you what I saw on one of the videos because they did, in fact, have empty chambers. They were not loaded guns. I don't know where they got the video from. So anyway, anybody want to comment on that? Talking about that, Colonel, I'm still trying to figure out what's really going on. Obviously, they have a problem with the government.
1:03:41 As far as the government goes, I'm not quite sure. When I looked at the policies of what was going on, it seems like the president there in South Korea, his policies say one thing. Whether or not he's actually doing that is a different story. But it seems that it's all for the people. I do know that he's got one person who...
1:04:11 within the government that that's um how do i want to say this he's actually opposition to the current president but even looking at the policies he wants to bring forward i don't see a difference between either one of them so it sort of strikes me odd here as to what's really going on well the most of the commentary talked about the fact that
1:04:47 Well, let's back up. So if you guys remember the sessions that we did on Korea, we established the fact that Korea was basically set up like Japan had been set up with the they're basically a fascist state. They are not a democracy. They're not a republic. They're not anything of the sort. They're basically a totalitarian government with nice people.
1:05:17 Not the people in the government, just the citizens. So these companies, whether it's Samsung or any of them, Hyundai, they're run as minor mafia victims. So what we learned when we talked about Japan is, remember that we had the Sokodama and the rest of the people that helped.
1:05:45 Reverend Moon and Taiwan set up the World Anti-Communist League, Tacoma, they were criminals. And they were World War II criminals that should have been put to death because of the criminality in using the slaves and gassing people and doing all of these criminal activities during World War II. But they weren't. They were protected by General MacArthur and the CIA, the OSS at the time.
1:06:13 And as a result of that, they were around when the World Anti-Communist League needed to be set up as a guise to manage the Operation Gladios worldwide. So that's basically what they did. In Japan, all of their companies were ran as little mafias and their family owned. And there is a gangster undertone.
1:06:42 to everything in Japan. So basically, Korea was set up very much like that. And the people that own Hyundai or Samsung or any of these other large Korean companies are part of this syndicate that operates within that country. And the intelligence apparatus is what weaves them all together.
1:07:13 So when the CIA set up the KCIA there and they brought Reverend Moon into it and they brought the rest of the current park, the one guy, most notorious, one of them all, but all of them that preceded him was in on it as well, into the government to run the government. They were under the control of the intelligence apparatus. As a matter of fact, the one guy that was assassinated was assassinated sitting in like.
1:07:41 In an open forum at lunch, the intelligence guy just had lunch with him, pulls out a gun and shoots him right across the table. That's how mafia-esque Korea has been all of this time. So you have to assume if they're in the government, they passed, it's kind of like Joe Biden, they passed the corruption test or they'd have never gotten into the government.
1:08:18 two factions, a bad guy and a worse guy? Or is there a good guy in the mix? Yeah, I haven't looked at the other guy. I saw his name earlier. I didn't have enough time. I had visitors. I didn't get enough time to look into him. I don't know that much about him. But again, unless he's a Donald Trump, he's going to be...
1:08:46 he's going to have come up in the same mafia-esque atmosphere that the current guy is from. And is it related to Biden's son being pardoned? I don't... In your opinion? No. I don't see that as... There's a lot of things going on right now. Some of it had to do with crypto. And some of the crypto is generated from South Korea.
1:09:13 Some people think that it was done as a result of that and their monetary because they're having a lot of monetary issues right now. So some people think it was that and the whole bottom fell out of there. I saw Warhanter in here. I don't know if he's had a chance to look at any of that or if he can even come up and talk. But there is something to do with their monetary policy that was tanking and it may have been a result of that because, you know, once you.
1:09:43 declare martial law, there's a lot of things that you can do to hide how grossly inept you are as a president. Colonel, that's part of the deal here. They're all over the map here when it comes to what seems to be the financial issue. I've heard everything from the deal that what spawned this whole thing was an argument about funding for the
1:10:14 funding for some specific part of the government uh where one faction wants x amount of dollars and the other faction wants less and uh that that's what spawned all of this when when a vote was taken to say no you're getting less so uh as well as they were saying well the markets and what happened to the markets and what happened to um the one their their currency right so i
1:10:45 I'm still in muddy waters here. And I'm with you. I didn't do enough research into the background of the opposition. I just did an overview. I didn't get any further into it. So I don't have much information to offer on that. If anybody else does, speak up. So let me just point out the obvious here. If you declare martial law because you have a budgeting issue.
1:11:15 with other people in the government, you're a failed state. Warhamster, go ahead. Hey, Karama, how you doing tonight? I'm awesome. How are you? You are awesome. So this one kind of caught me by surprise, and I am absolutely, admittedly, not up to speed on Korean politics. So I do not have anything to add tonight. But somebody sent me some interesting tidbits. I'm trying to put a couple things together and see if they actually...
1:11:47 Check out might be worth something I can share it about a day or two. But as of right now, I got nothing to add. Cool. And I do think if we are going to do a Thursday show, that this is probably a good 15 minute segment just to kind of go over how I think. And I'm going to talk for myself here. Most people believe when you talk about Taiwan.
1:12:15 The man on the street, none of us, because we've all relearned history here, but the man on the street believes that Taiwan has been a country forever, and it's been a democracy forever. And it wasn't a democracy until almost, well, well into almost 1990. It was a 40-year dictatorship. And the same thing with...
1:12:39 South Korea. Most people believe, you know, we buy stuff from South Korea. We've got military over there. They have to be a democracy. They've never been a democracy. They have the trappings of a democracy. But there's nothing about Korea that you and I would recognize as a democracy. And a girlfriend of mine was just there like a month and a half ago. And she and her daughter spent 30 days there.
1:13:07 She tried to get her husband, who still works for the U.S. government in a civilian capacity, to take an assignment to Korea. Thank God they didn't because they'd be there right now. But she was like, she was so impressed with how clean it is. They don't have any illegal immigration, which, of course, if you just read the latest, someone was posting about the U.N. and how one of their government officials has agreed to take basically.
1:13:36 you know, quote unquote asylum seekers from the Middle East. But she was just remarking on how nice and put together the country is. So I have not had a chance to reach out to her, which I will do after the show and go, hey, Laura, what's up with that Korea shit going on? But it's just amazing to me how easy it is.
1:14:05 For number one, for us not to know the history. And number two, and I'm as guilty as anybody. I believe what my military education told me about Taiwan and Korea, all of which was a lie. But also the fact that we just assume if our government has our military in a country and that we give them billions of our dollars, that they're actually a democracy. When in fact, often...
1:14:31 Oftentimes, they're not even close to a democracy. They're not even a legitimate government in some cases. Well, I won't go on a rant about why the word democracy is something that makes me makes my stomach upset because the United States is not a democracy. I know. But, you know, that being said, there's a couple of interesting things I did run into is, well, first of all, you know, the most recent count headcount I have is.
1:15:01 There's 28,000 U.S. military at the DMZ. And so this is our business. It matters because we can get embroiled in something nasty very quickly. The fun statistic is South Korea has the lowest birth rate of just about any modern country. It's ridiculously low. I want to say it was at 0.7, but I think that might be too low. North Korea doesn't have as bad of a problem. Unification is probably something that may.
1:15:30 be in the cards at some point in time. And it sounds like that's what this, what they're calling their Democratic Party is leaning towards. It really depends on whose propaganda you believe at this point. And, you know, most of the stuff we're reading in the Western media does not really seem like it squares with, you know, when I'm reading reports from people who do study the area, they think the U.S. press has got this all wrong. And we ought to put a lot of our, the way we describe things are not really in play there.
1:15:59 So 90% of the, and that's a statistic that I have read routinely that is repeated in Korean news. My old neighbor in Georgia is from Korea. She married a military guy. I still am in contact with her. Their estimates are 90% of all Koreans want their country back and unified. Even if it means making amends with him and the Northern.
1:16:28 you know, in coming up with some coalition government. They want that very much. The people that don't are the people that have been in charge under the propping up of the CIA, because, again, it's a strategy of tension. If they don't have that tension line there, they can't rattle sabers every time they need to. Yeah, that appears to be correct. From what I can see, you're spot on with that. The last thing I would bring up is that you mentioned Taiwan. Well, just like.
1:17:00 Korea was formerly under occupied by Japan. So was Taiwan. For the last, call it 250 years, whatever you want to call the modern era, both Taiwan and Korea have spent just as much time under foreign occupation, mostly Japanese, as they ever did independent or under Chinese. So, you know, we talk about Taiwan. It has not always been a Chinese territory. And Korea basically never was, unless you want to consider North Korea right now.
1:17:28 A lot of moving parts, not part of the world. I guess we're going to have to get I'm going to have to go back and get up to speed again because this does not seem like it's a minor incident at all. Yes. And I do believe that just from the things that I have read on accounts that I follow, it has something to do with monetary policy. It was like a way of hiding like the bottom falling out or something to that.
1:17:59 I mean, something huge. That might tie into the trail that I think I'm on. So I'll get back to you on that in a couple of days. And yes, we are doing a Thursday show. At least I'm planning on it. Okay. And we're going to do, we're going to start the Secret Society. Yeah, we thought we were going to start Skull and Bones. We'll see if that makes sense to do. I'm not sure we can fill the time. If there's something more important, we can jump. But I'm ready to do both. All right.
1:18:28 That sounds perfect. All right. Go ahead, Carrie. Yeah. I sent you a tweet from this lawyer that lives there that he does law tube stuff on YouTube. So I know about him and he's, he talks about Korea, South Korea law. He's lived there for decades and he's a Mormon from Utah. And that's like a satellite place for them, which.
1:19:01 We know, you know, Mormons aren't great. I'm missing his name. What's his name? The guy that ran for president. Anyway, that's money. Yeah, that's money, money, money, money, money. And he posted, I don't know if you looked at it, but he posted.
1:19:26 and commented about the videos that were being shown, he said, that's not even like the time of day it's supposed to be. It's not, this isn't, you know, the weather we're having. He said, this is totally fake. And the other thing I wanted to say was that I lived in New York City for years and years.
1:19:53 Every once in a while, there would be like a mass shooting in Chinatown. And they'd go on the news and they'd say, you know, Chinese mafia had a shooting in downtown Manhattan. And I just wonder if like each culture on the planet.
1:20:23 basically has a mafia in it. Does each and every culture have, however, that has been cultivated? What is your thought about that? Well, every country is going to have a criminal element. And all the mafia is, is a criminal element to it. So, yes.
1:20:52 they all have a criminal element. There is, to me, a distinctly different, a difference to be made between the criminal element that may exist in the country not part of the government. So much of the criminal element
1:21:21 has been captured inside of the country's intelligence apparatus. And it is no longer a separate element outside of the government. So we saw after World War II a melding between our quote-unquote mafia and basically it was sucked into the CIA. There are people that operated as part of the...
1:21:50 covert side of the CIA, but they operated in that with the protection of the CIA. And we just talked about it. We were just reading about it. All of those people begin working outside of the CIA with the CIA's protection in the thing called the Enterprise. That didn't just happen with Jimmy Carter. That happened all the way back to 1948 when they created the CIA. Santos Trapacani was mafia.
1:22:20 He operated with the protection of the CIA from the day the CIA was set up because he was running part of their covert drug network. And that's the reason why you're never allowed to go a certain level above in busting drug networks because they are actually CIA networks. And that's true whether it's in the United States or whether it's in Mexico or whether it's in Colombia or whatever. You're only allowed as the DEA or whatever.
1:22:49 to take whatever the CIA is willing to give up of their network. You're not allowed to go above that because as soon as you do, they say it's national security. You can't touch that. So there has always been that criminal element in society. But again, World War II changed everything. And most of that criminal element now works in conjunction with an intelligence organization that was set up post-World War II.
1:23:16 that basically answers to things like the World Anti-Communist League and NATO. And they are operating under the auspices of an international syndicate and not a particular government. Colonel, if I may. Sure. This is where your term, the international syndicate, actually really is accurate. I mean, it makes a lot of sense. I've always called the shadow state. They mean the same thing. But you go back further, you know, several hundred years, you had European merchants.
1:23:48 would want to do business in port cities around the world, you always had to be in contact with people who are willing to skirt their own country's laws. That's the underworld. It exists everywhere and it always will. These are people that are above law. That's why we call it, you know, they're pirates. Yeah, that's what they are. They operate outside the law. They'll do anything they can for a buck. People that are willing to break, sell out their own nation for a dollar are, you know, these are the criminals that not only intelligence agencies.
1:24:17 will always want to do business with. But before that, that's where the merchants would do that. The British East India Company, the Dutch East India Company, all of the imperials. And this goes back to Roman times. There's always been an underworld. And you find it mostly in port cities because of smuggling. And yeah, it's been there forever. And the fact that it got incorporated into governments in the last century is problematic.
1:24:41 And I love the thing that you said when you a long time ago, because it just stuck with me. The difference between the old version of the CIA affiliated underworld is that piece of paper that made the pirate the privateer. Yeah, the difference between a pirate and a privateer is a piece of paper. Yeah. And that piece of paper came from the government.
1:25:06 Which, yeah, which government approved of your criminality, they would protect you with a piece of paper. If they disapproved about it, they were they were withdrew your piece of paper. That is no different than what we're dealing with today. Agreed. Yeah. Great point. SR 71. Go ahead. Thank you, Colonel. Warhamster just said something that triggers. What are the differences between the opposition and the current president?
1:25:40 um that that i had read and that is um the opposition is is for ubi a universal basic income for for all koreans and i'm beginning to wonder now how far down the financial trail this goes maybe that'll help war hamster out i'm not sure but run with it if you can well
1:26:05 Obviously, a universal basic income in order to break the country would be advocated for right before you're going to mass import, quote unquote, asylum seekers so that you can break the country. Carrie, go ahead. Yeah, I'm just making some, just to piggyback on Morehamster. I grow tobacco.
1:26:34 And I'm making some tobacco tea and I'm Native American. Tobacco is really, really healthy for you. That's why I drink it. And I was just bemoaning that basically the whole tobacco industry used to be worse until they got massively.
1:27:06 A lot of lawsuits against them, but they were just like the stuff that they put in tobacco. They put formaldehyde in tobacco. It's insane. But they were just mandated by the U.S. government to just be allowed to kill everyone with that shit. And they're still doing it. And there's no indication of.
1:27:33 any ingredient on tobacco picked, nothing. They don't publish what's in there. And then, you know, with Cousin Ed. What they do, Carrie, though, is if you go to the FDA website, there is a list of like 600 chemicals that are approved by the FDA that any manufacturer can add to the manufacturing of cigarettes.
1:28:02 It's not. No. So. Oh, my God. I never heard that. Oh, my God. That's so sick. But I do have some breaking news and I don't normally do breaking news, but this one's worth doing it. And this is the reason why you guys can never hesitate to speak your mind about something that Trump does, because we are not a cult here.
1:28:29 I am reading a statement by the Hillsborough County Sheriff to have been nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to serve as administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration is the honor of a lifetime. Over the past several days, as the gravity of this very important responsibility set in, I've concluded that I must respectfully withdraw from consideration.
1:28:51 There is more work to be done for the citizens of Hillsborough County and a lot of initiatives I am committed to fulfilling. I sincerely appreciate the nomination and outpouring of support. So basically, Trump outed this asshole who is a piece of shit as the Polk County Sheriff. And now he's withdrawn from consideration. He will not be the DEA administrator. And I am sure that all of the feedback of people going, what the hell?
1:29:19 resulted in that happening. Go ahead, Bridget. One of the things I actually wanted to mention was something Cousin It brought up to me earlier today as we were first exposing the stuff going on in North Korea. What she had said was that only the U.S. news media outlets are calling it a fight.
1:29:52 for against communism and that's one of the things as soon as i jumped on it i jumped on it with both feet because recognizing patterns the anti-death you know the and everything communism everything was anti-communism whenever we got into these and it goes to show you how these recognizing the patterns of what they do
1:30:19 Anyway, the news media, our news media is definitely heavily trying to influence this. But anyway, that pretty much is all I wanted. I just wanted to throw that out there. Definitely on patterns, you know. That is a very interesting observation that we noticed when those things came out is everything is.
1:30:47 fun because it's basically drafted by CIA acolytes in the quote-unquote media, that you cannot let anything happen in South Korea. You can't interfere with it. You can't try to, although they destabilize it all the time to control it, the government outside of them can't do anything because they're the only thing standing between
1:31:15 all of those people and communism. And yeah, it is definitely that slant that you hear every single time. And someone just like, that's okay, Carrie, I just wanted to let you know, someone did forward me that guy's information. So I have it now as far as his post of him being an expat living in South Korea. Go ahead, Bridget. Just also,
1:31:47 like you had mentioned uh or noted posted um when we and it was definitely a hat tip to miles about the chinese cruiser that was came along with the anchor to seven of the lines of communications which is not the first time by the way that they've done this um not with communication but also with gas lines and so on so forth but um
1:32:14 And as soon as our media news outlets picked it up, they immediately said, yeah, but there was Russia. It was Russia, you know. Again, once you start seeing these things through your gladio glasses, man, you can just, as soon as they start saying that, you're like, ah, bullshit. It just goes off like a trigger, you know. Yeah. Again, you know, that kind of takes us back to the beginning of the show.
1:32:42 I can't imagine going through the last year not knowing what we know because things would be just so crazy in trying to, you would spend all day digging into stuff and not being able to recognize the patterns. It's so much easier understanding the patterns and using them to interpret the news. And it takes the emotional panic out. It does.
1:33:13 That's why they don't want us to have them. Right. I mean, it just takes the fear, all of it out. It's like, because all of a sudden, you know, you can see through what they're saying. And I'm just so glad. I'm so thankful. You know, since this is Thanksgiving season, I am so thankful.
1:33:40 For you guys, for doing this research, for all of this, you know? Yep. Well, it's literally changed everything as far as I'm concerned. So I'm glad we're all here doing it together. Amen. Cousin It, did you have anything you wanted to add? No? Guess not. She must be shooting squirrels. Yep. I think she's been lethal on them. They went through the wires again.
1:34:19 But just saying. They do have it coming. They're doing it on her wires? Yes, ma'am. Only Chevy diesel, little bastards. Yes, ma'am. Yeah, why do you think it's like Harry Carey all over squirrels?
1:34:42 It's just not for, well, it's a little bit of, it's soul satisfying. Yeah, they ate my truck. I told you I was married to a hunter. By the time we left the six years in Virginia, he had killed like 630 of them because he ate them. So I don't know why people shoot squirrels. There's all kinds of different reasons. I got to get a stamp for the side of my truck, you know, like the Red Baron, where I, you know, like put squirrel stamps on the door.
1:35:13 Because, yeah, I mean, the hood is still up. So hopefully Sunday, Monday morning, it'll finally be fixed. But, oh, yeah, I had squirrels underneath. And I've been fighting it for a while. But, yeah, they chewed right through the wires. So, yeah, shooting squirrels. I would also, just as an aside, since we're on the subject somehow, let people know that there are several vehicles.
1:35:42 and motorhome, two of which were my neighbor and my neighbor's neighbor. One bought a half a million dollar class A motorhome only to find out after they bought it a few years ago, like three years ago, that I think it was a Tiffin, that all of the hydraulic hoses on the slide out and
1:36:11 the jacks and everything else that's hydraulic, were manufactured out of soy. And guess what squirrels love? Soy. Now that cannot be a soy plant. Oh my God. A half million dollar RV sat for the first 18 months because it was so new they had not even made enough bare parts to get it fixed.
1:36:42 And, of course, it couldn't move because you couldn't get the jacks up. So that was 18 months. My next-door neighbor bought the thing that starts with a P, Palisade or whatever it is. I think it's a Kia. They also used soy lines on several of their engine compartment lines.
1:37:10 and I'm not sure if it was just regular oil lines or whatever, but they were made out of soy, $9,000 worth of damage the first week she brought it home. Oh, my God. We don't even have enough time. If we did a marathon space like Stellar did the other night, for me to expose what has been going on inside of the automobile industry in general from COVID forward, just from COVID forward.
1:37:40 Well, those soy lines, who the hell does that? Soy-based lines. What the hell? That's the green new grift bullshit right there. It's like, you know, I mean, manufacturing out of soy. I didn't have to worry about that. Knock wood. I don't know, six, one, half dozen, the other. How do you stop people from traveling and vacationing and communicating?
1:38:10 This is not an accident. They are heavily manipulated by the international syndicate. Very, very. And that was one of the first things to fall. Well, and you know where Key has come from. They come from South Korea. Right. Well, nothing a 22 can't cure. I might need a bigger gauge, though. No. So I had to cut a hole in the fence.
1:38:41 You just need to be a better shot. Make sure you're on the squirrel. No, I was on the squirrel. The damn thing fell on the wrong side of the fence. I actually had to cut a hole in the fence because the dogs were losing their minds. They wanted to retrieve the squirrel. It fell with a resounding thud. And I had to go cut a hole in the fence so they could retrieve it. So there you go. Well, sounds like your mission is complete then.
1:39:09 I don't think so. Well, that mission. I didn't say your overall mission. That mission was complete. Oh, yeah. They, every once in a while, have a brain fart and they like to sit in the tree above the truck. You know, I have yet to have one actually fall in the bed of the truck. So, because that would be sweet justice right there. But, yeah, we're squirrel hunting. We're taking the little vermin out.
1:39:40 I have decided that I've had enough. I don't care that there's like the peanut rally going on and everybody's like all upset about squirrels. It's like, I'm going to shoot them. That's just it. I was going to say, I was going to say you should buy the token. And when it goes up, then you can sell the token and you've got ammo now. Just lay off the hamsters, please. Yeah, no hamsters.
1:40:10 No hamsters. We got some really cool invasive frogs, though. So, yeah. Anyway, so that's been my... I don't know why everybody thought I was joking when I said squirrels ate through the wiring on my truck. And, yeah, I'm all out. War. It's been war. So, so far, so good. Just call it practice. There was something going on, too.
1:40:38 Oh, damn. And I can't remember what it was. It wasn't just South Korea. Georgia? Well, Georgia's been ongoing. I know, but it sparked up. And Syria. Well, the Syrian thing, that's Turkey, Israel, Ukraine, and the United States. And they're trying to cut off the Iranian arms going through Syria to Lebanon. Yep.
1:41:10 So, but Israel already broke the ceasefire and is bombing Lebanon again. So, you know, yay. Nothing will be done about it, of course. But yeah, I mean, it's very frustrating. And I got to tell you guys, being on the foreign channels, and I will say there's a lot to laugh about. Those ISIS assholes, those guys are brutal. And that is...
1:41:39 really really hard like there's a lot of information i have to go through in order to post it and let me tell you it is a soul-sucking experience absolutely soul-sucking they are evil and they are the brainchild of the cia and mossad um and in this case turkey so and they're using how the fuck did they get tanks somebody want to explain where they got the tanks well that would be a nato weaponry um laundered through ukraine
1:42:09 And now they're talking about having bioweapons out there. And where were all the biolabs? Oh, yeah. And that's what it was. Russia was removed from the bioweapons consortium right after Hunter Biden got his pardon. So we know about all the biolabs that are located in Ukraine and actually the COVID.
1:42:39 went from North Carolina to Ukraine and then on to Wuhan. So I find it very interesting timing that when Russia is the ones that actually released all the information, as much as that troll clandestine likes to think it was him, it was actually Russia at the BWAC. And not for nothing, I have all the videos and I have all the documents. So there, but obviously stolen.
1:43:10 and whatever. I'm not bitter. But they were actually removed from the bioweapons right after the pardon for Hunter. So I find that very interesting when two years ago, Russia called out the United States, Black & Veatch, and Metabiota for the bioweapons. Just saying. So it's more than just money laundering that they removed Russia from that.
1:43:40 And I'll step off because I still have some light. So I'm going to go shoot. All right. Stellar? Oh, hang on. Stellar, are you still there? Your mom is from Korea, right? Correct. Did you hear anything from her as to what happened over there?
1:44:05 Like, does she follow any of that? She follows all of it. It literally is the deep state going to war with. So, OK, there's people that want the unification and they want peace and all that other stuff. And then there's a group that don't want peace. They want to keep it separated. And from what I can see, what she says, she says he's terrible, the one that's there. And not that she wants North Korea.
1:44:33 Because she feels that China is really bad. So she still has that brainwashing, you know, because, you know, because of how like the occupation and stuff like that. So she doesn't like China, but she doesn't understand that all of these different things had dual governments. The people themselves, like the Republic is fine. It's the CCP. And back when China had Korea and then Japan.
1:44:59 Those were like the CCP members and things like that. Then they left or whatever. But the president and the last presidency, I think, was similar like how this stuff was or like how it was in Europe with Boris Johnson, those other assholes that are in there now, where they're just stolen elections for the deep staters. And so that's what's going on. So he did the martial law. Well, apparently the people don't like that.
1:45:23 And I guess it's lifted or it will be lifted. But the war is inside is it's a propaganda war. There's people that want unification and the others that don't. So that's what's going on from what she said on the simple sense. Now, that's basically what we have also been able to figure out. Tell her everything that you just said that on. Carrie, go ahead. Yeah, I'm just wondering why Cousin It isn't.
1:45:54 poisoning some soybeans for the squirrels instead of shooting. Maybe she wants to do target practice. So you're on the bioweapons? You're on the bioweapons wagon? No. Why would I poison anything that has... Why would I do that? Because then I've got a bunch of dead bodies that are...
1:46:24 They're infecting the owls. They're infecting the eagles. That's true. So why am I not taking it out with a 22? And it's much more soul satisfying. How do you like that? You're smarter than me. And then I was going to say it's probably more cruel to have them eat the poison because, you know, I saw what the decon does to mice. It dehydrates them crazy. So that's got to be a terrible way to die. So if you're going to die, just have it done swift.
1:46:54 Now, we can do the decon for, like, the Clintons and the Obamas. But as far as an animal, let's just put them out of the misery fast. All right. All right. This went downhill fast. So it worked. Well, I do have a question about the bioweapons in Ukraine. My data is that they actually made them, the bioweapons, to specifically target.
1:47:24 the Russian DNA. Anybody else have that data? They did. There was a DOD contract for ethnic Russian blood in order to do tests. So the fact that those labs are in Ukraine is all bullshit. They're actually U.S. labs. We funded them. As a matter of fact, the bioweapons lab for the worst one that's over there has Senator
1:47:54 Richard Luger's name on it, as does Georgia. In the country of Georgia, their number four level biolab has Richard Luger's name on the building. We funded them. So, Bridget, if you can give Tim... Yep. Okay. And that goes back to Obama also, doesn't it? In Ukraine with the biolabs and so on.
1:48:28 Obama's first overseas trip was with Lugar to Ukraine to the Biolab. It was well before he was president. It was well before he was even, yeah. It happened well before Obama. Tim, go ahead. And then we're going to go ahead and go. I read and I saw the information in the flow chart the Russian defense minister put out and the Biolabs have been a sticking point.
1:48:59 with the Russians for a long time, but I've also read that part of the peace negotiations related to settling the Ukraine, because Ukraine's lost, Russia won, they're going to require the International Criminal Court at Hague complete investigation on the biolabs. And you know what? That could be a fast track straight to the deep state.
1:49:26 That's all I got. Yeah, I think that's a great observation because the bottom line is things like that have to happen in starting in January of next year. I think it's again, I just love the fact that we have in our brains folders to put everything in that we what we refer to as patterns because.
1:49:52 The information starting in January is going to come so fast and so quickly that people that have done this research and understand what folder to put things in in your brain is going to be able to process the information a lot easier. And as Bridget pointed out earlier, a lot less emotionally than everybody else. And we're all going to have a leg up on that, having learned the real history.
1:50:24 And you guys are all, whoever's listening now and later, going to be ambassadors because this is where we're giving you the information. We're showing you all the receipts. We're giving you those receipts and showing you where you can come back to them even later. Like, oh, I remember I heard this once, but I don't remember what exactly it was about. You're going to be the ones out there when people are waking up and trying to figure this shit out.
1:50:53 And they're emotionally tied to it, to the mainstream media still. And you're going to be able to say, hey, no, don't worry about it. This is what's really going on. You know, that's what we're doing this for. We're arming you guys with truth bullets, so to speak. Yeah. Very well said. All right, everybody. Thanks for being here. We will be back tomorrow.
1:51:21 which is Wednesday. And I'm still trying to figure out, I probably will only be able to do the presentation in maybe 15 minutes. I have a Christmas party with some of the wonderful people that were here on Sunday to go to tomorrow night. And then we are going back into our Gladio series with Alpha at 9.30 tomorrow night.
1:51:52 So I'm going to run out and have Christmas dinner real fast and run back. And so we will not have a long show. I will do chapter 20 tomorrow and then we're just going to keep rolling with it. So thank you all for being here. And I will be back at four o'clock tomorrow. Thanks, everyone.

Entities here

Edwin Wilson50Korea30Libya21CIA18Neil Livingstone17United States16Tom Clines15Richard Shackley14Ted Shackley13Flachter10China9Washington, D.C.9Fritz Klein9Don Lowers8Jimmy Carter8Felix Rodriguez8Israel8Capucci7Egypt7Lloyd Cutler7Cuba6Panama6Japan6Frank Turple6Anwar Sadat6George H.W. Bush6Richard Secord6Mossad6World War II5J.J. Capucci Company5Mike Pilgrim5Doug Schlachter4Sun Myung Moon4Ronald Reagan4Operation Gladio4World Anti-Communist League4Manuel Noriega4Michael Hand4Around the World Shipping3Alexander Haig3

Claims made here

Ted Shackley founded 6I Private Intelligence Network book_quoted ▶ 5:31
“It was a big year for Ted Shackley and his colleagues that had created the Private Enterprise Intelligence Network. Shackley believed that Slatter, which is Edwin Wilson's buddy, could be turned into …”
Ted Shackley recruited Edwin Wilson book_quoted ▶ 5:31
“It was a big year for Ted Shackley and his colleagues that had created the Private Enterprise Intelligence Network. Shackley believed that Slatter, which is Edwin Wilson's buddy, could be turned into …”
Tom Clines recruited Edwin Wilson book_quoted ▶ 6:01
“The use of Doug Schlachter by Shackley and Clines reveals the kind of poor judgment that had haunted Shackley's operation for years. Mike Pilgrim, said Wilson, was expert at recruiting talent for his …”
George H.W. Bush member_of PEMEX book_quoted ▶ 8:58
“that would manage the Pemex account. And remember, Pemex is the Mexican oil company that George Bush was involved in. Wilson put up the money and Klein, Quintero, and Chavez were going to be the corpo…”
Edwin Wilson funded J.J. Capucci Company documented ▶ 10:25
“The man who, back in 1968, had recovered the Libyan crown jewels. Wilson had underestimated Capucci's connections and had never properly exploited them. Clines decided to exploit them. Department of T…”
Capucci carried_out_attack King Idris book_quoted ▶ 10:25
“The man who, back in 1968, had recovered the Libyan crown jewels. Wilson had underestimated Capucci's connections and had never properly exploited them. Clines decided to exploit them. Department of T…”
Don Lowers member_of J.J. Capucci Company book_quoted ▶ 10:57
“Wilson moved the company into his townhouse and put Lowers in charge of it. Prior to his incarceration in Ohio on security fraud, Lower had been in the intelligence business. He had been with the Army…”
Don Lowers covered_up Edwin Wilson book_quoted ▶ 11:26
“was one of the things that Wilson never understood about the setup. Mike Pilgrim, a longtime security operative who worked for J.J. Capucci, said, I wouldn't have trusted Don Lowers as far as I could …”
Don Lowers overbilled_or_diverted Edwin Wilson book_quoted ▶ 11:57
“According to Pilgrim, Lowers later masterminded an IRS settlement that cost the imprisoned Ed Wilson millions and millions of dollars. But Wilson, at this time, was still in Libya and thought Capucci,…”
Air Panama front_for CIA book_quoted ▶ 15:54
“meaning the CIA, paid Neil Livingstone. The airline in question, called Air Panama, was every inch a badly ran CIA proprietary. Livingstone and his partner took it over in the hopes of turning a profi…”
Neil Livingstone member_of Air Panama book_quoted ▶ 15:54
“meaning the CIA, paid Neil Livingstone. The airline in question, called Air Panama, was every inch a badly ran CIA proprietary. Livingstone and his partner took it over in the hopes of turning a profi…”
Neil Livingstone spied_on Israel book_quoted ▶ 16:22
“would be billed, Livingstone had learned enough about Panama not to press him for payment because he was basically doing CIA's business anyway. Livingstone had come to Panama via an arrest in Libya in…”
Tom Clines member_of Operation Watchtower book_quoted ▶ 19:46
“Not a lot of drugs. Then when Watchtower happened, Noriega was in the thick of it from then on. Yeah, there was a lot of drugs even before that, but you wouldn't expect him to admit that. Livingstone …”
Michael Hand member_of Operation Watchtower book_quoted ▶ 20:15
“Livingstone laughed. Are you serious? He did it for the money, and I can tell you who his partner was, Michael Harari. Michael Harari was much like Ed Wilson, a front man used by Mossad, and he had de…”
Manuel Noriega ordered_assassination_of Neil Livingstone book_quoted ▶ 20:15
“Livingstone laughed. Are you serious? He did it for the money, and I can tell you who his partner was, Michael Harari. Michael Harari was much like Ed Wilson, a front man used by Mossad, and he had de…”
Michael Hand front_for Mossad book_quoted ▶ 20:15
“Livingstone laughed. Are you serious? He did it for the money, and I can tell you who his partner was, Michael Harari. Michael Harari was much like Ed Wilson, a front man used by Mossad, and he had de…”
Neil Livingstone recruited J.J. Capucci Company book_quoted ▶ 20:43
“Two well-known quote-unquote businessmen with long ties to U.S. intelligence urged him to go see Don Lowers at Wilson's townhouse. One of those businessmen was the late James Cunningham. He had manage…”
Capucci recruited Hassan Kamal book_quoted ▶ 22:11
“To Livingstone, Capucci was nearly senile and didn't seem to know what was going on. Capucci's only value to the operation was that he had rescued an Egyptian from Gaddafi's overthrow of King Idris, w…”
Neil Livingstone trained Anwar Sadat book_quoted ▶ 23:09
“that Klein, Lower, and Slachter had intended to make the most of using the general. From a security expert point of view, Livingstone was assigned to organize the training program for Sadat, basically…”
Felix Rodriguez trained Anwar Sadat book_quoted ▶ 23:41
“Does he not show up in every story? Yes, he does. So Livingstone was assigned to organize the training program for Sadat's guard for kind of like Secret Service, if you will. And Livingstone met Felix…”
Ted Shackley spied_on Israel book_quoted ▶ 24:38
“during this time. So he's basically bringing classified information into this front company ran by Edwin Wilson, who had a contract to provide training for the Egyptian Guard Force. But even when Shac…”
Donald Gregg member_of Iran-Contra book_quoted ▶ 25:26
“He was in El Salvador with the death squads. He was in Honduras with the death squads. He was working on the CONFRA thing out of the Bush vice president White House for Donald Gregg, because Donald Gr…”
Donald Gregg member_of Phoenix Program book_quoted ▶ 25:54
“the vice president staff running basically the operation for the conference. And he knew Donald Gregg, who was Bush's national security advisor as VP. And Donald Gregg had been involved in the Phoenix…”
Felix Rodriguez member_of Iran-Contra book_quoted ▶ 25:54
“the vice president staff running basically the operation for the conference. And he knew Donald Gregg, who was Bush's national security advisor as VP. And Donald Gregg had been involved in the Phoenix…”
CIA assassinated Che Guevara book_quoted ▶ 27:21
“interviewed by Tucker. And he not only lied throughout the entire interview, but he told the story of how he was present when the CIA found Che Guevara and executed him. And of course, he doesn't go i…”
Edwin Wilson funded Libya book_quoted ▶ 28:49
“That's Felix Rodriguez. Now I got to find where I was at. All right. So we've got the Israelis. We've got the Egyptians. And Edwin Wilson is in Libya. So got all the bases covered there. Wilson's busi…”
Ted Shackley traded_network_to Thailand book_quoted ▶ 31:48
“and von Marbog were his business associates. Wilson recalled what he had told them. Quote, look, you guys, between you, Shackley, and Secord, you know every head of government, every intelligence chie…”
Edwin Wilson funded Around the World Shipping guest_asserted ▶ 33:44
“more than $4 billion to bring Egypt's military up to standard with Israel's. According to Wilson, there were millions to be made for the company that would be designated the shipper of all of these mi…”
Lloyd Cutler member_of Defense Security Assistance Agency documented ▶ 34:15
“he would be able to pull it off. Under the terms of the Camp David aid package, Von Marbog was an administrator for the Defense Security Assistance Agency, and he had to certify any shipper that was s…”
Richard Secord member_of Defense Security Assistance Agency documented ▶ 34:15
“he would be able to pull it off. Under the terms of the Camp David aid package, Von Marbog was an administrator for the Defense Security Assistance Agency, and he had to certify any shipper that was s…”
Edwin Wilson funded Arcadia Limited guest_asserted ▶ 36:35
“He estimated that it would cost about $150,000. Wilson soon found that von Marbog seemed to be speaking for the rest of the group. He just got adamant right away. He said, I am not getting involved in…”
Edwin Wilson founded Arcadia Limited guest_asserted ▶ 39:35
“for this new company, along with Ed Wilson's lawyer, Ed Coughlin, C-O-U-G-H-L-I-N. Wilson said that the exercise of setting up the Swiss company, which was called Arcadia, A-R-C-A-D-I-A, was one that …”
Barbara Rosati founded International Research and Trade guest_asserted ▶ 40:00
“The company would be divided five ways. Wilson expected to get his $500,000 back with interest in addition to his 20% share in the company. This operation was to work much like the company that he'd h…”
Flachter funded Tyco International guest_asserted ▶ 42:26
“who set in motion their plan to betray Wilson a year earlier when Flachter had asked Ed Coughlin to establish his own new company called Delex International. D-E-L-E-X. It was funded in part by a mill…”
Flachter founded Tyco International guest_asserted ▶ 42:26
“who set in motion their plan to betray Wilson a year earlier when Flachter had asked Ed Coughlin to establish his own new company called Delex International. D-E-L-E-X. It was funded in part by a mill…”
John Dutcher trained Libya guest_asserted ▶ 47:33
“After Wilson had finished setting up IRT Arcadia deal, he learned that Shackler had hired an ex-Green Beret by the name of John Dutcher, D-U-T-C-H-E-R, who was training Libyans to put a hit out on me …”
Richard Shackley recruited John Dutcher guest_asserted ▶ 47:33
“After Wilson had finished setting up IRT Arcadia deal, he learned that Shackler had hired an ex-Green Beret by the name of John Dutcher, D-U-T-C-H-E-R, who was training Libyans to put a hit out on me …”
Richard Shackley ordered_assassination_of Edwin Wilson guest_asserted ▶ 47:33
“After Wilson had finished setting up IRT Arcadia deal, he learned that Shackler had hired an ex-Green Beret by the name of John Dutcher, D-U-T-C-H-E-R, who was training Libyans to put a hit out on me …”
Flachter spied_on Libya guest_asserted ▶ 48:32
“Colonel Senussi. On a trip to Brussels, Wilson arranged to tape record Flachter's bragging about how he was spying on the Libyans on behalf of the Egyptians. Wilson then played the tape for an enraged…”
Flachter supplied_arms_to Libya guest_asserted ▶ 49:26
“and use him as a protected witness against Wilson. Also in the briefcase was an autographed picture of Billy Carter sitting on a reviewing stand with Frank Turple. Turple had asked Billy Carter if he …”
Mossad provided_bridge_financing_for Frank Turple guest_asserted ▶ 49:26
“and use him as a protected witness against Wilson. Also in the briefcase was an autographed picture of Billy Carter sitting on a reviewing stand with Frank Turple. Turple had asked Billy Carter if he …”
Frank Turple supplied_arms_to Libya guest_asserted ▶ 49:26
“and use him as a protected witness against Wilson. Also in the briefcase was an autographed picture of Billy Carter sitting on a reviewing stand with Frank Turple. Turple had asked Billy Carter if he …”
Douglas MacArthur instigated Korean War host_asserted ▶ 55:18
“This crap in the dividing of the country, MacArthur got a little too big for his britches, instigated a false flag, used it as the pretense to go north, went all the way to the Chinese border and pass…”
Chunghee Park founded World Anti-Communist League host_asserted ▶ 56:17
“that works with Reverend Moon in the Unification Church and the setting up of the World Anti-Communist League with Chiang Kai-shek out of Taiwan. Park makes multiple trips to the United States. He mee…”
Sun Myung Moon founded World Anti-Communist League host_asserted ▶ 56:17
“that works with Reverend Moon in the Unification Church and the setting up of the World Anti-Communist League with Chiang Kai-shek out of Taiwan. Park makes multiple trips to the United States. He mee…”
Chiang Kai-shek founded World Anti-Communist League host_asserted ▶ 56:17
“that works with Reverend Moon in the Unification Church and the setting up of the World Anti-Communist League with Chiang Kai-shek out of Taiwan. Park makes multiple trips to the United States. He mee…”
Douglas MacArthur protected Zaibatsu host_asserted ▶ 1:05:45
“Reverend Moon and Taiwan set up the World Anti-Communist League, Tacoma, they were criminals. And they were World War II criminals that should have been put to death because of the criminality in usin…”
World Anti-Communist League front_for Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:06:13
“And as a result of that, they were around when the World Anti-Communist League needed to be set up as a guise to manage the Operation Gladios worldwide. So that's basically what they did. In Japan, al…”
Japan occupied Korea documented ▶ 1:17:00
“Korea was formerly under occupied by Japan. So was Taiwan. For the last, call it 250 years, whatever you want to call the modern era, both Taiwan and Korea have spent just as much time under foreign o…”
Japan occupied China documented ▶ 1:17:00
“Korea was formerly under occupied by Japan. So was Taiwan. For the last, call it 250 years, whatever you want to call the modern era, both Taiwan and Korea have spent just as much time under foreign o…”
Santo Trafficante Jr. member_of The Enterprise host_asserted ▶ 1:22:20
“He operated with the protection of the CIA from the day the CIA was set up because he was running part of their covert drug network. And that's the reason why you're never allowed to go a certain leve…”
World Anti-Communist League member_of North Atlantic Treaty Organization host_asserted ▶ 1:23:16
“that basically answers to things like the World Anti-Communist League and NATO. And they are operating under the auspices of an international syndicate and not a particular government. Colonel, if I m…”