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Operation Gladio-Prelude to Terror Chapter 7_8

1:44:44

Transcript

0:00 Good afternoon, everybody. If you guys wouldn't mind, please repost the space for us as we get started. I also want to announce I just heard from Alpha. His daughter's birthday is today, so we're not going to do the show tonight. But we will be back next Wednesday, if not before, to continue our work there.
0:33 I had been a little busy. I went out to my cottage and was pulling some of my books that I have that all discussed. Hold on. Hold on. Bridget's talking to me and I didn't see it. Okay.
1:12 So I went out to my cottage to look through the books on the World Anti-Communist League, just doing a little bit more research with the book that I've been using called Inside the League. And unbeknownst to me, because I had cross-correlated them yet, there's quite a bit of information.
1:40 About the upcoming segment that we're going to do, because you guys, if you've been following that series, we talked about how the World Anti-Communist League kind of formed and set up regional entities. We started off with Eastern Europe and the Ukrainian and so forth with Stetsco and all of those guys. And then we went into.
2:10 Asia and how basically Taiwan and Korea got together and then got a couple of crooks from Japan to set up the Asian People's Anti-Communist League that morphed into the World Anti-Communist League. Where we left off was going into Mexico.
2:34 I was doing a little bit of extra research outside of the book itself in some of the other books that I have. Kind of obviously they're all about the topic. So there's tidbits and I was just sharing on X tidbits. It's mind blowing to me how they all circle back. So anyway, all of those books that I was quoting stuff out of.
3:03 are books that I have that at some point we'll probably go through. But it's just, it's mind-blowing. Mind-blowing. Still today. I mean, I've delved into this stuff, obviously, for quite a long time. And my mind's still blown every day. So, all right. Let's get into Prelude to Terror, Chapter 7, The CIA Under Fire.
3:34 This starts out with President Nixon's appointment of William Colby in September of 1973 as the new CIA director. And about him, let's see, and his relationship with Ted Shackley and all of the associates from Vietnam and Laos, which included Donald Gregg, who we find later in.
4:03 Vice President Bush's office running the Iran-Contra as his national security advisor. Also is Tom Klein, Bernie Houghton. If you guys remember Bernie Houghton, he's the guy that was a CIA asset agent that set up the restaurant down in Australia for Nugent Hand Bank and was running the...
4:28 contamination of all of our service men as they went on R&R break in Australia. And also Mike Hand, who was a CIA asset, who also ends up as the hand part of Nugent Hand Bank. So all of these people are basically very close to William Colby. And remember that Colby's business card was found in Nugent's pocket.
4:56 when he was suicided in his Mercedes down in Australia. Colby was the attorney, the staff attorney for Nugent Hand Bank. So Colby clearly looked at Shackley as a future director at some point in the future and basically had been mentoring him along throughout his career.
5:21 Shackley's job as head of the Far East Division included taking care of his friends from Vietnam and Laos. What made it possible was the collapse of Paul Helliwell's banking empire in the Bahamas, and that would be the Castle Bank. In 1973, things had begun to go very wrong for Helliwell. An IRS investigation called Operation Trade Wind first exposed the mercantile and Castle Bank association with the CIA.
5:50 The IRS wasn't looking for a CIA connection. It was looking for the names of 308 depositors who the IRS was convinced was avoiding taxes by depositing money in the shell bank in the Bahamas. But Halliwell had never been content with the IRS investigation. Also, by this time, his legendary appetite for liquor had turned into alcoholism.
6:18 So by the early 1970s, the CIA needed another bank. And we know that that ended up being Nugent Hand and BCCI. Shackley and Colby turned to two of their Laos colleagues, Houghton and Hand. Nugent Hand Bank was established in 1973 in Australia to help fund the CIA operations around the world. Frank Nugent was a lawyer who had pioneered shady tax deals in Australia.
6:51 Mike Hand was a soldier. Neither had much in their background as far as banking goes, but they still managed to form this shadowy bank. And that was true with Helliwell as well. Helliwell was a lawyer, but running one of their banks has nothing to do with banking at all. Nugent Hand set up branches all over the world. These offices were staffed with former top military and intelligence officers.
7:20 and were used to fund businesses as covers for intelligence operations. Nugent Ham was very much like the Heliwell Bank, just on a bigger scale. Bernie Houghton, who had provided similar services to the CIA during the Vietnam War, was the most important man in the bank as far as the CIA was concerned. Like Edwin Wilson, Hand hired former top military officials, many of whom had served in Laos and Vietnam.
7:49 In Taiwan, for example, Nugent Han's bank manager was Dale Holgren, H-O-L-M-G-R-E-N, who, before going to work at Nugent Han, had been the manager of flight services for Civil Air Transport in Air America. So he was CIA going to work for CIA. Although these men knew nothing about banking or finance, they all had the highest security clearance.
8:19 and were trusted by the inside CIA officers. Nugent Hand became a major fixture in America's private intelligence services. It came into being just as the harsh glare of public scrutiny was coming down on the clandestine services. At the age of 27, the CIA was suffering from years of cover-up and secrets. The reason...
8:43 Richard Helms was so feared in Watergate was because he believed that the involvement of the CIA in Nixon's activities could cause a major congressional investigation into the CIA that would lead to the examination of everything that had gone on since 1947. Helms' men still in place in the agency successfully staved off Senator Frank Church's investigation.
9:09 William Corston began advising the Church Commission on how to ask for information from the CIA to avoid the ever-ending stonewalling. Corston said, quote, it was obvious that Frank Church wasn't really serious when the investigation was turned into little more than a platform for Church to run for president. That was too bad because he had not run and just played it straight.
9:36 If he had not ran and just played it straight, there might have been an opportunity to reform the CIA. But when it became political, the agency people circled the wagons outside of the Castro stuff. The talk of poisons, none of real wrongdoing and screw ups made it into the public view, unquote. For Corson, the most surprising thing was how the CIA turned political. Quote, I blame this on the way Frank Church went about it.
10:05 By screaming that Congress was conducting a witch hunt on the CIA and enlisting people like George Bush and Ronald Reagan in their defense, they successfully avoided having to explain what had gone wrong. It was a little like Vietnam, the argument that the military lost the war because Johnson finally said no more troops when it reached half a million men. It was the same kind of shift of responsibility, Corson said, unquote.
10:32 William Colby, who had his share of covert secrets to protect, tried to appease Congress. But what the public and Congress did not know was that James Angleton's massive mole hunt was underway. The hunt for Soviet agents inside the director of operations went on between 61 and 74 and virtually stopped most operations against the Soviets around the world. Angleton's fear that the CIA had been penetrated would later
11:02 be bore out with the exposure of several moles. But Colby and other CIA officials began to attack Angleton, which resulted in his dismissal by Colby in December of 1974. This, combined with Watergate, is what prompted the Safari Club to start working with Helms and his most trusted operatives outside of congressional and even agency purview.
11:29 James Angleton said before his death that Colby destroyed counterintelligence, but because Colby was seen by Shackley and Helms as having betrayed the CIA to Congress, they simply began working with outsiders like Adam and Saudi Arabia. The traditional CIA answering to the president was an empty vessel having little more than technical capability. So basically what you see here.
11:56 is the outsourcing of, and whether or not this is actually the reason, because again, these are disgruntled CIA people writing this book. So just keep that in mind. What really is revealing is that the CIA, because again, this is coming up on the Jimmy Carter, you know, firing all the CIA officers and everything.
12:27 is the 70s saw the outsourcing of so much of the CIA's intelligence network into fake companies, fake banks, and basically hiding all of the activity that had been conducted inside the CIA up until that point.
12:56 with actual CIA agents. And the book goes on and says, Colby's reliance on Shackley to cover up leftover embarrassments from Chile to the Vietnam War was in direct conflict with the spirit of openness. He was displaying for a growing number of investigations into the CIA wrongdoing. And so basically, just as I was saying the other day when we were talking about this, Colby's...
13:27 you know family jewels testimony was throwing out a little red meat when in fact they were burying all the really good stuff um and the fact that they were perpetuating the drug weapons and human trafficking underneath the you know they they gave them a few pieces of stuff to chew on while at the same time they hid the really um important big stuff
13:58 The scrutiny began when the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Multinational Corporations, chaired by Frank Church, questioned Richard Helms about ITT's complicity in the CIA Chilean assassination. And remember, ITT paid Nixon in order to have Allende. He wasn't the only company, but they paid the U.S. to overthrow Allende.
14:28 and resulted in his assassination. Helms, as DCI, lied about the CIA's role. Helms' testimony laid the foundation for an all-out assault on the spy agency he claimed to admire, because he not only lied saying that they had nothing to do with it, which they in fact did, they orchestrated it, it was later found out that Helms had in fact lied to Congress.
14:55 After Watergate deposed Richard Nixon, the news emerged that the CIA had spied domestically since at least the Johnson administration. Congressman Otis Pike of the House Intelligence Committee began to probe publicly into the CIA. Newspapers and magazine reporters in the post-Watergate environment also began to dig. The Ford administration panicking assigned White House lawyer Roderick Hills.
15:23 to act as liaison among the various investigations. Hill recalled that Colby seemed cooperative, but many of his subordinates, especially those in the clandestine service, were not. Hell, a reporter friend of mine from San Francisco was interested in the CIA's Amelia Earhart files, Hill said. They were 30 years old, so I requested them and was told they didn't exist. I later learned they did.
15:51 It was clear to me that they were holding back not only from Colby, but from the president. Ford felt enough political pressure that he appointed Vice President Nelson Rockefeller to head a commission to look into the CIA. From assassinations abroad to spying at home, the Rockefeller appointment must have brought a smile to many of the faces at the CIA. Nelson's brother, David, had allowed Chase Manhattan Bank to be used in the CIA's anti-
16:20 Allende Chilean operation. Church and the Democrats, sensing that many clandestine operations from the Kennedy and Johnson days might emerge in the probes, announced their own investigation with the newly appointed Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. The Senate investigation coincided with Church's presidential campaign. Had Church not tried to muzzle and defame the reputation of Ambassador Edward Corey,
16:49 A Democrat, the director of operations, might have escaped unscathed. But Church refused to let Corey testify about wrongdoing in Chile, starting with the Kennedy years. Instead, Church wanted Corey, a former award-winning newspaper and magazine reporter, to discuss only what was done wrong under Nixon. Corey refused. When he was silenced during the hearing, he wrote a letter to Attorney General Edward Levi.
17:19 asking him to investigate high U.S. officials for crimes concerning Chile. Levi, a highly moral man, at once sent the Corey letter to the criminal division of the Justice Department. The result, the CIA was turned upside down. Corey's letter had implicated Richard Helms, Ted Shackley, and ITT chairperson Harold Greenan. G-E-N-E-E-N.
17:47 Corey's letter was far greater threat to the CIA management than any of the headline-grabbing news coming out of the Church Commission. Colby was unwilling to cover up for the director of operations on Chile, despite his sponsorship of Shackley. In fact, Colby earned the hatred of his CIA colleagues when he submitted to a House committee that even more embarrassing secrets that had not yet emerged.
18:15 Morale at the CIA was at an all-time low. The Directorate of Operations veteran leaked stories to journalists that Colby was probably a Soviet mole. I'm sorry. I just have to laugh that every single freaking time that the CIA gets implicated in anything, it's Russia. It's the Soviets. It's Russia. It's the Soviets. Sorry.
18:42 President Ford realized that Colby intended to comply with all requests for information, with the exception of the names of American agents. The establishment, both Republicans and Democrats, now was facing lots of revelations. From Iran, Helms, because remember, Helms went over to Iran to be the ambassador. Helms heard enough about the criminal investigation to issue a threat through his old colleague, Tom Braden.
19:11 B-R-A-D-E-N. Braden remembered Helms saying, quote, if I am going to be charged, then I will reveal Henry Kissinger's role in these operations, unquote, which, of course, he was guilty as hell in the whole Allende assassination. There were major changes at the CIA under Colby. Colby fired James Jesus Angleton, a suspicious
19:39 the suspicious counterintelligence chief who had turned the CIA inside out trying to find the Soviet mole. Angleton also served what was known as the CIA Israeli account. So for those of you guys who followed us along from the beginning, Angleton actually had the Vatican desk and the Israeli desk at the same time.
20:08 because they're money laundering this entire time through the Vatican. And Angleton is the one that handled both of those accounts. Over the years, he had built up a very productive and close relationship with the Israeli intelligence, Mossad. Shackley looked at that relationship with some longing. Soon after Angleton left the CIA, he discovered that Shackley was making numerous attempts to convince the Israelis that Shackley was
20:37 more trustworthy than Angleton and that he could feel the shoes of Angleton. Angleton says, as far as I know, these overtures were never authorized. After Colby fired Angleton in 1974, it took Angleton nine months to clean out his desk. Nine months to clean out his desk.
21:03 Angleton's final departure from the CIA came at about the same time Gerald Ford decided that Colby's open approach to the investigation had to end. Ford fired Colby. But Colby's sudden job loss did not cause him any severe worries. He began practicing law. His agency contacts brought a healthy client list to his firm, Reed and Priest. That's where he went to practice law.
21:32 Among those clients were Nugent Hand. So again, all Colby did was go to the enterprise, which is what I call the covert side of the CIA in all of their fake entities. Ford had thought about replacing Colby with Elliot Richardson, the forthright public servant who had stood up to Nixon and resigned as attorney general rather than fire Archibald Cox, the special prosecutor during Watergate.
22:02 But Donald Rumsfeld and others convinced Ford that the CIA under siege by Ford's attorney general, the last thing they needed was a reformer to head the CIA. Henry Kissinger, who needed someone at the CIA to stave off Richard Helms' very real threat, drafted a telegram to Beijing offering George H.W. Bush the top CIA job. Bush's appointment was announced on November 3rd, 1975.
22:31 along with the surprise sacking of William Colby. George H.W. Bush's political career had been floundering. In 1970, he had lost the Senate race to Lloyd Benson. As a consolation prize, President Nixon appointed him as the UN ambassador. However, that meant that Bush was humiliated as he fought for Taiwan's right to stay in the UN, while Nixon and Kissinger kept him in the dark as they secretly closed the door.
23:02 opened the door to China. Now, again, I want to remind you guys that Taiwan, Bush is trying to keep, Bush is the CIA guy, right? So he's trying to push to keep Taiwan in not just the UN, but Taiwan was sitting in China's seat at the UN Security Council.
23:29 You go back and you look at the records and it labels that seat as China. But up until we formally recognized China, our recognition of China was actually Taiwan. And so you have, as we have said on here many times, you have the world's biggest drug ring being ran out of Taiwan sitting at the Security Council in the UN. That's how crazy this whole thing is.
23:59 Obviously, they're working behind the scenes trying to open up mainland China. And in order to do that, you basically have to ditch the Taiwanese arrangements in order to bring that to fruition. If Bush's humiliation at the hands of his political friends over the Taiwan issue wasn't enough, his next assignment should have been.
24:28 Nixon was still celebrating his landslide victory over George McGovern in 72 when he offered Bush a new job, head of the Republican National Committee. Over the next two years, Bush made 118 speeches and held 87 press conferences, blindly defending Richard Nixon, as the Truth About Watergate cover-up closed in. Only at the very end did Bush urge Nixon to resign. Bush was disappointed again when he lost out.
24:57 to the more experienced and better known Nelson Rockefeller as Gerald Ford's vice president. To console Bush, Ford offered him his choice of two assignments, either the ambassador to London or the ambassador to Paris. Bush shocked Ford and his Republican insiders by asking that he be sent instead to China, Beijing, as head of the U.S. liaison office.
25:29 Why did Bush ask for this assignment? He had no history of any interest in Asia. One possibility is that in return for information from them, he was willing to help out his old friends in the CIA. The Directorate of Operations was desperate for information on China. Coincidentally, Ted Shackley was now heading the DO's Far East Division. Now, I find this particularly interesting.
25:57 Because of the timing of this and knowing that Bush had an intimate relationship with Taiwan, Chiang Kai-shek and the KMT army. And that had existed for decades. And so I find it very interesting that Bush is basically a spy in China posing as a diplomat. In addition, if arrangements could be made with the Chinese government.
26:27 China would make an extraordinary electronic listening post for the CIA on the most inaccessible and secret portions of the Soviet Union. In what may have been Bush's most significant contribution, that is precisely what happened. The Chinese military did agree to allow sophisticated listening posts on their territory from 1974 to 1975. These facilities were aimed at the Soviet Union and Iran.
26:56 The Chinese leaders were never told that, though the satellite system in the U.S. was monitoring their own high-level telephone communications as well as those in the surrounding area. So they're eavesdropping on China, Russia, and Iran. And Bush is basically the undercover CIA asset posing as the diplomat. The information was made public in 1979.
27:26 So the Chinese found out about it then. George Bush arrived in China four months ahead of his wife. It was during those four months that he developed a very curious relationship with a staff assistant, Jennifer Fitzgerald. Both the Chinese government and the CIA was convinced that the relationship between Bush and Fitzgerald was sexual. For an ambitious politician like Bush, this information in the wrong hands could have been dangerous.
27:54 The British-born Fitzgerald enjoyed complete access to Bush. Before the Beijing assignment, she frequently traveled with him without his wife. According to both U.S. and Chinese intelligence sources, the relationship was discussed by the Chinese leadership to the point where it was picked up by the NSA in intercepts. Those intercepts routinely went to Ted Shackley, who was known throughout the clandestine service for making use of all the personal information.
28:24 For blackmail, President Ford's appointment of Bush to head the CIA in November 1975 was greeted with a howl of objections from Democrats who feared that Bush would use the CIA as a political platform and allow more of their embarrassing secrets to be relieved. That's got to be a joke. Jet lag contributed to Bush's poor performance before the Senate Armed Services Committee.
28:52 He had flown in from Beijing on very short notice. By the end of the second day of hearings on Bush's confirmation, it was clear that the appointment was in trouble. President Ford found himself in the unenviable position of having to defend the first politician named to head the CIA. But of course, we know he wasn't just a politician. He was actually a CIA asset himself or agent.
29:19 Ford finally said, if Ambassador Bush is confirmed by the Senate as director of the Central Intelligence, I will not consider him as my running mate in 1976. According to many who would be, let's see, Bush would not have been confirmed if Ford had left out that pledge.
29:45 George Bush made no secret that he would not follow his predecessor, William Colby, in the policy of openness and cooperation with Congress. Bush said the scrutiny of the agency had undergone, quote, frankly, many of our friends around the world and some of them not friendly are wondering what we are doing to ourselves as a nation as we see attacks on the CIA. Some must wonder if we can depend on us to protect them if we cooperate with.
30:16 with us on important intelligence project, unquote. So in other words, we have to keep lying to you for your own protection. Not that the oversight had been very thorough. Ford's assistant, Rod Hills, recalled a case when two senators were sent to the White House to review some highly classified CIA files as part of their investigation into the CIA wrongdoing.
30:42 After they arrived, neither senator wanted to examine the files. In the end, they didn't even look at the material. As a result of incidents like this, the much-vaulted church committee investigation essentially accomplished not much. But whatever cooperation Colby had given ceased under the oversight of Bush. Within months of Bush's appointment, he selected William Wells as his deputy director.
31:07 And oddly, Bush picked Wells without consulting anyone inside the CIA. Wells was probably the worst choice to be Shackley's boss. Many in the agency considered him not to even be a serious man. Robert Crowley summed it up best. When you think of Bill Wells, you think of Bugs Bunny. Because Wells was not taken seriously, Shackley became the de facto deputy. Shackley had a history of working around bosses.
31:36 Shackley had denigrated the legend of Bill Harvey, his mentor, to Robert Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Harvey's CIA career was destroyed. Now, according to Robert Crowley, Wells was getting the same treatment Shackley had given to Harvey. The fact that George Bush was a political CIA director was no secret at the CIA.
32:00 One other CIA agent was quoted as saying they needed a new faith. And I think, frankly, another piece of personal opinion. But I think one of the reasons they settled on George Bush was it sort of got Bush out of the way in the terms of Republican politics. I think Donald Rumsfeld engineered that. And it was good for us. I think Bush was very good for us. He certainly was good for me because he made me his deputy.
32:30 When Bush moved back to Washington, he very much adopted his late father Prescott's approach to his political and social life. George joined all of the exclusive, all-male, all-white clubs, like the Alibi Club. At least once he entertained the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the club while he was the Director of Central Intelligence.
32:53 But if Bush thought his political experience would give him an edge over the characters like Ted Shackley and Tom Klein, he was mistaken. Bush began his tenure not by digging in with the slow methodical approach, but Bush came in from China. It was in the wake of investigations into CIA activities. They were trying to come up with new approaches. So he sat in the executive office building. He didn't try to go to Langley.
33:22 And he got himself briefed by us a lot. But there was an awful lot of concern, not only within the Senate, but out of Langley about his background. He became aware of that. He came out of a staff meeting, a senior staff meeting. And he would basically ask, try to ask lots of questions to appear like he was very concerned about what they were talking about.
33:50 And it says, quote, I just want you to know that I make no apologies for my political background. I'm proud of everything I've done. But I also have enough sensitivities to know when politics stops at the edge of a job. I had no politics when I was at the UN. I had no politics when I was in Beijing. And I intend to have no politics whatsoever while I'm at the CIA, unquote. Then the other thing.
34:18 Along the same lines, he came out to the agency and was sworn in. Quote, Ford came out to the alcove. Colby presided and then got into his old battered up jalopy and drove off into the sunset with a standing ovation. And Potter Stewart, the justice, swore George in and George made a little speech. And that was the thrust of it. Unquote. We like the looks of this place. It's red, white and blue. We like the looks of the people.
34:47 We certainly thought that we were going to do something important and he wanted to join. He wanted to support them and he wanted to do a job well done. After having endured six months in a year's worth of political reviews and dissections, he seemed to have been settling in well. And he, a month later, chose somebody from inside. Call me the people's deputy.
35:13 And that seemed to make people feel pretty good. So he was beginning to earn trust. He knew that it was the kind of an organization doing the kind of things that very often times backfired and caused embarrassment, not only to him, but to the entire organization. It did not take Shackley and Klein long to realize that George Bush was not going to reform the CIA. The director of operations, it was business as usual.
35:43 Naughty was Bush's top deputy. He knew better than to cross the clandestine side where Shackley was firmly ensconced in the CIA. So that it for the material for today. I do want. Oh, my gosh. So.
36:08 Again, I have to remind you guys every time that this book is written by CIA people. They obviously want to give you the impression that Bush was a politician. Bush was for decades a CIA asset. OK, so that's why when you read these things, you take what you read with a grain of salt. They intersperse the truth with a few.
36:35 fictions in order to lead you in a particular way. So we, of course, have talked about Bush being intimately involved in many different CIA operations over the years, well before the mid-70s. So for some reason, and I find it actually more interesting as to why the three CIA officers that gave Joseph Trento their material
37:04 why they would want us to believe that Bush wasn't part of them. So you know what I mean? It's kind of like you see what they're pushing. You have to know everything first, but you see what they're pushing and then you can kind of back up and figure out why they really want you to believe he didn't have anything to do with it and he was just a politician. And some of that could have been his association with JFK's assassination.
37:32 and other operations like that, that if they can leave in your mind that he was just a politician, you know, they're halfway there. But that's speculation on my part. So we're going to go ahead and open up the mics for anybody that wants to. Let's first kind of talk about what we presented here, and then we'll kind of open it up towards the end if we have time. I will be bugging out a little early today.
38:03 because it's my family dinner night. Go ahead, SR71. Thank you, Colonel Linda. And I'm not seeing hands. Mine didn't even show up. So we're going to play this by ear and see how it goes. But anyway, I was just laughing at what was going on here. This book makes it sound as if Bush won the lottery for some reason. Yeah. You know, I don't get it.
38:36 with all he was involved in to begin with and you're trying to tell me that this was the worst you could do and the funny thing is in the preceding few paragraphs they tell you that he's being a CIA asset in China posing as a diplomat by sitting up spying on Iran and the Soviet Union and overhearing all of Chinese stuff but then
39:06 Two, you know, three or four paragraphs later, they go, oh, but he was just a politician. Everybody just looked at him as a politician. I mean, it's hilarious. It's like that 80-20 rule, but it's like, I wonder how much the Bushes paid to make sure that they had the 80-20 rule in favor of him. Yeah. Yeah, it's just, it's hilarious.
39:33 And it's interesting because it goes along the lines with much that I have read about. If you go back and you look at the long history of the Bush family and their ties to the Republican Party, they try to make it sound like he's kind of like an outsider type thing. Or, you know, obviously they're trying to make it sound like he can be blackmailed through.
40:01 material that the CIA is going to have over him, which builds up for another thing that we'll talk about in a future chapter. But I just find that interesting that all of these people are involved in nefarious things. So every single one of them has blackmail material on them because they're all part of the international syndicate. Any one of them goes down, they can take them all down. So again.
40:29 And making these points, we're building towards something. And I just want to point them out as we go along so you can kind of see how they try to manipulate you. Because I just find it fascinating. Okay, Colonel Peacekeeper has got a question for you. Okay. Peacekeeper, go ahead. Yeah, one of the things I was just going to mention, you were talking about.
41:06 If you go back into the late 40s and early 50s with Prescott Bush and the Abraham Accords, how they say that Bush was not involved. I mean, he gets sworn in in 1974 as the CIA director, and they said he had nothing to do with the CIA. How do you get that standings if you're not connected way before? If you're not a handler on the CIA, you've got to come up through the ranks.
41:34 We know that he had direct connections with the Kennedy assassination. I mean, that's all been proven. So for but it goes all the way back into the late 40s, early 50s with his father. Yeah. Yeah. Excellent point. And that is kind of more important is or as important, I should say, is when you read these books, it is so important.
42:04 to understand the material that they're presenting to you and the way they are posturing it so you can guard against being manipulated with it. And again, you know, that's why we do several books on the same topics, you know, like lots and lots of them, because you get different angles of you get different layers of nuances.
42:33 And just like the stuff that I was just posting prior to starting the space on the world anti-communist league, you know, we've talked about that at nauseam. But in the one book that I just recently bought, you can see I clipped a little part of it out about the guy Warbell. And I don't know if you guys have been around long enough to remember. We did a whole.
42:57 like two or three shows on War Bell because that guy is like crazy. He's an arms dealer who set up shop right outside of Fort Benning after they moved the School of Americas there. And he literally has the paramilitary training camp where he has his arms manufacturing. And he created silencers for automatic weapons.
43:25 And I mean, he's a defense contractor. They were shipping this shit all over the world for the assassins as part of Operation Gladio. And I highly suggest SR-71, if you wouldn't mind posting his Wikipedia page on how he actually was poisoned and murdered out in Los Angeles with Hugh Hefner and all of these people.
43:51 The guy's life is like one of those things that you would find in a fiction novel, some spy novel, but it was no kidding real life. And the fact that several of these books, when you start piecing the world anti-communist league together, you find out that all of these people we've been talking about this entire time, all are orbiting around
44:20 all of the different chapters of the World Anti-Communist League. I'm sorry, Colonel. I missed the name. Whose is that? His last name is W-E-R-B-E-L-L, the third. Okay. Warbell. Go ahead, Peacekeeper. I was also going to mention you research Chauncey Holt.
44:48 He was actually one of the hobos, supposedly one of the hobos that was in the train car with the Kennedy assassination. He was a CIA operative, and he'd been a CIA operative his whole life. If you do his research on who he was, he was basically a pilot's license. He was very well known in the organized crime.
45:14 syndicate in Miami, but he was also one of the instrumental CIA operatives. If you read his book, I mean, he's dead now, but he actually came out when he was dying of cancer, and he wrote a book on exactly his role and all the CIA operatives that were actually connected. He said he was running into several people down in Dallas. He said he never approached them, but he did.
45:42 I see him down there, and he was amazed at how many guys that he knew that were mob-connected and CIA-connected that he had associated with. But he's seen them, but he never approached them and said, hey, how you doing or anything, because he knew there was an operation going on. He just didn't know what it was. I mean, his part of the operation was completely different than theirs. So it's just like you were saying, Colonel, that these organizations, they take over.
46:12 businesses and organizations, just like Bush Sr. He was actually involved in the oil industry, but he was actually a CA. They put him in a spot of a position to where they could use that as an asset, and that's where the connection to the Bay of Pigs and everything come in, because the oil company that was in Dallas actually had the oil rigs out.
46:39 along Cuba, and they were using it as a go-between to get to Cuba to try to take Castro out. And who else wanted to take Castro out was the mafia. So they're all connected, and it's almost like a need-to-know basis. Each one of them had little cells, and one cell didn't know what the other cell was doing, but that's what you're talking about with that book. They always try to distract or dissuade you from understanding exactly how their operations work.
47:09 Yeah. Have you been here very, very much, Peacekeeper, in our space? No, I've only been in here, this is probably the third time in here. So we talked about... I think Stella, I've got Stella, I follow Stella, and it popped up that she was in the room. Awesome. Well, welcome. And we did cover Zapata Oil, which is the oil company you're talking about. And the fact that...
47:36 Their geologist had discovered an oil, a potential oil in the Sabata Bay of Cuba. And they just so happen were to believe created a Sabata oil company in order to hide the bush activity. And we have oftentimes discovered.
48:04 These fake companies that they set up for people to be in charge of when they're actually CIA agents and assets that form these companies. And like you articulated, we did talk about the quote unquote mobile deep water rigs that they had not only used in association with Mexico, but also in floating them out in the middle of the Gulf and training the.
48:32 quote-unquote Cuban exiles, which we refer to as Operation Gladio operatives, in order to conduct not just raids on Cuba, but throughout all of Latin America. You find these Cuban exiles in El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua. You find them in Angola. You found them in Vietnam. They were deployed all over. They are paramilitary assassins, torturers, and kidnappers.
49:02 that the CIA has used in all of their operations. And they are heralded here as some, you know, hero of having survived Castro, when in fact they are paramilitary assets of the CIA. Ron, go ahead. What was the name, the peacekeeper, what was the name that you said that wrote the book on his jetbed? His name is Chauncey Holt. Thank you. H-O-L-T?
49:33 Appreciate it. What was the name of the book? What I was going to say is in that book, he talks about exactly what Colonel's talking about. Sure. He was actually a well-known – he was actually an artist by his own trade. I mean, he liked art, and he was real good at art. Well, he actually was – one of the fronts that he actually operated was out of California. It was actually a printing company that was in –
50:01 uh in financial trouble the cia came in and bought them out and they said they ran the regular operation down in uh you know first second and third floor but the upper floor what he he him and his cia guys were running they were running fake passports fake ids for all these paramilitary guys the cia and he actually made the badges for the cia uh fake cia members that were at the uh
50:32 assassination of Kennedy because several of the witnesses on the ground had mentioned that they talked to CIA operatives. Well, in the Warren report, they said they identified every CIA operative there, and the ones that they said the eyewitnesses talked to, they said they weren't there. We only had a certain amount of people there, and they were the only CIA.
50:56 Or not CIA, but Secret Service. He made fake Secret Service badges and paperwork for these CIA operatives. But anyway, they said the only Secret Service that was there at the shooting was the ones protecting the president. Nobody else was there. And there's eyewitnesses that said there was maybe 15, 20 people with CIA credentials. Is this a self-portrait of a scoundrel?
51:25 Yeah, that's the name of the book. Thank you. Yeah, that's great information. Thank you. But it ties right into what you're talking about, Colonel. I always call it pieces of the puzzle. When you start putting all these pieces of the puzzle together, you see the picture. You understand exactly how they operate. They've secretly, like I said, taken over their fronts, just like the oil companies and all that stuff. They've actually put people in place.
51:59 uh to have assets when they need them oh absolutely yeah we've uncovered all of that um i i i would suggest that um since you're new here also we did a we've done a series of i think we're up to 35 episodes over on alpha warriors um podcast on rumble that starts at the beginning of this where this came from in the late 1800s what it
52:28 metastasized into post-World War II. What were the tenets of it and how all of the new intelligence agencies that were set up post-World War II, how they've all colluded together to do all of this. And if any one head of state gets out of line, they assassinate them. And they've couped over 80 governments. And some cases, like in Charles de Gaulle's case, they tried to kill him over 20 times.
52:55 Some they have a lot more success at. They've tried to assassinate Castro, according to them, over 400 times. And so this is what we refer to as an international syndicate that is controlling all of this activity. And they do it in order, just like we were talking about with Allende, they do it to go in and steal the people's resources. Allende in Chile, they had lots of copper.
53:23 and several other resources down there. And they, Allende wanted all of the Chileans to have high paying jobs and work in all of those industries like ITT had came in and basically took over their telephone and telegraph. And Allende wanted them jobs for Chileans. And so he was nationalizing not only the mines, but the telephone infrastructure.
53:52 And, of course, we joke here now because all of the things that Americas are up in arms about, wanting our farmland back and all this other stuff from foreigners, this is the same shit we've done all over the world. Not us personally, but the U.S. corporations. So you have United Fruit that was in Chile and several other U.S. corporations. But PepsiCo, ITT, and I love how they left.
54:18 the Freeport and PepsiCo out of their comments that we were just reading about them orchestrating the coup of Allende because it was all three of those organizations, PepsiCo, ITT, and Freeport mining that paid the Nixon administration to overthrow the government and sign the finding to assassinate Allende. So yeah, it's obviously as far as
54:44 We're into this discovery process now. We keep meeting all of the same people in different operations. And so just like Warbell, it's not new to us that his name pops up because he's popped up in three or four different CIA operations because he's an arms dealer. Adrian Khashoggi, same thing. His name pops up fairly routinely.
55:10 As does Israel being a international weapons dealer go-between. Anytime Congress says that U.S. dollars can't go to fund weapons to some CIA cause, the U.S. CIA goes around Congress and just funnels money from their covert operation fund to Israel to buy the weapons, and then they go to wherever the CIA wants them to go to. So, Deller, go ahead.
55:40 I just put up in the nest, I saw that there is a gas station company giant who's also parent company is Shell, who's doing a Chapter 7 bankruptcy. I guess it was a Chapter 11 at first, but it looks like they're doing some reorganization because Shell, I thought you talked about Shell as well. Oh, we have. Shell was very much involved in the Indonesia coup because of, of course, oil.
56:08 And so many of the assets when it comes to oil, Shell's very much involved. You guys might find that interesting up there then. Okay. Yeah, I'll definitely take a look at that. Thank you for posting that. Peacekeeper, go ahead. Well, you mentioned in the Chauncey Holt book, you'll read the PepsiCo, the director of PepsiCo is one of his.
56:39 He was actually one of the CIA assets that was actually placed in PepsiCo. But it's interesting that you had mentioned that. And the other thing about when Stella mentioned Shell, you go back and research the Shell Corporation up in the North Sea. Right. Like you said, it's all connected.
57:06 It's all connected. And of course, where did the Secret Service chick go hang out for the three years Trump was president before she came back and oversaw his attempted assassination? Where did she go? Anybody? PepsiCo. Was she over in Germany? No, she was at PepsiCo. Pepsi. She was at PepsiCo's global security department head. Is that why Donald Trump always does the Coke instead of the Pepsi? Maybe.
57:47 Yeah. So, again, all of these things, when you see them and again, I think that if we didn't know anything about Operation Gladio and someone says this shit goes and hangs out for three years while Trump's president of PepsiCo, everybody goes, oh, OK. And then, you know, she had 27 years experience in Secret Service. So Biden taps her to come back and we just go on about her life. It's like that wouldn't have been news at all.
58:17 But for us here, who knows exactly the role PepsiCo plays in assassination attempts and how they have been used as fronts because they're an international company. CIA assets can travel anywhere in the world using Pepsi as their employer. Immediately when I looked her up and saw that she had been at Pepsi, I'm like, son of a bitch.
58:45 Because we know that's a place they stash people. Go ahead, Stellar.
59:17 Telling us, you know, for a long time. You got to find that picture. It's a Watergate picture. It's a black and white picture with Nixon. I'll look for it right now. Oh, my gosh. Ron, go ahead. Well, Pepsi was the first American company or product to get introduced into the Soviet Union. Was it like 1971, I think, when the Pepsi CEO negotiated something to get into the Soviet Union.
59:47 There you go. They did the same thing in China. Yep. And that's one of their spying vehicles. Crazy, crazy, crazy. It's interesting that you mention that because, like I said in the book, I can't even think of his name. I'd have to dig it up. But the member that was actually head of PepsiCo, he was actually connected with the Warren Commission. And, I mean, it's just mind-blowing.
1:00:23 Yeah, well, and we've talked about how, you know, George Morgan DeShield was part of Alan Dulles' past when he was working at Sullivan and Cromwell over in Azerbaijan. They'd known each other, George's, you know, since George was 10. And he just happens to be the star witness on the commission for Alan Dulles when Alan Dulles has known him practically his entire life.
1:00:54 Again, come on. So lots of fun stuff. Anybody else? I don't see any more hands. Do y'all see any more hands? No, Colonel. I haven't seen anybody else prop up. Tim just raised his hand, and I'm looking for that photograph. Okay. Go ahead. Hey, Colonel. How involved is Gladio in the storm shadow missile and the...
1:01:33 attack a missile attacks that we did this week. So you can't actually, I would not refer to them as Gladio because for this reason, and I know it sounds like maybe Gladio is done covertly and it is done with like plausible deniability kind of CIA operations.
1:02:03 The overtly attack that was done by NATO on Russia is not a gladio. Now, I will tell you that the killing of 140-some civilians at that theater was 100% gladio. It was trained and exercised in Turkey. Turkey is the largest, other than Colombia, Turkey has the largest...
1:02:32 had the largest Gladio program in all of NATO. And those assassins trained in Turkey, went to Ukraine, went across the border into Russia, assassinated all those people at the theater, Crocus, and then came back through Ukraine. They were assets that was first identified as part of the Afghanistan operation.
1:03:01 While the CIA was in Afghanistan, they recruited Kajikistan and several other Kazakhstan and Afghanis as basically like a Mujahideen kind of apparatus that they much like they did in Colombia. There's 20,000 of them in Colombia and they use them all over the world. The Turkish ones.
1:03:27 show up all over the world. One of theirs is the one that tried to assassinate John Paul the Pope when he was shot in St. Peter's. So they show up all over doing all kinds of attempted assassinations as a warning or assassinations for a leader or head of state that doesn't do what they want him to do type of thing, just like the Cuban exiles were actually in the Congo when we assassinated Lumumba.
1:03:56 Those types of things are all covert operations, and that's where Gladio comes in. Any of the stuff that's done overtly as part of the conducting of official business doesn't necessarily get classified as a Gladio operation. Does that make sense? Yes, there was a German with Ukrainian ties that was arrested in Russia, I think yesterday, with plans to...
1:04:27 blow up a fuel facility now that would definitely be gladio i see the difference yeah absolutely all right who else we got do you see anybody else sr71 stellar i do not nobody else has their hands up and i'm going to still be searching for that after we close stellar what what give me the parameters of what you're looking for on that photograph
1:05:09 There was a photograph where Nixon was sitting down. It's a black and white picture. It looks like that he's sitting and then there's a tape. It's not like a table, like a conference table. It looks like an end table and it's a black and white picture. And it's from that early late.
1:05:27 70, 71 timeframe, you know, or maybe a little bit before, but it was around that Watergate time. And then there's a photograph with a Pepsi can there. There's also another photograph with Nixon and Trump together. And there was also Pepsi, but.
1:05:42 Current photos of Donald Trump are with Coca-Cola. So that's why, I mean, with all the stuff that's going on with Pepsi and things, I'm trying to find that one photograph because they were probably messaging things. But I'm going through like total stock archives of everything right now. Yeah. I'm going to try to help you and see if I can find something. Yeah, just text me if you find it, Stella. All right. Everyone.
1:06:09 And then because you were talking about, you know, Shell Company. And when I saw the paperwork or saw the stuff regarding Giant and then Shell Company, you know, Shell, I think it was PLC or something like that. Something PLC. I don't know. It was Shell. And then if you keep reading through the article, there's a lot of different companies that are involved that are underneath that that have something to do with it. So because whenever there's bankruptcies and stuff, that's all public. Yeah. And it's interesting that a lot of the.
1:06:38 global oil in order for them to agree to concessions on basically how much of the wealth they're going to steal out of a country. They kind of have to cut everybody in. So there are lots of companies in these deals. And then you have to go through the corporate hierarchies in order to trace them back. And obviously they all end up having the same.
1:07:07 you know, overarching three or four big global oil that are usually at the top of the food chain. Go ahead, Stellar. Well, I was going to say also, like before the big fall, you know, the last time with like AIG, the banking and, you know, this whole thing, AIG separated its companies apart, you know, and then they had one part of it going into the bankruptcy, the, you know, the profitable side state, you know, liquid.
1:07:36 Now we see what's going on with Shell. You know, Google was told that they had to separate apart because, you know, it's a monopoly. Then seeing what's going on with Visa and MasterCard throughout the world, you know, they're a monopoly. So all these big companies that have all these other companies underneath them, you know, it's just a dismantling of, you know, the lock that they have with everything. Because overall, I mean, there's only about three to five companies that actually own the world. Well, does that make sense? It does. And they're being all broken apart. But call me skeptical.
1:08:05 Because supposedly Standard Oil was being broke apart and it was never actually broke apart because they just own 60% of all the things that supposedly were broken. So Standard Oil still ran all of the oil that the original Standard Oil did. It just made it look like to people like us that they were separate. They were never separate. And that's kind of been a, what's the word?
1:08:35 Well, it's disguising under the, you know, oh, we're going to be big on these anti-monopoly kind of things, when in fact, if you, again, you trace back the parent and the stock ownership of these companies, they all end up being the same thing. So, yeah, I don't, all of the ones that I have.
1:09:01 And speaking of AIG, y'all know where that came from, right? Where is the origins of AIG as the big financial insurance, blah, blah, blah. It was CV Star, S-T-A-R-R. And I was recently posting about him. His name is Cornelius Vander Star. He's 100%.
1:09:34 part of this international syndicate worked for oss during world war ii basically was a cia the whole origin of aig was a cia front company was star the same one is is that the like how they have this there's also a system that's within the banking system too that star is that the same one i don't know about that part but i mean it's it's just crazy when you start
1:10:05 Going back to how many of these and, you know, of course, AIG was part of the big scam of stealing our wealth in 2008. So all of this and that that hands down started off as a CIA front company. So, yeah. And that's why I mean, for me, I was living back east. The 9-11 stuff had happened, you know, probably a year or so, year and a half earlier.
1:10:34 And we just moved back east. And my ex-husband was an attorney. And then I used to run medical and dental offices. And AIG was the malpractice insurance. So when we moved back east, their headquarters was there. And so, you know, in the local news, they'll say what's going on. And, you know, they so that's what I said, like in 2003, 2004, they're already separating out the like, say, the the the profitable from the not profitable.
1:11:03 And they were also, you know, and that's also, you know, the mortgage insurance and stuff like that. Yeah. So that was a huge, big part of it. But I saw that stuff happening beforehand. And, you know, and then you've got the Santander. I mean, there's a lot of different companies and a lot of those same thing. I just think that things are going to be different this time, mainly because it was captured. It got captured back then.
1:11:27 in my opinion. And that's why I keep always bringing up the Basel protocols within the banking or banking of international settlements, because you can see where things started changing. And then enforcements happened. And then, you know, with these different companies, you know, with how the blockchain in and I mean, some of these companies are part of the other company, but, you know.
1:11:48 It just seems like it's more open now. It's not private like it was before because we didn't have any controls like regular people to be a part of what the financial system was going to be. It was always the bankers or the corporations and it was always laundering and really taking the fractional banking routine completely on steroids to the point of it's just nothing but counterfeiting and then following where the money, the counterfeiting money goes and where it's coming from.
1:12:17 You know, and just following the history of like how things slowly have been opening up mainly because of these protocols within the Basel and things, you know, so I don't I don't know. I just I have faith that, you know, it's going to be opened up more and broken apart and people are going to be a part of it, you know, and.
1:12:36 And without all of the laundering and all the shady stuff that's going on, you know, a lot of these big things are going to be a lot smaller if that makes any sense. Well, I mean, obviously, I hope you're right. I'm just very skeptical. Go ahead, Peacekeeper. I think I found that picture. Richard Nixon was a lawyer for Pepsi in Pakistan in 1964, and I posted that picture in the Purple Pill. Thank you. Peacekeeper, go ahead.
1:13:08 What you were saying, Colonel, is all it was was the Standard Oil and the Rockefeller. That was just the predecessor to BlackRock and Vanguard. What they did was they diversified into different companies. And what it was, it's just like the mafia. When you got when you got five dons at the table and one of them has too much power, the rest of them say, hey, you got to split up some of that power that you got with us. So we're all at the same table. That's exactly they made it sound like.
1:13:35 Yeah, they made it sound like that Rockefeller was really pissed off because they came in with the monopoly rules and all that stuff. But he wasn't. It was just that I got to share some of my power with my other constituents, the all-seeing eye at the top.
1:13:51 of the pyramid, he had to share that with other people so that there was not too much control in one man's hands. That's exactly what Black Rock and Vanguard and Brookshire Hathaway, all those are basically just diversifications. They all own each other. That way nobody, they all have hands in each other's pockets. That way nobody can get away scot-free.
1:14:16 And we saw that probably best played out in the Indonesian coup and how the oil was found. And then the insiders knew and basically the Dutch had the monopoly on it because it was a Dutch colony. But the Rockefellers wanted in on it. And at the end of the day, they all had a piece. So, yeah, we went through that with the Indonesian coup. And you're absolutely right. You just explained it perfectly. Tim, go ahead.
1:14:49 Okay, I was going to bring up one thing because of what Ron was saying. So he brought up Vanguard and Franklin Templeton also. Everything's being moved onto the blockchain, so you can track where the money's coming in so there's not the laundering or the funny stuff because, you know, it can be tracked. It's open source. So that's what I'm saying. There's a lot of things that are happening within the financial part of the world and going into a secure blockchain, going from a...
1:15:16 centralized system to a decentralized system to an open source, they're not going to be able to hide the money because that's where a lot of the corruption comes into play. So that's why I have faith or hope that this stuff is going to get cleaned out and the shell game is going to end because right now we are literally on a shell game. If they're going to get audited, they need to have so much of assets or whatever.
1:15:43 electronically funneled in there to show that they have the assets and then someone else gets. So it's just literally a shell game. And at some point they're not going to be able to do that because the net is getting tighter and tighter and, and the movement of quote unquote, sorry, I got a phone call. Yeah. Go ahead, Tim. You think Chelsea Gabbert's got a handle on this? Do I think what? Tell the, the representative from why the Trump appointed. Yeah.
1:16:20 You think she's the one that's going to have to handle this? Well, it's not just her. I mean, it's it's all of it. Radcliffe's at the CIA. So, you know, he's going to have a piece of disassembling it. She's at the, you know, DNI. So she's going to have a piece of it. It's going to take all of them. It's going to take Matt Gaetz as the AG to prosecute.
1:16:47 It definitely is going to be a team effort. And that's why all of the people that Trump wants on his team to take down this apparatus has to be approved. I saw Warhamster up here. Where did he go? I saw him as well, Colonel. He just popped back up. Okay. There he is. What's up, Warhamster? Hey, how you doing tonight?
1:17:18 I've just been driving around running errands, and I keep popping off when I have to go into a store, but now I am driving home, so you got me. All right. Say hi to a few friends in the audience there. You know who you are. A couple comments. There's something I saw today about Tulsi. Apparently Liz Cheney endorsed her today, and something was running around the Internet that some kind of a godmother to Cheney's kids or something like that. So those two are really close.
1:17:48 I've always been wary of Ms. Gabbard, but I'm going to remain so because of that relationship for no other reasons. Everyone keeps hearing Mike Rogers for FBI, and that would just be an awful decision. Everyone goes, oh, isn't he the guy that told Trump that they were spying on Trump Tower? No, that's Admiral Mike Rogers. It's a completely different Rogers, and this guy has got a long history of covering for Deep State, etc.
1:18:17 So we're hoping that doesn't happen. The last comment I wanted to make, and I didn't hear everything today, but a gentleman who was named Peacekeeper was talking about the vanguards, the Black Rocks, and how they all own each other. And while that's true, it's exaggerated to some degree. And I say this because, you know, you go to Yahoo Finance or any other thing and you look at the top ten institutional shareholders, and for just about every big company, you're going to see it's going to be Vanguard, State Street, and, you know, what have you.
1:18:47 But they don't actually own those shares. They're listed because they are the fund holders, not the shareholders. You, if you have money in their funds, are the actual beneficial shareholders. They just found a way to get Congress and the SEC to allow them to vote your proxies without you having to opt in or opt out. That's something that several people, attorney generals around the country that are currently working on. And I've had written correspondence with several of them. So that may be coming to an end.
1:19:15 Because it's a big abuse. Obviously, you shouldn't be able to wield the power of a shareholder if you don't actually have those property rights. Correct. Very good point. Thank you for bringing that up. Susan, go ahead. Good afternoon, patriots. And it wasn't Liz Cheney's children that she's godmother to. It was Meghan McCain's. Second thing, I posted and I sent it to you, Colonel, and I posted in the...
1:19:44 in the bubble that uh president vice ex-vice president um nixon was a corporate lawyer for pepsi cola and he was yeah i don't know if you saw that or not so i don't know whether that's pertinent or not but that's the only picture i could find no it is it yeah it's very pertinent and i had read that um as a matter of fact i think i posted it a long time ago when we were um talking about because i found that
1:20:14 Absolutely amazing that he's, hold on a second, he's getting paid by PepsiCo to assassinate Allende on behalf of PepsiCo. And he had in his history the fact that he was a lawyer for PepsiCo, which is just, again, mind boggling. Very small, small network of people that keep falling all over each other.
1:20:40 And thank you for posting that, Susan. Rabbit, go ahead. No, thank you very much, Colonel and Steller and SR for holding the space. Always super informative. I only popped up right quick. There was a comment about if Trump gets all of his nominees confirmed. I want to give credit where credit is due. Jeff Childers wrote, I believe, yesterday about an ability to have.
1:21:07 all of his nominees be appointed via the Senate being in recess. If the Senate does not go into recess, there is a clause where the House can go into recess. And if the House is in recess via Congressman Mike Johnson, then if the Senate chooses not to go into recess, the president can force the Senate into recess because the House of Representatives
1:21:35 is in recess. And then once the Senate is in recess, he can push through that recess period, appointing all of his nominations. Thank you for letting me speak. Sure, absolutely. After 10 days of them being in recess, he can then get them all in. You're absolutely right. And thank you for reminding us of that. Peacekeeper, go ahead. Well, that's why you got to listen to Trump. When he got elected, he said, people don't understand how much power the presidency has.
1:22:05 and talking about exactly what he's been. They've been building this up for 40 years, and they laid it right in Donald Trump's lap. And all those rules and regulations in the Senate and all that stuff, they were planning on Hillary taking it. Well, when he was elected, all bets were off. Yeah. Amen. Amen to that. Absolutely. All right. Anybody else? No more hands. Stellar SRC.
1:22:39 One other thing I was going to say is it's funny that you brought up PepsiCo. If you do the research on Nixon and Russia, that's one of the things, just like you were saying, Colonel, earlier, is everything. They put everything in our faces. It's almost like what they were doing is they were communicating with one another by posting certain things and pictures and things like that. It wasn't just for the general public. It's kind of like an internal.
1:23:08 Communication. That is true. That is very true. That's why they said symbolism will be their downfall. Yeah, somebody did say that. Carrie, go ahead. Yeah, I just have a weird question, Colonel. So you know how we have continuity of government, right? So it seems like they kind of have a continuity of their government.
1:23:46 But how is that? How do they know? Are they just like ants that are like building an anthill? So they just are sociopaths and they naturally know how to fuck everything? Or what do you think? Well, I think that's the purpose of all of these. The World Anti-Communist League, the WWF, the 1001 Club, the American Security Council.
1:24:16 the Bilderbergs, all of these different organizations that we've been through and kind of dissected, you find that they have overlapping membership that coordinate all of this, the CFR, the RIIA. So there's definitely a panel at the top and they decide how this whole thing's going to play out. And they coordinate it with all of these different
1:24:46 organizations, nonprofits. They fund it with the trusts like the Rockefellers, the Carnegies, all of that. Because I, a long time ago into this research project, decided that none of this shit was done in people's garages. They pick people that they're going to have at the front of basically a fake company. And we saw this with Facebook.
1:25:13 and meta, that they pick Zuckerberg, they hand him a DARPA project and say, you're going to pretend like you're in charge of this, and we're going to infiltrate the entire thing with intelligence assets, which in fact they did. We're going to use it for...
1:25:29 stealing everybody's data. We're going to manipulate people with it, blah, blah, blah. We're going to control people with it. And oh, by the way, one of the very first things you have to do is you have to set up a trust. And then that trust, while it's going to look like you're in charge of it, you're not going to be in charge of it. We are. And it's just another money laundering operation. And this has been done throughout time. You can go back to the Carnegies, the Rockefellers. All of those trusts have been done.
1:25:56 have been used for one purpose, and their purpose is what the Fabian Society roundtable crowd all wanted to have done. The eugenicist movement of manipulation and destroying God's DNA and God's perfect creatures, the destruction of our culture, and it has been a cohesive, well-organized, step-by-step
1:26:23 implementation of one world government. In order to do that, you have to have war. You have to have chaos. You have to have refugees to be able to hurdle around to all of the other stable countries to infiltrate those stable countries and destroy their culture. Because no one was going to be going around from America to all of these other things. They had to bring them here to destroy our culture. The same thing with Europe. If they tear it all down, they can build it back.
1:26:51 so that we're all zombies. And they were well on their way to orchestrating this with all of their little, you know, fancy clubs like the St. Hubris Hunt Club and all of that other crap. And then in walked Donald Trump and said, yeah, we're not going to do that anymore. And you see the fallout of that. Yeah, Harari, you know Harari from Israel that...
1:27:20 Crazy, creepy guy. God, he's so creepy. I saw some footage of him saying that that is absolutely the truth. That they were, you know, dancing towards their one world government and Trump walked in and just knocked everything over. And he's really horrified by all of that. I bet he is. And it shows with their panic. Yes, they are panicked. I hope.
1:27:52 Um, so do you know about tour network? What about it? You know, I think about it. Oh, that, um, that it was the Navy and I don't know why this is coming to my mind, but, um, yeah, it was set up by the Navy. This is how sneaky they are. It was set up by the Navy and, um, they got all these activists, underground activists.
1:28:23 to get on there as their cover so they could do all their crazy whatever, who knows, under the cover of activists. And it's just, it's such crap. It's so horrible. I hate Tor. It's such a lie. They can target, like, they can find out who's using Tor through the freaking internet. You can see.
1:28:50 and um through trap and trays and um and everyone was everyone that i knew that it was an activist was like but the navy built it i have one question about the navy um are they the most focused on nuclear no um i mean i don't know what you mean by focused on nuclear um the army for the most part has tactical nuclear
1:29:20 capability the air force has most of the strategic um along with the navy in their forward projection as far as um you know submarines and stuff like that but i don't know that i would put the navy on a higher um because the the nuclear warheads that are you know ground-based are all under the auspices of the
1:29:47 Air Force as well as, you know, like the B-52s and all of the bombers all are within the Air Force as well. So I don't, I mean, you could kind of trade off the strategic amount of bombers in the Air Force with the submarines in the Navy and then
1:30:14 do a count, you know what I mean? But I think it's fairly equal. I mean, it's a triad for a reason. They talk about the nuclear triad so that any one element of that is as strong as the next. So you have, there's redundancies built in. Well, I just wondered about the Navy in terms of,
1:30:47 You hate the Navy, I think. I don't hate the Navy. I don't know why. Why would you say I hate the Navy? I thought you said some negative things about the Navy. But I have a bad memory, I guess. Sorry. No, I have talked about Task Force 157. I don't hate the Navy. I love our military. The leadership of each of the services.
1:31:15 has all fell into some form or fashion part of Operation Gladio and are to be hated and court-martialed as far as I'm concerned, but not a service per se. I mean, if you're inside the military, you make fun of all of the other branches. It's just what we do. I don't hate any of them. We need all of them. Well, maybe not the Army. No, I'm just kidding. Tim, go ahead. Tim?
1:31:51 You mean did you mean me? No. OK. Tim has his hand up. Yeah, I didn't see it. And then I'll call on you. I guess we lost him. Go ahead, Ron. Yeah, I was just going to say, you know, the Navy in terms of intelligence and you can probably echo this or confirm it or not. But in terms of intelligence, the Navy was always.
1:32:13 At the forefront, you've got to realize when the Constitution was written, the only branch of the military that does not need to be reauthorized with the NDAA every two years is the Navy. That's why the Marines are part of the Navy. They're Crest's Department of the Navy, United States Marine Corps. That's why the Marines guard the observatory. That's why they guard the president. That's why they guard all the embassies.
1:32:39 But the naval intelligence has always been the premier intelligence of the military branches. And then the Army obviously came in with the NSA and whatnot. But in terms of implementation, the Navy has always been at the forefront of a lot of those things. And yes, to the colonel's point.
1:33:00 When you're in the Navy and you're in the Army, you bust everybody's balls with their other branches. But at the end of the day, when it comes to shove, we're all under the same banner. Well, the Navy's preeminence in intelligence dates back, obviously, to like the East West Indies corporations. The entire intelligence apparatus was part of imperialism and the the piracy of, you know, the.
1:33:31 Yeah. So you Intel has been built into every country's survival since the beginning of time. And when most trade has always been done over water. And so naturally, when our country was formed in order to survive, you had to have a Navy.
1:33:52 And it was not until well after, you know, the creation of our country that we started flying crap around. And so there's, you know, a century and a half of development in Navy, naval intelligence and the practice of that. And they have some very unique capabilities on how that and you.
1:34:21 You can't, especially today, but even 40 years ago, you can't separate intelligence by service anymore. Because in 1947, when they set up the joint operations where we all are together all over the world, the base that I was at in Italy was an intelligence base. And guess what? We had a Navy detachment and we had Air Force people and they worked in the same building underground.
1:34:50 So it is impossible to separate intelligence now. All of NSA, all of DIA, it's all joint. We all do it together. And so basically, the Navy, having been the granddaddy of that initiative, has shared all of that expertise and capability. And now that the majority of our intelligence comes from satellites.
1:35:19 It is something that we all equally share and participate in in every single thing, whether you're at a COCOM, the joint staff, or you're in theater in the middle of an operation. All of the intelligence capability is thrown at or lied about in the case of the CIA to get the job done. We just have discovered that.
1:35:45 the job they're doing isn't necessarily the job they tell the public that they're doing. Tim, are you back with us yet? Yes. Yes. I'm sorry. I had to take a call. That's okay. Go ahead. Is it my turn? The, the Trump capitulation tour early in his first term is, is this, is it connected to this? Is that him going out picking sides? He wasn't picking sides, but I think the,
1:36:18 International Syndicate had large presence in the places that he went. I speculate that both in the Saudi Arabia case and in North Korea, China, all were controlled elements in some fashion of this network. And they were used to rattle cages every time they needed a crisis.
1:36:48 You know, every single time that it was beneficial to the international syndicate, South North Korea just happened to shoot up a missile and then China would just happen to threat threaten Taiwan. So there has been agitation points all along the way. And I believe that what was happening on the tour that he took was he was releasing.
1:37:15 from captivity, if you will, that's not the right word, but control, probably a better word, the CIA mechanism, whatever that happened to have been, releasing of those entities in order to set up the ability of what we're going to behold starting in January 2025. And that's...
1:37:43 probably best illustrated with the role that the Saudi Arabia government had in the corrupt princes that were all imprisoned as a result of that. And we had a new heir apparent come up and MBS. And I think that's illustrative of the releasing and the changing of the guard.
1:38:09 So, yes, I think that that had a lot to do with it, because if you go back in Operation Gladio, especially post-91, Saudi Arabia basically stepped up the corrupt elements of it to usher in the development of Islamic terrorism for the CIA to replace the anti-communist initiatives that had.
1:38:36 held them over from World War II, because now we don't have the Soviet Union, right? So now we can't have the communists as the bad guys, although they like to throw Russia in there occasionally. But we no longer have the communists to be able to, you know, it's like one of those medicine doctors in the indigenous Indian thing where you have the little rattle thing and you shake it over somebody to ward off the bad spirits. That's kind of like they treated the quote unquote communists. Every time that they needed chaos, they just evoked.
1:39:05 communism. And it's like trying to bring back people from the dead or something. That switched in 91 with the Gulf War and the fake problem with Kuwait and Iraq. That was all drummed up to create an illusion. And then they used that fake dispute between Kuwait and Iraq.
1:39:28 To say, oh, my God, we went over there and we did this, and now they're all going to hate us for the next 30 years. So I automatically gave birth to a new boogeyman. I don't need communism anymore. I have radical Islamic terrorism. Well, in order to have that, you had to have the Saudis and several of the other governments over there, like Qatar and UAE and all of those other ones, play along. Because if they would have went, what the hell are you talking about?
1:39:54 It would have it would have like busted the entire thing. So all of those people were basically playing along, captured whatever you want to say as part of the CIA misinformation op on all of us. There never was any radical Islamic terrorism. There was the CIA who created and funded Al Qaeda.
1:40:16 The Mujahideen in Afghanistan, ISIS, all of that, those are all just creations of the CIA to make us appear like they're all of these people over there hate us. It was all just bullshit. Peacekeeper. Yeah. Chime in on that. I've got a file. I call it my because I've been researching it for, you know, 30, 20, 30 years. But I've got a file. It's called the plan. Well, when you go, what you're talking about is it goes all the way back.
1:40:53 Somebody mentioned the trust. If you research the trust of, I think it was 1214 in England and Europe, there was a trust that was put in. And that's what those trusts, I use the analogy, it's like a frog jumping from petal to petal. And those petals are centuries. So each century they jump to a certain trust to keep their control in place.
1:41:21 Well, just like we were talking about, North Korea was the same thing. Kim Jong-il was actually controlled by CIA. That's why Donald Trump made a big point to him being the first president to step into North Korea. That's not true. He was the first president, but he wasn't the first American. The reason why we stopped at the 38th parallel was to create a new boogeyman, the North Korea. Well, that's his...
1:41:50 Like what you just said, Colonel, that when Donald Trump stepped over and actually had communication with Kim Jong-un, that told you right there that his controllers were no longer in control. Basically, Donald Trump told him, I mean, I wasn't there, but just by all the pieces I put together.
1:42:11 It was almost like Donald Trump stepped across the line and said, you are no longer under control. Correct. Basically, you'll be a free society. You can do what you want with it. But that's why Donald Trump has always made comments about, just like you were talking about all the generals and stuff. That's why he always makes a comment about the TV generals. He said, I got the real generals behind me, not these TV generals.
1:42:37 What he's talking about is just like in business. You don't have to control the janitor. All you got to do is control the CEO. If you've got your guy at the top of the food chain, then everybody else has to follow in line. And military is real bad about it.
1:42:54 And you just got these upper echelon. That's why the Q post said there's more good than bad. There's more good people in the military and in government and in business than there are bad. We got to get the ones at the top out. I agree with all of that. All right. With that, I got to go so I can run to dinner. I appreciate everybody being here. This is probably one of my favorite spaces we've had. Thank you all for being in here. I appreciate it.
1:43:25 You guys all have. Oh, well, hold on. One leg Patriot. You go ahead and you can close this out. I just came in here to say hi. Cause I haven't, I haven't talked to you in a little bit. So I saw in stellar. How are you doing? Just want to say hi. That's all I want. Well, thank you for coming in and saying hi. I'm glad you're here. Yeah. I haven't seen you. I haven't talked to you in a while. Yeah. I've been, I've been.
1:43:54 Head in the school books. Okay. What are you going to school for? I haven't been on a space in a minute. What are you going to school for? Cybersecurity. My main is ethical hacking. Oh. Well, look at you. Yeah, that's way above my pay grade. That makes my eyes glaze over. But we love having the kids on the side. Yeah. All right. Well, I won't keep you any longer. I just want to say hi. That was it. All right. Thank you for being here. Yep. Have a good night.
1:44:27 We do this every day, four o'clock, Monday through Friday, unless I'm traveling, then we'll skip a few days. But again, thank you all for being here. Appreciate it. Great conversation. And we'll be back tomorrow at 4 p.m. See you then. Enjoy dinner. Thank you.

Entities here

George H.W. Bush38China25CIA25William Colby20Richard Nixon17Ted Shackley17PepsiCo15Gerald Ford13Chile10Operation Gladio10U.S. Navy10A Is for Alibi10Richard Helms9Soviet Union9Nugan Hand Bank9United States8Salvador Allende8James Jesus Angleton7Frank Church7World Anti-Communist League7Iran6Robert Kennedy assassination5Kerry Committee Senate investigation5Chauncey Holt5Vanguard Group5Vietnam5Watergate scandal5Mitch Werbell5Rockefeller5Cuba4Church Committee4Paul Helliwell4Is This a Self-Portrait of a Scoundrel?4Australia4Donald Trump4John F. Kennedy4Saudi Arabia4Laos4Korea4Assassination of Salvador Allende3

Claims made here

William Colby headed CIA book_quoted ▶ 3:34
“This starts out with President Nixon's appointment of William Colby in September of 1973 as the new CIA director. And about him, let's see, and his relationship with Ted Shackley and all of the associ…”
Richard Nixon appointed William Colby book_quoted ▶ 3:34
“This starts out with President Nixon's appointment of William Colby in September of 1973 as the new CIA director. And about him, let's see, and his relationship with Ted Shackley and all of the associ…”
Donald Gregg member_of CIA book_quoted ▶ 3:34
“This starts out with President Nixon's appointment of William Colby in September of 1973 as the new CIA director. And about him, let's see, and his relationship with Ted Shackley and all of the associ…”
Bernie Houghton recruited CIA book_quoted ▶ 4:03
“Vice President Bush's office running the Iran-Contra as his national security advisor. Also is Tom Klein, Bernie Houghton. If you guys remember Bernie Houghton, he's the guy that was a CIA asset agent…”
George H.W. Bush appointed Donald Gregg book_quoted ▶ 4:03
“Vice President Bush's office running the Iran-Contra as his national security advisor. Also is Tom Klein, Bernie Houghton. If you guys remember Bernie Houghton, he's the guy that was a CIA asset agent…”
Michael Hand founded Nugan Hand Bank book_quoted ▶ 4:28
“contamination of all of our service men as they went on R&R break in Australia. And also Mike Hand, who was a CIA asset, who also ends up as the hand part of Nugent Hand Bank. So all of these people a…”
Michael Hand recruited CIA book_quoted ▶ 4:28
“contamination of all of our service men as they went on R&R break in Australia. And also Mike Hand, who was a CIA asset, who also ends up as the hand part of Nugent Hand Bank. So all of these people a…”
Bernie Houghton founded Nugan Hand Bank book_quoted ▶ 4:28
“contamination of all of our service men as they went on R&R break in Australia. And also Mike Hand, who was a CIA asset, who also ends up as the hand part of Nugent Hand Bank. So all of these people a…”
William Colby mentored Ted Shackley book_quoted ▶ 4:56
“when he was suicided in his Mercedes down in Australia. Colby was the attorney, the staff attorney for Nugent Hand Bank. So Colby clearly looked at Shackley as a future director at some point in the f…”
William Colby member_of Nugan Hand Bank book_quoted ▶ 4:56
“when he was suicided in his Mercedes down in Australia. Colby was the attorney, the staff attorney for Nugent Hand Bank. So Colby clearly looked at Shackley as a future director at some point in the f…”
Operation Trade Winds exposed Castle Bank & Trust book_quoted ▶ 5:21
“Shackley's job as head of the Far East Division included taking care of his friends from Vietnam and Laos. What made it possible was the collapse of Paul Helliwell's banking empire in the Bahamas, and…”
Paul Helliwell founded Castle Bank & Trust book_quoted ▶ 5:21
“Shackley's job as head of the Far East Division included taking care of his friends from Vietnam and Laos. What made it possible was the collapse of Paul Helliwell's banking empire in the Bahamas, and…”
Ted Shackley headed CIA book_quoted ▶ 5:21
“Shackley's job as head of the Far East Division included taking care of his friends from Vietnam and Laos. What made it possible was the collapse of Paul Helliwell's banking empire in the Bahamas, and…”
CIA funded Nugan Hand Bank book_quoted ▶ 6:18
“So by the early 1970s, the CIA needed another bank. And we know that that ended up being Nugent Hand and BCCI. Shackley and Colby turned to two of their Laos colleagues, Houghton and Hand. Nugent Hand…”
Frank Nugent founded Nugan Hand Bank book_quoted ▶ 6:51
“Mike Hand was a soldier. Neither had much in their background as far as banking goes, but they still managed to form this shadowy bank. And that was true with Helliwell as well. Helliwell was a lawyer…”
Michael Hand founded Nugan Hand Bank book_quoted ▶ 6:51
“Mike Hand was a soldier. Neither had much in their background as far as banking goes, but they still managed to form this shadowy bank. And that was true with Helliwell as well. Helliwell was a lawyer…”
Edwin Wilson recruited CIA book_quoted ▶ 7:20
“and were used to fund businesses as covers for intelligence operations. Nugent Ham was very much like the Heliwell Bank, just on a bigger scale. Bernie Houghton, who had provided similar services to t…”
Bernie Houghton member_of Nugan Hand Bank book_quoted ▶ 7:20
“and were used to fund businesses as covers for intelligence operations. Nugent Ham was very much like the Heliwell Bank, just on a bigger scale. Bernie Houghton, who had provided similar services to t…”
Dale Holgren member_of Air America book_quoted ▶ 7:49
“In Taiwan, for example, Nugent Han's bank manager was Dale Holgren, H-O-L-M-G-R-E-N, who, before going to work at Nugent Han, had been the manager of flight services for Civil Air Transport in Air Ame…”
Dale Holgren member_of Nugan Hand Bank book_quoted ▶ 7:49
“In Taiwan, for example, Nugent Han's bank manager was Dale Holgren, H-O-L-M-G-R-E-N, who, before going to work at Nugent Han, had been the manager of flight services for Civil Air Transport in Air Ame…”
Frank Church headed Church Committee book_quoted ▶ 8:43
“Richard Helms was so feared in Watergate was because he believed that the involvement of the CIA in Nixon's activities could cause a major congressional investigation into the CIA that would lead to t…”
Richard Helms headed CIA book_quoted ▶ 8:43
“Richard Helms was so feared in Watergate was because he believed that the involvement of the CIA in Nixon's activities could cause a major congressional investigation into the CIA that would lead to t…”
William Corson member_of Church Committee book_quoted ▶ 9:09
“William Corston began advising the Church Commission on how to ask for information from the CIA to avoid the ever-ending stonewalling. Corston said, quote, it was obvious that Frank Church wasn't real…”
James Jesus Angleton headed CIA book_quoted ▶ 10:32
“William Colby, who had his share of covert secrets to protect, tried to appease Congress. But what the public and Congress did not know was that James Angleton's massive mole hunt was underway. The hu…”
William Colby removed_from_power James Jesus Angleton book_quoted ▶ 11:02
“be bore out with the exposure of several moles. But Colby and other CIA officials began to attack Angleton, which resulted in his dismissal by Colby in December of 1974. This, combined with Watergate,…”
Safari Club traded_network_to Richard Helms book_quoted ▶ 11:02
“be bore out with the exposure of several moles. But Colby and other CIA officials began to attack Angleton, which resulted in his dismissal by Colby in December of 1974. This, combined with Watergate,…”
James Jesus Angleton asserted William Colby book_quoted ▶ 11:29
“James Angleton said before his death that Colby destroyed counterintelligence, but because Colby was seen by Shackley and Helms as having betrayed the CIA to Congress, they simply began working with o…”
CIA ordered_assassination_of Salvador Allende book_quoted ▶ 14:28
“and resulted in his assassination. Helms, as DCI, lied about the CIA's role. Helms' testimony laid the foundation for an all-out assault on the spy agency he claimed to admire, because he not only lie…”
Richard Helms covered_up CIA book_quoted ▶ 14:28
“and resulted in his assassination. Helms, as DCI, lied about the CIA's role. Helms' testimony laid the foundation for an all-out assault on the spy agency he claimed to admire, because he not only lie…”
Otis Pike member_of U.S. Congress book_quoted ▶ 14:55
“After Watergate deposed Richard Nixon, the news emerged that the CIA had spied domestically since at least the Johnson administration. Congressman Otis Pike of the House Intelligence Committee began t…”
Gerald Ford appointed Roderick Hills book_quoted ▶ 14:55
“After Watergate deposed Richard Nixon, the news emerged that the CIA had spied domestically since at least the Johnson administration. Congressman Otis Pike of the House Intelligence Committee began t…”
Gerald Ford appointed Nelson Rockefeller book_quoted ▶ 15:51
“It was clear to me that they were holding back not only from Colby, but from the president. Ford felt enough political pressure that he appointed Vice President Nelson Rockefeller to head a commission…”
David Rockefeller financed_via Chase Manhattan Bank book_quoted ▶ 15:51
“It was clear to me that they were holding back not only from Colby, but from the president. Ford felt enough political pressure that he appointed Vice President Nelson Rockefeller to head a commission…”
Frank Church removed_from_power Edward Koch book_quoted ▶ 16:49
“A Democrat, the director of operations, might have escaped unscathed. But Church refused to let Corey testify about wrongdoing in Chile, starting with the Kennedy years. Instead, Church wanted Corey, …”
Edward Koch exposed Harold Green book_quoted ▶ 17:19
“asking him to investigate high U.S. officials for crimes concerning Chile. Levi, a highly moral man, at once sent the Corey letter to the criminal division of the Justice Department. The result, the C…”
Edward Levi member_of U.S. Department of Justice book_quoted ▶ 17:19
“asking him to investigate high U.S. officials for crimes concerning Chile. Levi, a highly moral man, at once sent the Corey letter to the criminal division of the Justice Department. The result, the C…”
Edward Koch exposed Richard Helms book_quoted ▶ 17:19
“asking him to investigate high U.S. officials for crimes concerning Chile. Levi, a highly moral man, at once sent the Corey letter to the criminal division of the Justice Department. The result, the C…”
Edward Koch exposed Ted Shackley book_quoted ▶ 17:19
“asking him to investigate high U.S. officials for crimes concerning Chile. Levi, a highly moral man, at once sent the Corey letter to the criminal division of the Justice Department. The result, the C…”
William Colby covered_up CIA book_quoted ▶ 17:47
“Corey's letter was far greater threat to the CIA management than any of the headline-grabbing news coming out of the Church Commission. Colby was unwilling to cover up for the director of operations o…”
Richard Helms threatened Henry Kissinger book_quoted ▶ 18:42
“President Ford realized that Colby intended to comply with all requests for information, with the exception of the names of American agents. The establishment, both Republicans and Democrats, now was …”
William Colby removed_from_power James Jesus Angleton book_quoted ▶ 19:11
“B-R-A-D-E-N. Braden remembered Helms saying, quote, if I am going to be charged, then I will reveal Henry Kissinger's role in these operations, unquote, which, of course, he was guilty as hell in the …”
James Jesus Angleton member_of CIA book_quoted ▶ 19:39
“the suspicious counterintelligence chief who had turned the CIA inside out trying to find the Soviet mole. Angleton also served what was known as the CIA Israeli account. So for those of you guys who …”
Ted Shackley attempted_coup_against James Jesus Angleton book_quoted ▶ 20:08
“because they're money laundering this entire time through the Vatican. And Angleton is the one that handled both of those accounts. Over the years, he had built up a very productive and close relation…”
James Jesus Angleton member_of Mossad book_quoted ▶ 20:08
“because they're money laundering this entire time through the Vatican. And Angleton is the one that handled both of those accounts. Over the years, he had built up a very productive and close relation…”
Gerald Ford removed_from_power William Colby book_quoted ▶ 21:03
“Angleton's final departure from the CIA came at about the same time Gerald Ford decided that Colby's open approach to the investigation had to end. Ford fired Colby. But Colby's sudden job loss did no…”
William Colby member_of Reed and Priest book_quoted ▶ 21:03
“Angleton's final departure from the CIA came at about the same time Gerald Ford decided that Colby's open approach to the investigation had to end. Ford fired Colby. But Colby's sudden job loss did no…”
Gerald Ford appointed George H.W. Bush book_quoted ▶ 22:02
“But Donald Rumsfeld and others convinced Ford that the CIA under siege by Ford's attorney general, the last thing they needed was a reformer to head the CIA. Henry Kissinger, who needed someone at the…”
Richard Nixon appointed George H.W. Bush book_quoted ▶ 22:31
“along with the surprise sacking of William Colby. George H.W. Bush's political career had been floundering. In 1970, he had lost the Senate race to Lloyd Benson. As a consolation prize, President Nixo…”
George H.W. Bush member_of United Nations book_quoted ▶ 22:31
“along with the surprise sacking of William Colby. George H.W. Bush's political career had been floundering. In 1970, he had lost the Senate race to Lloyd Benson. As a consolation prize, President Nixo…”
Ted Shackley spied_on William Harvey book_quoted ▶ 31:36
“Shackley had denigrated the legend of Bill Harvey, his mentor, to Robert Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Harvey's CIA career was destroyed. Now, according to Robert Crowley, Wells was getting…”
Donald Rumsfeld appointed George H.W. Bush host_asserted ▶ 32:00
“One other CIA agent was quoted as saying they needed a new faith. And I think, frankly, another piece of personal opinion. But I think one of the reasons they settled on George Bush was it sort of got…”
George H.W. Bush member_of Alibi Club book_quoted ▶ 32:30
“When Bush moved back to Washington, he very much adopted his late father Prescott's approach to his political and social life. George joined all of the exclusive, all-male, all-white clubs, like the A…”
George H.W. Bush headed CIA documented ▶ 32:30
“When Bush moved back to Washington, he very much adopted his late father Prescott's approach to his political and social life. George joined all of the exclusive, all-male, all-white clubs, like the A…”
Prescott Bush member_of Bush family documented ▶ 32:30
“When Bush moved back to Washington, he very much adopted his late father Prescott's approach to his political and social life. George joined all of the exclusive, all-male, all-white clubs, like the A…”
George H.W. Bush succeeded William Colby book_quoted ▶ 34:18
“Along the same lines, he came out to the agency and was sworn in. Quote, Ford came out to the alcove. Colby presided and then got into his old battered up jalopy and drove off into the sunset with a s…”
George H.W. Bush appointed Ted Shackley book_quoted ▶ 35:43
“Naughty was Bush's top deputy. He knew better than to cross the clandestine side where Shackley was firmly ensconced in the CIA. So that it for the material for today. I do want. Oh, my gosh. So.…”
George H.W. Bush member_of Bush family documented ▶ 39:33
“And it's interesting because it goes along the lines with much that I have read about. If you go back and you look at the long history of the Bush family and their ties to the Republican Party, they t…”
Mitch Werbell supplied_arms_to Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 43:25
“And I mean, he's a defense contractor. They were shipping this shit all over the world for the assassins as part of Operation Gladio. And I highly suggest SR-71, if you wouldn't mind posting his Wikip…”
Chauncey Holt member_of CIA caller_asserted ▶ 44:48
“He was actually one of the hobos, supposedly one of the hobos that was in the train car with the Kennedy assassination. He was a CIA operative, and he'd been a CIA operative his whole life. If you do …”
Zapata Oil front_for George H.W. Bush host_asserted ▶ 47:36
“Their geologist had discovered an oil, a potential oil in the Sabata Bay of Cuba. And they just so happen were to believe created a Sabata oil company in order to hide the bush activity. And we have o…”
Zapata Oil trained Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 48:04
“These fake companies that they set up for people to be in charge of when they're actually CIA agents and assets that form these companies. And like you articulated, we did talk about the quote unquote…”
Chauncey Holt covered_up Robert Kennedy assassination caller_asserted ▶ 50:01
“uh in financial trouble the cia came in and bought them out and they said they ran the regular operation down in uh you know first second and third floor but the upper floor what he he him and his cia…”
Freeport-McMoRan financed_via Coup against Salvador Allende host_asserted ▶ 54:18
“the Freeport and PepsiCo out of their comments that we were just reading about them orchestrating the coup of Allende because it was all three of those organizations, PepsiCo, ITT, and Freeport mining…”
PepsiCo financed_via Coup against Salvador Allende host_asserted ▶ 54:18
“the Freeport and PepsiCo out of their comments that we were just reading about them orchestrating the coup of Allende because it was all three of those organizations, PepsiCo, ITT, and Freeport mining…”
Royal Dutch Shell funded Indonesia '65 coup host_asserted ▶ 55:40
“I just put up in the nest, I saw that there is a gas station company giant who's also parent company is Shell, who's doing a Chapter 7 bankruptcy. I guess it was a Chapter 11 at first, but it looks li…”
PepsiCo front_for CIA host_asserted ▶ 58:17
“But for us here, who knows exactly the role PepsiCo plays in assassination attempts and how they have been used as fronts because they're an international company. CIA assets can travel anywhere in th…”
Allen Dulles member_of Sullivan & Cromwell host_asserted ▶ 1:00:23
“Yeah, well, and we've talked about how, you know, George Morgan DeShield was part of Alan Dulles' past when he was working at Sullivan and Cromwell over in Azerbaijan. They'd known each other, George'…”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of Sullivan & Cromwell host_asserted ▶ 1:00:23
“Yeah, well, and we've talked about how, you know, George Morgan DeShield was part of Alan Dulles' past when he was working at Sullivan and Cromwell over in Azerbaijan. They'd known each other, George'…”
Turkey trained Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:02:03
“The overtly attack that was done by NATO on Russia is not a gladio. Now, I will tell you that the killing of 140-some civilians at that theater was 100% gladio. It was trained and exercised in Turkey.…”
Operation Gladio carried_out_attack 2024 Crocus City Hall attack host_asserted ▶ 1:02:03
“The overtly attack that was done by NATO on Russia is not a gladio. Now, I will tell you that the killing of 140-some civilians at that theater was 100% gladio. It was trained and exercised in Turkey.…”
CIA recruited Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:03:01
“While the CIA was in Afghanistan, they recruited Kajikistan and several other Kazakhstan and Afghanis as basically like a Mujahideen kind of apparatus that they much like they did in Colombia. There's…”
Operation Gladio attempted_assassination_of Pope John Paul II host_asserted ▶ 1:03:27
“show up all over the world. One of theirs is the one that tried to assassinate John Paul the Pope when he was shot in St. Peter's. So they show up all over doing all kinds of attempted assassinations …”
Operation Gladio assassinated Patrice Lumumba host_asserted ▶ 1:03:27
“show up all over the world. One of theirs is the one that tried to assassinate John Paul the Pope when he was shot in St. Peter's. So they show up all over doing all kinds of attempted assassinations …”
Richard Nixon member_of PepsiCo caller_asserted ▶ 1:12:36
“And without all of the laundering and all the shady stuff that's going on, you know, a lot of these big things are going to be a lot smaller if that makes any sense. Well, I mean, obviously, I hope yo…”
Standard Oil succeeded Vanguard Group caller_asserted ▶ 1:13:08
“What you were saying, Colonel, is all it was was the Standard Oil and the Rockefeller. That was just the predecessor to BlackRock and Vanguard. What they did was they diversified into different compan…”
Standard Oil succeeded Blackwater caller_asserted ▶ 1:13:08
“What you were saying, Colonel, is all it was was the Standard Oil and the Rockefeller. That was just the predecessor to BlackRock and Vanguard. What they did was they diversified into different compan…”
Netherlands secretly_owned Indonesia '65 coup host_asserted ▶ 1:14:16
“And we saw that probably best played out in the Indonesian coup and how the oil was found. And then the insiders knew and basically the Dutch had the monopoly on it because it was a Dutch colony. But …”
Rockefeller targeted_for_regime_change Indonesia '65 coup host_asserted ▶ 1:14:16
“And we saw that probably best played out in the Indonesian coup and how the oil was found. And then the insiders knew and basically the Dutch had the monopoly on it because it was a Dutch colony. But …”
Richard Nixon ordered_assassination_of Salvador Allende host_asserted ▶ 1:20:14
“Absolutely amazing that he's, hold on a second, he's getting paid by PepsiCo to assassinate Allende on behalf of PepsiCo. And he had in his history the fact that he was a lawyer for PepsiCo, which is …”
DARPA funded Facebook host_asserted ▶ 1:25:13
“and meta, that they pick Zuckerberg, they hand him a DARPA project and say, you're going to pretend like you're in charge of this, and we're going to infiltrate the entire thing with intelligence asse…”
U.S. Navy founded Tor network caller_asserted ▶ 1:27:52
“Um, so do you know about tour network? What about it? You know, I think about it. Oh, that, um, that it was the Navy and I don't know why this is coming to my mind, but, um, yeah, it was set up by the…”
U.S. Navy member_of Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:31:15
“has all fell into some form or fashion part of Operation Gladio and are to be hated and court-martialed as far as I'm concerned, but not a service per se. I mean, if you're inside the military, you ma…”
United States Marine Corps member_of U.S. Navy caller_asserted ▶ 1:32:13
“At the forefront, you've got to realize when the Constitution was written, the only branch of the military that does not need to be reauthorized with the NDAA every two years is the Navy. That's why t…”
East India Company founded U.S. Navy caller_asserted ▶ 1:33:00
“When you're in the Navy and you're in the Army, you bust everybody's balls with their other branches. But at the end of the day, when it comes to shove, we're all under the same banner. Well, the Navy…”
Saudi Arabia stepped_up Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:38:09
“So, yes, I think that that had a lot to do with it, because if you go back in Operation Gladio, especially post-91, Saudi Arabia basically stepped up the corrupt elements of it to usher in the develop…”
Donald Trump released_from_control Kim Jong-il host_asserted ▶ 1:41:50
“Like what you just said, Colonel, that when Donald Trump stepped over and actually had communication with Kim Jong-un, that told you right there that his controllers were no longer in control. Basical…”