Operation Gladio-Vietnam Part 6 Phoenix Program
2:03:40 · ▶ watch on Rumble
Transcript
0:00
Good afternoon, Bridget. Good afternoon. So I feel like I need to do the Where's Waldo every day on whether or not Cousin It's joining us or just listening. I think, I think. Last I checked, she was working. And in fact, yesterday, I think she worked a major day, like 12 hours, something like that. And, you know.
0:30
We'll let whoever comes in. I assume Froggy's back at work as well. So when Stellar gets in here, we'll make her a co-host to help you out. Thank you. So. And everybody, please repost. Please remind everybody as we go. It definitely.
0:56
Getting throttled a little bit, but it looks like for a moment we broke through it again. It happens every time I send out a message and ask people to go find a single post and repost it. It breaks the algorithm for a day or two. And then, you know, slowly they start throttling it back. But I did a...
1:26
interview this morning with Ron Partain and it's up on the Rumble channel. We kind of talked at the 30,000 foot look about 9-11. I mean I didn't get into it's been rehashed a million times. I just put it in perspective of whether or not it fit the profile of a Gladio event.
1:55
But it was a two hour wide ranging conversation about just Gladio in general. So there is a ton of information in there that kind of goes across all of the stuff that we've discovered. So if you have anyone new, using 9-11, because it happened in most of our lifetimes, is a good eye opening.
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way of putting Operation Gladio into context and exposing the intel agencies and many other people. So I would highly encourage you guys to go to the Colonel's Corner on Rumble and watch that interview and then share it. Bring it back over here, post it on your ex profile, post it on your true social profile.
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because it is definitely a good 101 and kind of hits them very... Ron Partain, just so that you guys know, he fashions himself as a historian. And many of the points that I made during this interview, he had never heard of. And you can see...
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At the end, he's like, I'm never left speechless except for when I have you on. So it ended up being a very good show. And I highly encourage you guys to go watch it. Anyway. Oh, there she is. All right. I'm going to bring her up. Good afternoon, Stellar. I sent you a co-host invite if you're available.
4:03
There you go. And we're going to get started. So we kind of left off with some horrific assertions about what the CIA and some of our military special forces were involved in. But today we're going to.
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kind of discuss a little bit further because I want to put it all in one show because it's really not the aiding. So, but I do think it's important for us to know who teaches people how to do this stuff. So when these, what we're, what we're told is gangs like MS-13 or
5:07
the Crips, the Bloods, all of these, and especially the ones that come from Central America, when they come into our country and they do these horrific crimes, we think, because we're programmed to think, that our forces and Americans in general operate at the tippy top of the ethical realm.
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and that we abide by the Geneva Convention. And that's unequivocally not true. And the reason why it's important to understand this is because in reality, many of the people that come here illegally and commit horrific crimes, if you were to trace back the origins of
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where they learn these tactics, in many cases, not all, you are going to go back to the School of Americas. You're going to go back to their graduates having gone back to their home countries. You're going to go back to the Cuban exiles that were deployed into Latin America during the Irene Contra and taught people how to do this very thing. We taught people how to do it in the Philippines.
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And keep in mind, as we said yesterday and before, the Filipinos that we taught how to do this were accompanied Lansdell into Vietnam. He had already trained them to do these things. And they bring them with them.
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The deal got made, and I don't know if you guys know this, but I came across this tidbit as well, that when the Cuban exiles were brought into the United States and trained as assassins, torturers, and kidnappers, and then deployed out all over the world to do, I mean, they blew up a former ambassador in downtown D.C. and killed an innocent civilian in the meantime by blowing up his car.
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These were Cuban exiles. They were told there was a special program the CIA worked out with the Department of Defense that if they enlisted after they were naturalized. So, excuse me, they were made residents through a special program amnesty. And they were they were told that if they enlisted in the army. Now, these are trained assassins, guys.
8:02
If they enlisted in the Army and they served their four-year enlistment, I don't know if you guys know this, but you can be a non-resident and enlist. And during your first enlistment, you have to apply and be approved for citizenship by the end of your first enlistment. If you don't have your U.S. citizenship by the end of your first enlistment, you're not eligible to re-enlist. So then you have to get out.
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So many of these people enlisted and went over to Vietnam and then were taught how to do the Phoenix program and all this other stuff. They came back, got their U.S. citizenship, and then were deployed all over the world as trained assassins, having further received training in Vietnam in programs like the Phoenix program.
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I don't think it's accurate for us to assume some of these hellacious, horrific crimes that are being committed in the United States are 100% by people that have no CIA affiliations. That's a long way of saying that. But I do believe, based on the information that we're learning, we have to go back and question everything. Because literally everything that we've been told is a lie.
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So I just want to preface that because basically this came up in the conversation this morning. And I don't think I emphasize the applicability of these things to our domestic environment. And they are directly linked. OK, so having said all that, we left off where the.
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with these counter-terrorist cells basically going into these villages, assassinating people and removing their liver because of the significance to their religious Buddhist beliefs, and then in some cases, eating it. So, along those lines, not that that's a good thing, in 1964, Manzoni
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was assigned to the Special Operations Group Northern Headquarters in Don Ha. And here's a quote from him. Back then, being as close to the DMZ as we were, it was hard to tell where any particular Vietnamese civilian came from. Unquote. He was referring to the fact that there had been so many changes to these little
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hamlets or villages. And the border between the North and South was so open to people sneaking back and forth that Americans literally had no idea who was who. So Manzoni goes on in a different light and begins talking to
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The let's see. I don't think he was directly interviewed by Doug. So this is a quote that he has provided, obviously. So, quote, we left our calling card nailed to the forehead of corpses that we left behind. They were playing card size with a lot. They were playing cards.
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with a light green skull with red eyes and red teeth dripping with blood. They were set against a black background. That sounds awful. Red and black and green. Isn't that like the... Never mind. We hammered them into the victim's third eye, which is the pituitary gland, with our pistol butt.
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The third eye is the seat of consciousness for a Buddhist. This was a form of humiliation and a powerful psychological effect. Curiously, terror tactics often involve mutilating the third eye, which is the seat of insight and secret thoughts, and plays on the fear of the all-seeing cosmic eye of God, and used by officers during
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World War I, the Eye of God trick called for pilots and small aircraft to fly over enemy camps and call out the names of individual soldiers. Ed Lansdale applied the technique in the Philippines. At night, when the town is asleep, a Psyops war team would creep into the town and paint an eye copied from the Egyptian eye that appears atop the pyramid in the Great Seal of the United States.
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on a wall facing the house of each suspect. This is from Lansdale's writings. Quote, the mysterious presence of these malevolent eyes the next morning had a very sharply sobering effect, unquote. To appreciate this and the mysterious eye of God, it helps to know something of the origins. In Egypt, the eye of God was plucked from Horus.
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sun god with a falcon's head. It was pictured as the morning sun cresting the pyramid. The eye of god represents the dawn of self-awareness and the ego emerged from id and no longer required human sacrifice to overcome a primeval anxiety. Awed by the falcon's sight, talons, and flight,
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The Egyptians endowed Horus with a bird's predatory prowess, so he could avenge the murder his father, Horus, whose name means seat of the eye. Set high atop anything, scanning the earth for the forces of darkness, the falcon as sun god, as manifestation of enlightenment, carries out the...
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work of organization and pacification imposing moral order on earth. The eye of God assumes its mysterious counter espionage qualities through this myth of eternal cycle, the battle of good and evil, in which the gods of darkness can guess the sun god's secret name. They can rob him of his powers and trap him forever in the underworld if they find out his secret name.
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Thus, a falcon emblem was placed above the gates of all Egyptian temples, scanning for the sun god's enemy, while the sun god relied on code names to conceal his identity. Oddly enough, the eye of God was the symbol of Chaldea sect, and we've talked about them throughout this series, whose gallery of saints included Confucius, Buddha, Joan of Arc, Jesus,
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and Victor Hugo. Inside Calde's Cathedral in Vietnam, in the city of Tay Ninh City, the Calde Pope divined upon his seat the secrets of the Great Pyramid. Over the temple door loomed a huge blue all-seeing eye surrounded by snakes and trees.
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For this reason, some people suggest that the Cow Day Eye of God endowed Phoenix, the all-seeing bird of prey, that selectively snatches its prey with its talons. In South Vietnam, the Eye of God trick took on a ghastly twist. CIA officer Pat McGarvey recalled Seymour Hearst that, quote, some...
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psychological warfare guy in Washington thought of a way to scare the hell out of villagers. When we killed a Viet Cong there, they wanted us to spread eagle the guy, put out his eye, cut a hole in the back of his head, and put his eyeball there. The idea was that fear was a good weapon, unquote. Likewise, ears were cut off corpses and nailed to houses so that they knew Big Brother was listening.
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The subliminal purpose of terror tactics was to drive people into an infantile dependency on government. In this sense, CIA psyops experts were not exorcists come to heal Vietnam and free it from communist demons. Their spells were meant to break up society and project its repressed.
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homicidal impulses onto the communists in order to basically break them. So you can see, based on these tactics, and I'm going to use the word, I don't even know what the right word is, milder version of this, a slower, not milder, a slower version of this.
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has descended upon the United States. This is not a mad rush out and do this kind of horrific crimes. But by opening the border and allowing people who have been trained in these terror tactics into the United States, you can see it slowly feeding into the United States. It was, this is another quote from Manzoni, it was all part of the counter terror.
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developed by the ugly American to beat the enemy at his own game. But the communists were not doing this. Not this kind of stuff. Quote, our camp was always separate, talking about the special forces and the CIA. Sometimes a special forces colonel would come by, but very rarely.
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Nang Dong was not populated by the spooky hunter-killer type folks you associate with Green Berets. A lot of them were medical specialists or agricultural specialists and language specialists that worked with the villagers. So the great majority of these particular special forces camps were not hit teams. We were, however, and our camp was separated by the wire in a gate.
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Having these particular hit teams, like Manzoni's talking about, amongst other nonviolent people is part of the psychological approach to this whole thing. Because when one of these teams showed up, you are always kept out off balance because you don't know who it is. But you do know that some of them do this type of thing.
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Now, everyone this is another quote. Now, everyone knows about the airborne interrogation where you take up three people in a chopper, taking one guy and say and talk, but not even allowing him a chance to respond and throwing him out the helicopter. And they literally did that. The next guy you would hook up to some type of booby trap and throw him out and.
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basically destroy his body on the way down. And then the third guy who was the guy that you actually targeted to begin with, you just pick up two strangers in the village to do this shit to in the helicopter. The third guy was your target all along. You've saved him to last. And then as they go on and stay, he talks so fast that sometimes you have to hit him to get him to shut up because he doesn't want.
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what just happened to the other two guys to happen to him. This was another tactic that they used. Having seen the intelligence potential in this way of doing things, they then wanted to deploy it to all of the provinces in South Vietnam. The problem is that the guy may be talking, but you don't know if anything that he's saying is true.
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The guy that we talked about a couple of days ago named Stu Methman, this is a quote from him. He says that he wanted a version of this in all provinces of South Vietnam. The job of standardizing these political action teams, that's what they call them. These are hit squads. They're assassination death squads.
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but they're referring to them as political action teams. Along with counter-terrorists and Chow's census grievance program, all of this collectively was given to the guy, Stu Methvin, to implement. His first steps was to find a permanent home, which to operate out of. Basically,
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Mephin did this with the help of Tran Quoc Bu, B-U-U. He was a very wealthy Vietnamese warlord and a founding member of the Can Lao Party, who in 1954 had headed the CIA-funded Vietnamese Federation of Labor. So see, labor things are fine when the CIA creates them, but if you unionized labor like in Italy or Chile,
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it's considered a communist thing to do because these federations of labor are controlled by the CIA. It's just like an NGO. It's like USAID. So Boo had been charged by them with laundering Can Lao's money through the Federation's foreign account. Boo, however, pocketed the money and bought huge parcels of land, which so often happens.
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When you're dealing with black ops money. So after Dem's assassination, the tables got turned on Boo, who basically was a Dem lackey. And he got imprisoned. And so he needed to buy his way out of jail. So he sold Methvin, the CIA agent, a huge piece of land on a place called Vung Tau.
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Peninsula. V, and Bridget, if you wouldn't mind getting a screenshot of this one, it's spelled B-U-N-G-T-A-U. It is in the very south of Vietnam. And this, if you look at it, is basically somewhat of an island. And that becomes very important.
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Beau's estate had been used by the French as a transshipment point for opium. And there was a terrorist training camp set up there for their Montegard training operation. Beau himself had used Catlo, C-A-T-L-O, as a training camp for his own personal private army.
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made up of re-settled Catholic refugees. You know, the ones we brought from the North? Yeah, those guys. During the day, these guys were shrimp and cinnamon farmers. And at night, they were basically killing squads. Sounds like Gladio to me. So Boo's troops were highly motivated because they were paid well. And with money laundered money, of course.
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And unlike the normal army, they stayed at their posts at night because that was their job. With Powell's consent, Methvin arranged for a CIA contract employee to start training these counter-terrorist units at this island estate. This was a unilateral CIA operation, not legal.
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and with no oversight. It was isolated and accessible only by Air America. Vu Tu was the perfect place for a, they call it a covert action, I'm going to call it Camp Gladio. Vu Tu became the seedbed of the CIA's political cadres, where they trained, they were trained to enter Viet Cong villages.
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and convince the people that the South represented their best interest. And basically, they wanted to arm the citizens, but most of the people in the Vietnamese government, to the extent that they even had a government, were very not okay with this. They didn't want the citizens to have guns.
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And so the Montegards had basically mutinied against many of the special forces officers in at least four districts that they could trace. And that required basically the CIA to go in and deal with these guys because they couldn't have anybody not towing the line the right way.
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So they set up a directorate of political warfare and basically established a non-CIA approved pacification program, almost as if they were going to compete with the CIA. And they had launched a.
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coup that did not work against one of the South Vietnamese generals that they felt was a leftover from the Dinh administration. So, basically, all around them is this disorderly garbage of things falling apart on them. It was like putting band-aids over holes in a 200-year-old ship.
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CIA officer chosen to build the facilities and create a national pacification program that could maintain operations independently of the South Vietnamese Army was fostering local initiatives. And his name was Tom Donohue. D-O-N-O-H-U-E. He basically was from the Chicago area.
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And very integrated into Cook County politics. And people say, describe him like he looked like W.C. Fields. Same mannerism, same kind of personality. So he joined the CIA when he viewed it as a way of kind of stepping up in the hierarchy of who's who in America. That's the reason why he joined.
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So he was the quintessential CIA officer, very calculating. And when the author met him in 1986, Donahue was working as a representative for a Filipino construction company. When he arrived in Saigon 22 years before that during the Vietnam War. So he stayed over there.
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and worked in that area. And many of these people did this, by the way, but not in Vietnam proper necessarily, most of them in Thailand, because we basically had bought off the entire Thai government. Because remember the national police guy, the general, we give him $35 million to give us free access to all of their seaports and airports. So we basically owned.
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like bought lock, stock and barrel Thailand. Maybe that's why there's so much pedophilia over there now. Just a thought. So anyway, when he arrived in Saigon, he replaced a guy by the name of Cliff Strathern. S-T-R-A-T-H-E-R-N.
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And he basically was the chief of covert actions. So he would be over all of this stuff that we're talking about. And Strathairn and his replacement, Donahue, basically worked as if they were a part of the embassy staff in the political office, but they were covert agents, CIA. And this is another thing that we come across every time we look into something.
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The entire State Department staffs and embassies are CIA in some way, shape, or form. There is no difference between the State Department and the CIA. One of his jobs as a part of this CIA embedded in the State Department, Rouge, was a small training camp, the one that we were just talking about, in Bentow.
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And it had about 100 students when he got there. And the guy running it on the Vietnamese side was a guy by the name of Le Xuan Mai. And Donahue says that basically he was like his adopted counterpart there, like he spent all of his time basically with him.
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Learning all about the Vietnamese and why the nationalistic pride that some Vietnamese had, like Ho Chi Minh, posed their biggest problem for them because they didn't want Americans in there to begin with. And Donahue immediately picked up where Methvin had left off, hammering out a deal with the Minister of Interior.
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to rent another chunk to expand their operation down on this island slash peninsula. He then got his counterpart, Mai, M-A-I, a promotion and arranged for him to begin training not just the Vietnamese, but all of the new CIA people coming in as well.
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Donahue says, I decided, quote, I decided this was the route we should be following, and I began looking for a means of expanding the program. I got rid of most of the other stuff I had responsibility for, and from that point on, programming evolved rapidly. We began to build up the program with more and more officers coming in from Washington on permanent change of station. So now they're not even coming in TDY, like temporary duty, like you would.
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During a war, they're like PCSing people in there to stay for years at a time. Donahue leased a Catholic seminary whose owners had decided that it was time to cut and run, or they made sure that they did that. It was really just a, supposedly just a temporary fix, but it gave us the ability to establish a base. Then we started building.
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buildings for our training. This ends up being called Ridge Camp, R-I-D-G-E, and was five miles beyond the airport. So we built roads, we built barracks, mess halls, classrooms, armories, offices, the whole nine yards. So they're setting up an entire base here. We built a base training camp for 5,000 people, and it opened in January 1965.
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So they don't plan on going anywhere, folks. Having put his management team and facilities in place, Donahue next had to demonstrate that the CIA could develop people into these action teams in a quantity necessary for this program to work. To manage the counterterrorism training program, he imported guys from back at Langley and the CIA headquarters.
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They taught how to get in, how to abduct prisoners, how to get the hell out of there, and how to interrogate. He originally had brought them there temporarily, but most of them ended up staying long term. Let's see. And he said many of them ended up staying in the CIA long term as well.
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Donahue's pet program was the thing called the census grievance, the most sophisticated program in the whole country, the most effective political tool if you accept the fact that the government really didn't care what people thought and what their political needs were, unquote. Noting that the Viet Cong had made the problem worse by cutting the lines of communication through skillful application.
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The population had been cut adrift and the census grievance was a system that allowed us to say, quote, we accept the fact that there is no normal political lines of influence. So we'll put this on and hope to God that we can jumpstart a political body. So again, they've got a corpse of a country, a dead body, and they're trying to pump, resuscitate it in some shape or fashion. And I hope.
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this gets driven into you, that this was a dead body from the get-go. And everything that we were ever told, if you go back and you look at the quote-unquote media, the PR from the CIA, they tried to gaslight people in America the entire time. They were lying their ass off. They are trying to resuscitate a dead body by making tens of thousands of dead bodies to include our U.S. military.
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Donna Hugh explained the census grievance program like this, quote, everybody knows the government takes a census. So you'd have a guy make a map of every house in the village, put everything into perspective. Then the edict was issued that once a month, every head of house had to talk to a census grievance officer. We tried to get somebody from the village who was older, retired teachers, civil service, older.
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and someone who appeared harmless, unquote, to make it possible for a head of household to speak privately with a census grievance officer, we would put together a little two-by-four shack patterned off of a Catholic confessional so there's nobody else around. Basically, the census had three questions. One, what would you like for the...
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South Vietnamese army to do for you? Second, well, not army, but just South Vietnamese government. Second, oh, hold on. A continuation of that question. All of the basic precinct needs like a bridge across the canal, blah, blah, blah. Two, is there anybody in the South Vietnamese government
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Giving you a hard time. Are the police at the checkpoints charging you a toll every time you take your wares to market? Number three, is there anything you want to tell me about the Viet Cong? If the answer was no, the whole thing wasn't pursued. But once a month, the head of household had to touch base. If the census grievance officer finds that a certain number of people say that they need a bridge.
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you begin to get a consensus. Okay, money's allocated. If it went to the wrong things, you might as well keep it back here. So the point we would make with the province and district chiefs is this is a political need. If you are responsive to it, people will look at you as the guy actually in charge. The census grievance process also rendered a good bit of intelligence.
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So did the cadre program. But there were areas that were so tough and inaccessible that there was just no intelligence coming out of those areas. And then it says, but we never really had what we thought was a good continuing intelligence network. There were blind spots everywhere. The next problem Donahue faced was how to imprint a political system on a foreign country.
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That was no easy task, even for Tom Donahue. He basically described the province chief as a military officer who was the product of a Mandarin system, a person with total discretion over how money is spent and who couldn't care less what some little old peasant lady said that she needed to have.
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He didn't have a political bone in his body, Donahue said. By the way of comparison, the CIA viewed the chiefs as basically the same problem that they had with the Vietnamese military. They never understood how trying to satisfy those people is like winning the hearts and minds of people.
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Further complicating things was the fact that corruption in the provinces was basically part of the culture. So Donahue spent a good till of his time trying to keep the local parties from using the money that they were giving to their own advantage and not the village people. And it says basically other well-off chiefs that had been able to squirrel away money.
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sometimes came with their own private army, and that posed an even bigger problem for these guys. Donahue said, if you use the province chiefs in the way that they've been trained, we'll feed them, pay them, and equip them. If you decide to do anything else, I will find out, and within 30 days, we'll get them out of there.
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If I decide that you're not using them properly and you're using them as some other purpose, he's going to take care of it. So he's threatening these village chiefs that they needed to work for the CIA, basically. Next, he says that he took people, other CIA officers.
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into some of the bigger provinces and tell them, find a place to live, get some sandbags, and we'll get you some guards, stay alive, and basically manage what I have set up. And these CIA officers were responsible for things like paying the local chiefs.
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getting supplies in and out, and then carrying out, for example, if everybody had a consensus of they needed a bridge, then it was this CIA officer's job to get them a bridge. And to do that, they had created some construction cadres in order to get to work and do some of these things.
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It says we put them on an airplane and send them down to that training base they set up in the south, get them some training for the village chief to try to teach them how to take care of the infrastructure at the senior level that the CIA had already bought and paid for to make sure that they had people that would protect them.
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They also rendered medical care out of that camp. A New York Times reporter by the name of R.W. Apple described in 1965 the Ridge Camp graduation ceremony of one of these groups of paramilitary people. They had an amphitheater, it said, the size of a football field. And they were using...
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wait for it, Filipino trainers, like the ones brought over by Lansdell, to train these people how to be basically gladio operators, for lack of a better word, or Phoenix program operators. They had flags, they had, I mean, it was all pageantry at this graduation, trying to ensure that these people
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did what they wanted them to. And at the end of the graduation, they were issued their black pajamas uniform to wear on these covert missions. And basically they were whipping them up into a sense of heightened, you know, kind of like what they do to our military here, like the whole.
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patriotic, you're part of this mission, when the mission's not necessarily good and like they do to us, right? Because that's kind of what we, that psychological garbage has been for us to be clapping seals every time our government tells us they want to take us into another war, which is something obviously we need to guard against because that's obvious. We're watching it. We're going through this and we're watching them do it and how they do it.
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So, of course, the South Vietnamese government was really not a functioning democracy. It was a military dictatorship, which was opposed to the independence not only of the South, but of the country entirely. And one of the guys that are over there watching all of this happen.
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says, quote, could be curiously compared to the Soviet Union with the Armed Forces Council as the Supreme Soviet leadership and the committee leading the nation as a basically like as the president and having a central executive committee as the Soviet government like they had during World War II with commissars.
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And that's basically what they're saying. They elected one of the military generals as being the chief of state, you know, because, of course, they assassinated the president at this point. And in 1965, the National Council of Security was created. And this guy, General Nguyen Cao Cai, K-Y, was placed in charge of it.
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And the guy, let's see, as prime minister controlling the interior ministry, Kai appointed his people to the CIA covert action program and appointed his confidential agent, General Nguyen Ngoc Luong, director of the military security service in June of 1965. He also was the national police guy and the guy in charge of...
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basically their version of the CIA. And he basically became the liaison between the South Vietnamese government and the CIA. So let's see. Frank Scotton would later say that he shied away from anything that happened at that training base.
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because the American hand became too big and because having a fixed complex was uncomfortable. He felt that it needed to be a more impromptu type responsive as opposed to us setting up what, for all intents and purposes, was a permanent military base in South Vietnam because it went against everything that Scott...
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Frank Scott and said it. What's the best way to say it? Our whole message when we went over there is that we were trying to help them set up a democracy and then leave. When you start building permanent bases, it indicates the exact opposite is true. We were the imperialist. We were basically digging in. And he thought.
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That was absolute, even if it was true, and that's what we were, he's not saying that we weren't going to stay there forever if we could. He's just saying you needed to keep up the pretense that we weren't going to do that. And that's a critical difference as far as understanding his comment. He also went on to criticize the development of how everything became routine and the doctrine that was being set up.
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basically began to look like, you're never going to believe this. This is hilarious. It resulted doctrinally a mindset that led to the rural construction programs being compared with Hitler's strength through joy camps. Isn't that what Kamala Harris was just saying we were going to do? Strength through joy? Yes. Yes, it is. That's creepy.
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That's totally creepy. And you can find that on the internet. When you put that stuff in, it will even show you like what you're talking about. It totally shows you and it's on Google too. So it's not even being censored. That is crazy. They were copying Hitler's strength through joy camps through the rule construction program set up in South Vietnam.
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And this is from one of the CIA guys. It's a quote from the CIA guy doing it, by the way. Its cadre studied the 98 duties and 11 point criteria and the 12 phases of action. They sang the, and this is a quote, new life Hamlet construction unquote song with its symbolic 12 stanzas.
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98 notes and recited a ritualistic five oaths. Quote, standing before the altar of our fatherland and the national flag, we in the capacity of rural construction cadres take the oath, dot, dot, dot, to remain faithful, dot, dot, dot, to confirmly believe, dot, dot, dot, that cadres are created by people to mingle with the people.
52:04
and to make constant efforts in study in order to progress in behavior, education, and techniques, unquote. This is frickin' scary as shit. Scotton's biggest complaint, however, was that the shift from intelligence and displacement to civic action. The change took place in 1965, and of course, now keep in mind, this is under LBJ, because, right?
52:36
JFK is gone in 63. LBJ gets reelected in 64's election. And that was his one term from 64 to 68. And he starts right at the beginning of his term in 1965 implementing Hitler's agenda in Vietnam.
53:03
So when Robert Kelly joined the CIA and took his team of instructors to duplicate this program in other provinces, a guy by the name of Harry Monk, M-O-N-K, took over Ben Dem province and began working as a case officer to one of the local majors. He had basically been a former insurgent.
53:34
And from the Viet Cong, he is said by these CIA people over there that he was basically a visionary and wanted the rural construction to be more than an attack on the Viet Cong. He wanted to provide services to the people as well. And basically perceiving that the political action teams were a little too American, he retrained his people.
54:03
who were graduates of their little camp down there. And with the help of Monk, combined mobile census grievance cadres and political action teams and counterterrorism teams and came up with 59-man revolutionary development team program. So these 59-man revolutionary development teams had group leaders. They were taught psyops, intelligence.
54:33
medical stuff and they were three 11-man teams consisting of action elements using a counter-terrorist mission. They were broken further down into six-man civic actions teams, mobile grievance teams, and placed under an intelligence officer. There were also a six-man economic unit.
55:02
So his teams were called Purple People Eaters by American soldiers in reference to their clothes because they decided to wear purple clothes. The locals referred to them as Idiot Birds. I'm with the locals. Scotton is quoted as saying, be this guy.
55:28
was trying to create a climate to make the Viet Cong blunder into ambushes and fear the unpredictable, unquote. His goal was to neutralize the Viet Cong, but his style was basically to be nice to them, giving gifts and lure them in, get them to rat out their superiors and then pounce on all of them. So Scotton said,
55:59
B was like an older brother to me and had basically gotten to know all of Scotton's kids. So he became very good friends with him. And let's see. But Scotton was not at all impressed with this rejiggering of things either. He didn't like the way that we were originally doing it. And he didn't like this rejiggered way either.
56:30
So by the middle part of 1965, the CIA was using B's 59-man model as a standard way of doing it. And basically, the Rural Construction Cadre Program was renamed Revolutionary Development Cadre Program. With larger teams and standardization, increased the number of advisors the U.S. needed to provide.
56:57
So Donahue began recruiting military people like a guy by the name of Joe Vaccaro, V-A-C-A-R-R-O. He was a special forces sergeant who was working as a, wait for it, public safety advisor. Because remember, the public safety program is what USAID and AID used.
57:20
That was actually to train people to assassinate and torture each other. But they did it under the guise of public safety. And he says that he thought that the guy looked interesting. And I forgot about this part. They actually assigned him to work for AID.
57:53
So that makes perfect sense because AID is the organization that turned into USAID and you find them in every one of these coups. They're the guys that go in under the guise after they install a dictator under the guise of public safety and basically teach people how to kill each other. That you just can't make this shit up. All right. So he then talks about.
58:23
And I'm not going to bore you guys with it about how they did the training and then goes on to say where the CIA was running a political program in a sovereign country. There's nothing sovereign about Vietnam at this point. You've like totally destroyed it where they didn't know what the hell we were teaching.
58:48
They were trying to do all the right things, but what kind of program could it be that had only one sponsor, the CIA? That says, and that the CIA was the only person saying that was doing any good, which meant basically that it had to be sinister. Any red-blooded American could understand that. What the hell is a CIA doing running a program on political action? Question mark.
59:19
This is a quote. So I went out to try to get some co-sponsors for the record. They weren't easy to come by. So he goes to the U.S. Information Services chief, which is just another front for the CIA, by the way, Barry, and I'm going to spell his last name, Z-O-R-T-H-I-A-N, Zorthian, and said, hey, Barry, can you give us someone?
59:49
And he goes on to tell the guy that he had asked AID to give him someone as well. And Donahue says that it was basically just window dressing. We had the funds. We had the logistics. But we wanted to make it look like more organizations were buying into them doing this than it just being the CIA. So here in America, we would have thought.
1:00:17
if we were, you know, being the intended PR audience, that if multiple government offices over there trying to, quote unquote, help the South Vietnamese be a, quote unquote, democracy, that if you could get AID and you could get whatever the equivalent of an NGO and the CIA and the military, the military advisory group, all of them saying,
1:00:47
This was a good idea that it's an easier sell to get the funding and everything else and do it than if it was just the CIA over there saying, yeah, we're training a bunch of terrorists. So that's basically what they're trying to create. And it goes on to say.
1:01:10
that as a way of monitoring the Saigon station in 1965 in August, the special group assigned Ed Lansdale, he's back, as a senior liaison to General Thang, P-H-A-N-G, who instantly advocated transferring the entire Revolutionary Development Program to the Defense Ministry, because of course he's a general and that would make him in charge of it. Ed Lansdale
1:01:38
was an invention of Hubert Humphreys. And the idea was, we did it before, we can do it again. So Lansdale came out two years too late. He brought a lot of his old cohorts because he's not really there to do this. He's there to start the drug networking, by the way. And it says, my boss,
1:02:08
And he names Jordan Gorganson, who had by this point replaced the guy we talked about earlier, De Silva, said, tell them everything. I said, OK. And I spent two and a half hours briefing his full group, Lansdale's, about a week after they arrived. And they said, let's have a joint office. We will have our logistics people put in the office and get you everything that you need.
1:02:39
The Vietnamese counterpart, his name's Chau, C-H-A-U, said to Donovan that he wants to be part of all of this too. But he's the guy that had basically been, he was a crony of Dem. So people kind of looked at him with kind of suspicion.
1:03:08
He ends up getting transferred to the training camp so that they can keep him under watch because they're not sure what to think of him, whether or not he was crooked like them or not. So they're going to put him down on charge of the Vietnamese side of that training camp. And they've got several other people down there. There's a guy.
1:03:32
Um, who was a holdover from when, uh, France was occupying Vietnam. They've got him at that training camp down there. Um, so whole bunch of people down there. Um, and it says I had forced the transfer of Chow down there and it ends up being that, um, Chow was mad. He wanted to be out in the field and being in charge of stuff. Um, so he felt like he'd been fired.
1:04:04
And again, when you're doing something like this in a foreign country and you start making decisions like that and you start pissing off the internal people, do you know how easy it is for him to then go to the Viet Cong and sell your ass out? These are all problematic when you're doing these kind of things. So that's a good place to stop.
1:04:36
pick up where this is going to, tomorrow will be probably the most revealing as to the, because this part in here, when we get to 1966 and after, because we basically got us up to 1965, is where some very interesting activity takes place.
1:05:05
So anyway, let's hand out some mics and see if anybody's got anything they want to say. I'm throwing mics to people who have never had mics or some people that have occasionally had mics. We want your opinion. We want to hear what your thoughts are. And I promise that I will not ask test questions. Don't believe her. Did you have something SR-71? Okay.
1:05:55
I guess my mic's playing games with me again. Colors, what can I say? I did post some stuff out in the blue pill to clarify some of the things you were talking about that hopefully people will take a look at and hopefully find worthwhile. But other than that, Colonel, as usual, you hit it out of the park with Bridget and your team.
1:06:21
It just blows me away. Every time you put something out there, it opens another eye as to what's going on. So thank you all very much. And I'll drop for now. Thank you. And not the penal gland eye either. I just want to clarify. Jillian, go ahead. Hey, you guys do a great job. And thanks for all your hard work because I know it takes a lot of time and effort.
1:06:50
But I love listening to all these spaces. This is kind of not a Gladigo question, but with Vietnam, that was the first war that we used helicopters, right? In battle? I'm probably not saying that the right way. I don't know. I'm pretty sure we had some in Korea, but I can look that up. Yeah.
1:07:19
I was watching a movie, which I know you don't watch movies. So I was going to say, if you watch, we are soldiers. We were soldiers. But I was watching that, and they gave them like a month or two of training and sent them over there just to jump out. I thought it was awful. So now I know that we were there for no good reason, and they were just using them as experiments, the soldiers, you know. And that's kind of the –
1:07:50
Yeah, early 1950s. So that would have been, we were in Korea from 50 to 53. And it says the first use of helicopters was in 1944, which would have been the end of World War II. But it said it was actually used the year the Italians used the first in Libya. Yeah.
1:08:20
But I think Korea was kind of the first significant use, but obviously the entire it was very spotty. So in respect to it being integrated doctrinally into the military operations, you're correct. From a war planning perspective and just so that everybody understands the difference. When when you're in the middle of a war, for example, like.
1:08:48
When new technology comes online, sometimes it's accelerated, classified technology that is going to be mainstreamed in the middle of the Iraq War or the Afghanistan War, where drone warfare came of age. If it comes into play in the middle of an operation, it's very different.
1:09:17
the use of it, then if doctrinally, and that means all of our war plans, if it comes out and it can be incorporated into a planning so that when you first go into war, you're using all of the technology that you have on the shelf at that time, it's hard in the middle of a war to
1:09:45
incorporate new technology because you haven't trained on it. You haven't integrated it into how you conduct warfare. And so the application of it is subpar because you don't even know all of the capability of it yet in a warfare scenario. So it's very important to look at things where
1:10:13
If I throw helicopters in halfway through the Korean War, they're not going to be optimally used, where if I have, and we didn't have a whole long time, but a few years where we were just there, bits and pieces.
1:10:28
in the 50s, but I didn't really go into technical operational capacity where I'm deploying massive amounts of people and machinery until the 60s, I have already had enough opportunity to practice, train, and revisit our doctrinal use of a new piece of equipment so that when I go to war in Vietnam for the first time massively, on a massive scale,
1:10:56
I'm incorporating helicopters into the entire field of operations. We would not have had that in Korea, just in Vietnam, as you pointed out. I was just curious. Thank you for that. I thought I had another question, and I've lost it. Well, keep your speaker and your mic, and if you think of it, just pipe back in. SR-71? Yes. Thank you, Colonel.
1:11:25
There is one thing I wanted to add out of all of this. What I don't believe a lot of people understand at this point in time is World War II was a declared war. And ever since then, and according to the U.S. Constitution, Congress has to declare war. To date, these are not declared wars. These are conflicts.
1:11:58
of which many servicemen and women have died without a declaration of war. We were actually fighting in Vietnam. We were fighting in Iraq. We're fighting everywhere against the rule of the Constitution. How we as people put up with that, I just don't understand. Thank you, Colonel. Sure. And that's a very important. So if you guys.
1:12:27
have not realized it. And I made a post yesterday that basically alludes to this. The three branches of government that we have, Congress has basically advocated every responsibility they have. They haven't passed a budget, which is basically their only real job on an annual basis in over a decade. It's been forever.
1:12:57
They do continuing resolutions and that allows them to not do their job, their job of declaration of war. They've abdicated that and they fund the not doing their job on a separate line item. So in case you don't know this, this is very important. A budget that goes over to the Department of Defense.
1:13:24
has no money in it for a war because they're not supposed to be at war because there's no declared war. The only way they can stick money in a budget that goes over to the DOD is if it's an actual approved thing. So they have no declaration of war, so they can't fund it in an actual budget. But by having continuing resolutions,
1:13:54
And doing a supplemental to the continuing resolution, which is like not doing my job, not doing my job again. They are able to fund as a separate line item, a contingency, which is a whole made up bullshit thing, as a way of in running their responsibility of a declaration of war. So they have a special line item for contingency funding.
1:14:22
That they throw all of the money to do actual, quote unquote, war activity, which is all unconstitutional, as you point out. Every bit of that that I just described, not only is it unconstitutional for them for all of these years to not have a budget because it's their only fucking job to pass a budget. They've also delegated their responsibility for the control of the currency to the Federal Reserve.
1:14:51
That was unconstitutional, too. That is their job as it's called out in the Constitution. And we as a society has allowed them to get away with that as well. Miles, go ahead. Good afternoon, Colonel. It was interesting. A few years ago, I met this guy and around my age, really nice guy. His name was High. And I was talking to him and he goes, oh, you know, I was on.
1:15:25
Life magazine. And I was like, well, why were you on Life magazine? He was Special Forces in Vietnam. He's Vietnamese. And he got on Life magazine for some of the stuff he was doing over there. But he wouldn't talk about certain things, even till today. He will not talk about some of the stuff that he did in Vietnam. Of course, you know, they brought him over after the.
1:15:56
the conflict was over. I just wanted to point that out, that there's quite a few of those people that you're talking about over here now. You brought up a really good point this morning about missing money from the Pentagon. I don't know if you talked about that, but as far as, you know, it gets spent, but it's the missing equipment. Maybe you haven't talked about this.
1:16:25
I have throughout this series. I haven't in the last week or so, but I have mentioned that. I posted about it. That's a really good point that you brought up about that. And one last thing. I'm really glad. Okay. Hold on just a second, Miles. I want to explain that to people. Since you brought it up.
1:16:54
I worked in the Pentagon on budgets for two years. And the way the process works is that the Congress, back then they actually did an appropriation and an authorization bill and passed a budget. Probably one of the last times they did it. But there's two bills that have to be passed every year.
1:17:24
for the Defense Department to spend any money. One is an authorization act. It authorizes you to do certain things, like buy C-130s, and then they separately give you the money to do what they authorize you to do. So if they authorize the GI Bill, but there's no money appropriated for it, you can't do the GI Bill. If they authorize you to buy five helicopters, but they don't give you any money to buy it,
1:17:53
then you can't buy them, even if it's in the authorization bill. Very, very important. And they do this to screw with people. They will authorize something to make their constituents think that they actually did it, but they didn't put any money in the line item for it, and therefore they didn't actually do it. So that's just something that you need to be aware of. Secondly, if they authorize and appropriate the money to buy 100
1:18:24
During war, there's a thing that's called attrition. We don't lose a lot of aircraft. And when it is easier, I'll just say this, it's easier when you have deployed capability. So I have, let's just say I have 100 C-130s. And because I'm in the middle of a conflict, I have...
1:18:54
20 of those 100 deployed forward in, let's just say, Afghanistan. And you guys have heard about the audits that they do. So there's going to be an auditor that goes around and says, OK, there's four here, there's five here, there's 10 here, there's 12 here. And then I have, quote unquote, 20 deployed. So I've accounted for.
1:19:24
oh crap, I only accounted for 90, but we bought 100. Where's those other 10 C-130s? Well, if they're a million dollars each, that's all of a sudden $10 million that's missing. And when they tell you that $1.3 trillion is missing out of the Department of Defense, that does not mean there's $1.3 trillion missing out of the Department of Defense. Because every penny that comes in,
1:19:54
is spent contractually. So if Congress tells the Air Force they have to buy 100 airplanes, they're buying 100 airplanes because Lockheed's going to be the next day at the door knocking, going, where's my contract? Where's my contract? Where's my contract? They just appropriated X amount of money for you to buy 100. Damn it. I'm calling Congress if you don't give me that contract because Lockheed is the C-130 contractor.
1:20:21
They're not going to let you not buy the C-130s, okay? Literally the next day, the Air Force's phone's ringing off the hook. Where's the contract? Where's the contract? So the contract gets let to Lockheed. They get the money. They produce the airplanes. Where's those airplanes go? There's 10 missing. Well, they get sold on the black market because they're quote unquote delivered somewhere on a deployment that they never get there.
1:20:50
They're flown to Timbuktu because they were sold on a black market. And just so that you also know, many of the aircraft, just like the CIA pretends to be military people, it could be the CIA that's stealing this equipment. And so when I look at the fact that they say $1.3 trillion is missing, no, $1.3 trillion is not missing. $1.3 trillion.
1:21:21
Dollars worth of equipment is missing, but they don't want to tell you that. There is $1.3 trillion worth of weaponry floating around the globe fielding Operation Gladio caches of weapons and hardware and everything else. Because one of the things I keep coming across is there were...
1:21:51
contingencies done for operation gladio specifically in africa where they're buying airplanes they're buying helicopters for these things they're buying patriot battery systems where the hell are they getting that shit from they're getting it from the process that i just explained to you well you know how you don't lose shit
1:22:16
when it's all staying inside the United States and not being quote unquote deployed. That's how you don't lose shit. So you understand in order to traffic weapons systems, you actually have to have a contingency that you're quote unquote shipping this shit to for it to be, oh my gosh, it went to Egypt or oh my gosh, it went to Nigeria as opposed to it showing up in the theater where it was supposed to go.
1:22:44
If you're not having a contingency and you don't have any military deployed, you're not going to lose the shit. We are all being lied to. Go ahead, Miles, with your last point. No, I was done, Colonel. Thanks. Benjamin, go ahead. Hi, Colonel. Hi, ladies. Just to add to what you were just saying, Colonel.
1:23:10
I'm a logistics chief, so supply and logistics and audits, you know, that's all the things I did. Research and development, contracting, you know, like you couldn't imagine how easy it is to make something disappear. You know, like I've conducted.
1:23:25
A few hundred audits, you know, throughout my career. And it's like it's very easy for equipment to be gone. And then there's that good old boy system within the military. It's like, you know, like I'll turn my head even though I probably shouldn't. You know, it's it. But that's one of the things that happened happens is it's too easy to make something disappear, you know, because a lot of it is clerical errors that can happen. And those can be reasoned off real easily. You know, everybody throws up the semen salute of I don't know.
1:23:55
What happened? You know, like take a look at Afghanistan. That's the perfect example. Like they knew what they were getting into. They knew they should have got all that equipment out of there way ahead of time. But they they lagged and let it happen on this. So for those of you to piggyback on what Benjamin just said, you guys know that we've lost nuclear weapons, right? Do a search on Minot, North Dakota, and the fact that we actually lost.
1:24:26
quote-unquote lost nuclear weapons in another audit. So I'm here to tell you we didn't lose jack shit. But tactical nukes was part of one of the Gladio operations in the arms dealing network that we have been tracking along with Gladio. Go ahead, Bridget.
1:24:59
I'm getting ready to post the wiki link for the incident you just mentioned. It's just mind-blowing. And I also just wanted to say, you know, like my uncle was in Vietnam. My husband's brother was also in Vietnam. The PSYOP war was not just on the American people. It was also...
1:25:31
on the military that was there. There's a reason why so many of those particular vets came back more PTSD than probably most other wars or conflicts we were involved in. And I've seen it firsthand. And anyway, just as a side note. Yeah, it's crazy.
1:26:02
Go ahead, Sunshine. Bridget, I can almost piggyback off of what you just said. I have several uncles that were in Vietnam, and one in particular was a Marine that went there. And he couldn't get the help from the VA that he needed. I don't know what he was doing over there. I know it wasn't.
1:26:28
very good whatever it was it was it was unspoken of in our family um my uncle could not drink if he drank he he had flashbacks he went to another place my uncle almost killed me as a child um because of one of these and he could get no help whatever he was doing like i said we i i don't know but i know like his job title
1:26:57
was, I don't know, it was janitor or something, you know, but that's not what my uncle was doing. Correct. And he was never able to get the help that he needed. And he was never the person that he was before he left. So many of the reasons why they can't is, I think we covered in one of the earlier shows, was they doctored their
1:27:26
personnel records, if they were there doing a classified mission to indicate that they weren't even there. And so then there's no way for them to get help from the VA. And there's been lots of incidences of stories out there that people found out later that their records had been doctored in order to eliminate.
1:27:55
any mention of them ever being in Vietnam. It's a travesty, absolute a travesty. It really was. I mean, the man was, he was a big man. He was a, after that, I mean, he was a logger, you know, by trade. I mean, he was a big man's man, you know, and the man had lost his mind. And I was with my little cousins. I was like the oldest by many years of all of them. I don't know who or what he thought I was.
1:28:24
But he was ready to drown me in the river. We were camping. And if it wasn't for my other uncles and my stepdad, who they were all big logger, you know, guys. It was just a tragedy. He obviously was having flashbacks. Yeah. Yeah. It was sad to see. Yep. I agree. Bridget, go ahead. I had, you know, again, my uncle had the similar flashbacks. And that's what makes this.
1:28:58
And all this information is so grievous. And my husband's older brother, as I said, went into Vietnam. It voluntarily enlisted, you know, for duty in countries. And because of Agent Oren, ended up in a wheelchair. And eventually, the side effects of Agent Oren caused...
1:29:29
humans to die um but anyway just something to keep in mind you know and these the effects of agent orange have been studied um and they are still in the dirt over there it is still they're still fighting the uh side effects uh children being born with their brains on the outside of their body intestines on the outside of their body i mean it's
1:30:00
truly horrific um agent orange and the other biological experiments and biological things that we did to those people are still the side effects are still happening today it's still happening well there's still unexploded ordnance over there as well we still have a marine eod mission over there um right there they teach in school um
1:30:31
Everybody gets about every six months a refresher. Like we got the drills of getting under our desk when I was a little kid because, you know, any minute we were going to get nuked to scare the shit out of us, kind of like a terror campaign here. The Vietnamese children get an annual, semi-annual refresher on identification.
1:30:59
of unexploded ordnance, what they look like, and the process of notifying and who to notify when they find them to not touch them because they are still there and can still, you know, kill you. And one of the things that came up on the research of this was there was a program, you know, just again to...
1:31:30
kind of tie things from now to then, you know, that this operation is still going on. I mean, even though it goes by different names, even though the situations are different, one of the things that went on was Operation Baby Drops, where they actually shipped and lost countless children.
1:32:01
They scared the people there so badly that they gave up their children. And there are photographs, it's well documented, of babies in boxes inside of these cargo airplanes. Yep. Anyway, just to give you an idea, these, you know, the pedophilia, the child trafficking, the human trafficking, the drug trafficking, this all goes into that same war cycle. And they just, they...
1:32:31
They use terror to get us to react and respond. And the main thing is don't respond. Don't let them use that cattle prod on you. They keep using it because it works. And when it no longer works, then they have to try and think outside the box. Then you've got the upper hand. That's why we're doing this, guys. Yep. Jillian, go ahead. I'll be quick because I know you've got hands. I looked and...
1:33:04
That first air unit they sent with helicopters was also the 7th Cavalry. Wasn't that Custer's? Wasn't he the 7th in the Civil War? I don't know. This is not supposed to go this way, Jillian. You're not supposed to be quizzing me. Never mind. I think he was in the Civil War. But anyway, are you going to do a space on 9-11?
1:33:35
Well, interesting that you asked that. I did a two hour show this morning with Ron Partain about 9-11, but I didn't do it specifically to like the 100 foot level. I did it from the 30,000 foot level of looking at patterns and whether or not it was an inside job versus an outside job. So I posted that on my Rumble page called the Colonel's Corner.
1:34:03
I would suggest go looking at that. And if you, in the future, when we get done with our geography thing, at that point, I can probably go into one that's much more tactically relevant. But I just wanted to keep it kind of at the strategic level in whether or not it fit the pattern. And it definitely fits the pattern. Yeah, yeah.
1:34:32
That's great. Well, I live in what everybody calls Vietnam now. So that's what they call Fayetteville, where Fort Bragg is. Have you ever heard that? Yeah. So anyway, so if you ever want to come and visit and see, no one thinks about, you know, like a lot of the married women, which is fine in Vietnam, and the women came back.
1:35:00
They divorced, you know, so we've got a big Vietnamese and Korean population, which is good. But I just had never heard that I worked for Delta Airlines. So it was like, Vietnam, what do you mean? Yep. I definitely heard that. I'm sure you have. All right. Thank you so much. Sorry for the crazy questions. Sure. Stella, go ahead.
1:35:27
So because I have learned so much from Operation Gladio and from you, Cousinet and Bridget, you know, I make little comments and stuff. And then I see all I'm starting to see all these people saying that communism is good. And, you know, we're not, you know, because they're trying to make it like, you know, Trump is a communist, which he's not because they do their projections and stuff like that. And then so.
1:35:53
understanding what is going on in this information war. I just wanted to thank you guys for teaching me and showing me more than what there really is. And so now I'm responding that Kamala Harris and that Walls dude are the actual communists and the controls. And what we're trying to do is expose that.
1:36:15
So last night I went into a space and understanding all of these things, the pedophilia, like you guys were saying, is all a part of these operations and their way of making money because that's what they do. Found out that even within our own hospital systems, the immigrants that are going in, kids are having babies at 9, 10, and 11 years old.
1:36:39
the diseases and stuff. But more importantly, these people are seriously terrified because of, you know, what they've gone through that they don't trust us, but they're not being brought into the hospitals until they're five to even 10 centimeters dilated. Now they have rotating men coming in and out and they all say that they're baby daddies. And so
1:37:02
Even before the mom is being released, these babies are being taken out of the hospitals and disappearing. So they're doing it. So not only with the cities, you know, that are compliant, not stopping this stuff from happening and letting these gang members take over like in Aurora and other towns that are happening now throughout our country.
1:37:22
But if you guys start looking at what's going on, you know, because like SafeNest and those different things, DHS, maybe those things are being exposed more. You know, now they're doing it. They're literally being as brazen as going in and taking the babies before the moms are released. Moms are trying to commit suicide, but they're terrified and committing. So just to let you know that, you know, this is the kind of stuff that if it had not been for you guys exposing it.
1:37:46
and understanding that, you know, this other faction of evil things happening is all a part of it, if that makes any sense, you know, with the, you know, the human trafficking, the Golden Triangle, all the different stuff you've exposed with Operation Gladio. And this project, our Phoenix project, is so happening here.
1:38:06
And the propaganda or lie machine is completely, what do you call, militarized or weaponized against the people. So thank you so much for everything you share. That's all I just wanted to say. Thank you. Miles, go ahead. Colonel, it was nice to see you back on Ron's show. He's a nice guy and he's a wealth of knowledge. You did bring up a really good point about, you know, Operation Phoenix and Stella just brought it up again.
1:38:36
about how we're living that right now on a non-kinetic level after 9-11. So you kind of folded that into your talk about 9-11. But I did want to ask you a question. John and Zach on Baseless Conspiracies are doing a series on...
1:39:00
The octopus murders. And when I was listening to that, I had my Gladio glasses on. And I was like, whoa, wait a minute here. This could be connected to what you're. No, it is. So this is my frustration. And I love John Harold. I love all the Badlanders. I've been on Zach's program. They know that that's Operation Gladio. The octopus that.
1:39:29
Costolero is talking about is Operation Gladio. He didn't know the name of it, which most Americans don't because most Americans have never lived in Europe and understand what they went through. And the fact that it was revealed over there and that it traces back to NATO and all the stuff that we've covered here at Nauseam. The octopus is the Enterprise is Gladio. It's all the same thing.
1:39:58
And I did see that they had, I think it was, was it last night that they had the first show or night before last? Whenever it was. Yeah, for sure. Three part series. So my frustration, and I will just share this with you because we're all a family now, is that.
1:40:24
There's no one that has put out more information about this. And I did a whole long series post about Casalero and some of the things, the points that he made and the background of people that he had dealt with. So if we're going to talk about this as a community, and I've written articles for Badland, they know that.
1:40:52
I mean, the last meeting that they just had in South Dakota is where they unveiled those glasses. So we're all on the same team. But for some reason, they don't act like we're all on the same team. And that part of it has been very frustrating. I was on a space, Stellar, were you on that space the other day where I had never been on?
1:41:21
I can't even remember the guy's name now. Um, but there were like the two co-hosts and him, um, both of the co-hosts have their own shows and everybody was going, oh my God, oh my God, this information is so crazy. I've got to have you on my show. Do you remember that? It was just like maybe three or four days ago. I think you came and joined. Um, yes, yes. Okay. Do you know not a single one of those people has contacted me? Are you kidding? No.
1:41:54
And that's what I'm saying. Everybody acts like this information is, oh, my God, it's groundbreaking. And you have a grasp of it. I cannot tell you the number of people that have then said, oh, my God, you've got to come on my show. Not a single one of them ever follows up on it.
1:42:21
And Bridget and I reached out to every single person that she could find. She did it. She did all the work for the USS Liberty to get them to come on and talk to me because I know stuff they don't know. I know stuff that they have not even talked about because I don't think they know about Gladio. And I called every single one of them. I emailed every single one of them. I talked to the guy that lives on Polly Island, which is one of them. And none of them.
1:42:50
Followed up and they go on every other show and say, oh, yeah, if anybody wants me to be on their show, I will. They will not come on my show. So I find it very and I don't know if it's because I mean, they call out the CIA. They call out Israel's role in the bombing of the USS Liberty. I don't know what it is, but.
1:43:17
There seems to be a collective shying away from this topic for some reason. And I don't know what the reason is. Alicia, go ahead. OK, so first off, I just want to thank you, Colonel, for what you're doing, because I know that Stellar has been very concerned about, you know, like whether or not anyone is really informed and really working on solving a problem.
1:43:48
you know, that we are very aware of and that a lot of people don't think that we're aware, but we are. And we're fighting on all fronts. And as far as the human trafficking, I'm trying to figure out why, you know, number one, California is saying this is just a misdemeanor. No, like no human should be for sale. This is the United States of America. Okay. And this is, we were supposed to be born free. Okay. That's the first thing.
1:44:17
And second off, I'm fighting also a different war that I have three different X channels. And we are actually working on another way for people to be able to communicate because of the severe attack of the trolls.
1:44:37
So many people out there that are sitting at their home alone and they just feel hopeless and depressed because of all of the PTSD and all of the information war is so thick. But the thing that I try to do is really keep an eye on our people. So the women that are depressed at home, check in on them.
1:45:04
Do what you can. Check in on your vets. And anybody that feels like they don't have a voice, we need to make sure that they have that. And I just want you guys to know that we are working on that. We've actually built another avenue for people to collect other than on Zoom. And you can just come in and talk whenever you want. We're keeping up with world events. No issue is off topic.
1:45:32
But we want everyone to have a voice because we want to keep track of our people. So this is another mission that we have. There are people that are very aware of what's going on. We're aware of the mental warfare. And the biggest thing is that we don't want people to end up with PTSD and feel like they're hopeless and then lose their children, you know, whether it's to DEI, you know, training and this transgender thing.
1:45:59
or to the system or whatever it might be. We're doing what we can to keep track of our women and children. And everybody's staring at the world stage. And I want to remind everybody also to keep an eye on your local elections, because I know how the deep state works. And I know how those commissioner seats, you know, I call them musical chairs, but, you know, all these appointees and stuff.
1:46:27
When there ends up being an open seat on those commission awards or on the school board, then when there's an open seat, there's going to be someone appointed. So I just want you guys to also keep an eye on that. We have to keep an eye on every level, not only of our people, but of our government. And another thing, just the last thing, as my boyfriend is a licensed U.S. journalist, we have taken down.
1:46:55
five out of six of Ron DeSantis' appointees in Manatee County. And we have also brought someone to justice in Colorado just by doing our stories that we don't care if the deep state punishes. They've already punished us. They hate us. They've taken everything from us. And we don't care. We will put out those stories and we will be on the front lines for the people.
1:47:23
And I just want to let you guys know that it seems like nobody cares because everybody is fighting this information war. But I want you also to know, like, if you ever, you know, I don't have the blue checkmark, but if you ever DM me. Hi, Alyssa. SR71 and I were in your space on Saturday or whatever day it was.
1:47:48
Oh, thank you guys for all your support. And if you follow, Alyssa, Alyssa, I don't mean to be rude, but Colonel Tanner does these spaces for us to learn about Operation Gladio and stuff.
1:48:03
Um, so we're going to go back to that right now, if you don't mind, because we're on topic and we've got hands up. So, um, go ahead and put your information down in the purple pill and we will address it afterwards. But right now we're going to stay focused. Thank you. But yeah, I just want to let you guys know that I'm on the, I'm on the ground and I'm keeping an eye on every person and the effects of what you're talking about. Okay. Alyssa, please.
1:48:28
Put your information down there so that I can repost it and ask people to follow you. All right. Thank you, guys. Love you. Sure. Absolutely. Love you, too. Benjamin, go ahead. Thank you. Just for me, like with all this going on, I'm not worried about what's going to happen. You know, it's going to be what it's going to be. I can only control so much, you know, so that's why I do what I do. You know, to me, it seems like all the signs are pointing to.
1:49:01
you know, that were pointed in the right direction. You know, a lot of what's been happening over the last few years is that, that with them for everybody, what's in it for me, you know, why should I care kind of thing, you know, and a lot of, a lot of things have been uncovered and unveiled, you know, for the American public to see, you know, the types of things that have been going on behind the scenes for a while. You know, all I can say about that is, you know, I wouldn't worry. It does you no good, you know, that.
1:49:29
That's what brings you down, and that's when you don't think properly. If anything, build people up, encourage people, give people information, do the things that you can do. Stay in your swim lane, branch out if you can, but reach out to as many people as you can. I talk to people all the time around town. When this all started happening at 20, my...
1:49:53
My old lady and my kids, they looked at me like I had like 10 heads or something, because some of the stuff that I was saying was just bonkers to them. They had never heard it before. But more and more throughout this process of me walking around and chit-chatting with people all around, because we go around a lot. We're a big family. I try to keep them moving and grooving and out doing things. So I talk to people all the time. And when my kids started noticing a lot of these people,
1:50:23
that are strangers are saying the same things their father is. It's like, okay, okay. Let me start paying attention to what my father's talking about now. So like I'm catching them up on the game and then I'm catching people up around me on the game. And that's all we can do. This is a information warfare and it's going to be what it's going to be. But, um, Colonel, you were talking about the USS Liberty. That's something we go over, you know, during the season, every year we get into Naval history, chief history, things like that. And, uh,
1:50:52
If you would like, you or Bridget, one of you guys want to shoot me the contact information of whoever you got for the liberty, I can reach out to them and might get a different result just because, you know, my background. Absolutely. I'll send you all of the emails. If you wouldn't mind, Benjamin, DM me and I will give you the email addresses that Bridget sent to me. Yes, ma'am.
1:51:23
Mama squirrel nuts. Hi, everyone. So I just wanted to let you know, Colonel, that I also watched baseless conspiracies the other night. And I also first thing I thought of was this is a Gladio operation. And so don't think that your message is not getting out. It is. And a lot of people.
1:51:54
eyes have been opened real wide now to, and we're more keen on what's going on. I don't know if you've ever thought of this, but I think that the baseless conspiracies should actually be you. And, you know, I forgot the other gentleman's name, but not John Harold, the other, the other guy, he has his own. Yes. Yeah.
1:52:24
You know, it should be the two of you going through all of these because everything that he brings up basically is a Gladio operation, you know, that he brings up for ideas. So I think it would be a great idea. I mean, that might be something that you might want to talk to John Harold about because it doesn't seem like he's that interested in being there.
1:52:51
Just say, you know, on those nights, you know, he was too worried about, you know, his own stuff going on in the background. So either way, I guess my point being is that your information is getting out there and we are all paying attention now. So that's all I had to say. Thank you. Yeah. Thank you for saying that. So you understand the difference that it's made in the way you look at life, right?
1:53:20
One of the critical things, though, in a psychological war and an information war is naming things. That's why they assign names to us to target us. I am trying to do exactly the same thing in reverse. I want people to name the damn thing. And I get, I'm sorry, and this is not directed at you at all. I get frustrated.
1:53:49
at these people who want to portray themselves as one of the people that are in the know on information warfare and psychological warfare. And they can't get the very basic principle of being able to name something and understand that every time you're talking about something that has to do with that thing, that you have to call it that thing.
1:54:18
Otherwise you're ceding ground to the enemy. And exactly, exactly. But I think the reason why it's, it hasn't been done in red pill is not because I think red pill and you would be ideal together. I I'm just, he's that type of person that I think you guys would match well. Yeah. And I've actually met him and I've talked to him. He comes to our bad land.
1:54:44
um, media thing that we have here in my hometown. I mean, I know who he is. Oh, excellent. So maybe that might be something that you guys work on together. And I get what you're saying. I get what you're saying. Mama, I'm trying to be nice. I have basically done this. I'm not going to throw myself on them. Okay. I got, I got what you're saying. All right. I get what you're saying. Okay. I'll, I'll stop now. Yeah. So I can't do any more than I.
1:55:12
have done i've made myself available anybody that isn't uh let me caveat this because a friend of mine and she's gonna know i'm not gonna say her name um just sent me a thing going oh my god this guy wants you on his show well i look online and he's talking about med beds okay i'm not doing that shit um so um i will do just about anybody's show to expose operation gladio to a new audience
1:55:41
But I am also not going to go out and these people know that I know this stuff. And I mean, John Harold put it in his movie, the movie that they released. Operation Gladio is there. He even mentions Paul Williams.
1:55:59
I went to the initial screening of that and corrected two things that he had that they fixed before they released the movie. So, again, I've worked with all of them. I've been on CanCon Show, Alpha Warrior, all of those guys on Ghost of Patrick Henry, Base Patrick Henry. All of those people, I have their texts, their phone numbers. I've talked to them on the phone. I text messaged them.
1:56:27
I'm not going to jump up and down to them. I just said what I said to you guys because we're all family now. But it does get, and I can tell you unequivocally of anybody, and I'm not patting myself on the back, but there's probably no one that's done more investigations into these money laundering, whether it's BCCI or Nugent Hand Bank, than I have.
1:56:55
and can articulate the dates and why the things are important. But that's it. I'm not going to dwell on that. Miles, go ahead. Yeah, I think what you're talking about is a large audience exposure. And we don't have that right now. We're trying to build that. Now, personally, what I would like to see is if at some point
1:57:25
You talked to Mr. Truth Bomb and did like a series that he would want to do and to expose Gladio. Yeah. And he's actually reached out to me. He was in the middle of doing something else, which he's releasing right now. So that is definitely a possibility. We'll see. But I've had other people say that they will do things and this is not anything on him.
1:57:53
And then they just don't. So we'll see. I'm not looking for more work. I just want more people to know about it. That's it. Shannon, go ahead. Hey, Colonel, how are you? Good. Good. Do you know I've been promoting you? All of you guys have. I just I love when you guys repost me and you tag things. And let me just say this. Kudos to every single one of you guys. And I'm going to assign a percentage because.
1:58:27
There's nothing scientific. I would say 25% of everything that I know, both from Truth Social when we first started and from here, is from you guys. Not Bridget, not Cousin It, and not me. It's from you guys. You go out there and you scour the internet and you tag us and shit and I'll go down a rabbit hole and I could not thank all of you who do that more.
1:58:54
And that just spurs me on more because then I want to post. And again, I have like 25 tabs open on my thing of articles and threads that I need to write from shit you guys find every day. It's amazing. I know. Well, I just want to let you know the one I put out was I looked up because I'm, you know, I'm an IT geek and working for the communist. Well, I know fascist Canadian government as the US.
1:59:23
Yeah, my pleasure to do that. And when I looked up on Wikipedia and I typed in, just for the heck of it, because I was thinking of you and also my military family, I put in just Gladio. And it came up with, and I tagged you on it, said Operation Gladio. And it was spelling it out with the secret army, stay behind, da-da-da-da-da, paramilitia, da-da-da. And I actually made sure.
1:59:53
I put in there subject matter expert, Operation Gladio, Colonel Counter. And yeah. And so I'm putting it out there because I know I, you know what? I've been in IT and I'm very senior IT in the government as a woman. I don't want to say there's anything sexist going on, but there's something in the back of my mind. I don't know if it's ego or what, but there's something about that I'm getting.
2:00:22
that it may be about ego. I don't know. I don't know. So we're like, I had my foot in the ground before you did even got known. And even though you've been like the subject matter expert on Gladio, I don't know what the boys want to play ball with someone. They feel as a new kid on the block. I don't know. And I know you're not a new kid on the block in the sense of what I'm talking about. I'm talking about in the social media realm, Badlands media. I'm talking about that because I am a geek. I am a geek. I know about this stuff.
2:00:51
Badlands Media has been around. They claim themselves as being, you know, we know what's going on and we're cutting edge. It makes me think that their ego and they just don't even want to share their like, how can we let this new kid on the block get in on our territory on Gladio? So they're keeping to the old terminology. And, you know, I've studied and read Paul Wallace's book on Operation Gladio. You know that about me.
2:01:17
You also know that my great uncle served as an officer in Vietnam War, lost his arm rescuing his troops. You know this stuff. And I'll tell you, that's what's coming to mind, Colonel. Yeah, I don't want to go there. But, yeah. No, no, I know you don't want to go there. But all I'm saying is we're promoting you. It's not going to be long before you're known. Yeah.
2:01:43
And I really appreciate that. And thank you for giving me the opportunities to thank everybody else for all of their tags and sources. Guys, I'm going to give Stellar and then SR71. I really got to run. My daughter just showed up. And so Stellar, go ahead. I was just going to say I was texting.
2:02:05
Jenny Gerard's in here. She's also a space host. She has a lot of followers on Telegram. And I don't know if she's reached out to you or if you want to reach out to her. But I think that, you know, a lot of people in Telegram that are not on X.
2:02:20
You know, they're missing a lot of information that would tie a lot of dots to understand what is going on in this world that we have going on right now that is being dismantled. So I'm hoping that maybe you two can connect. But she is an incredible person. She is incredible. She's got Derek Johnson. She's got so many wonderful guests and stuff like that. And I just really feel that if.
2:02:43
your information to get into Telegram. That would open up eyes to a whole lot of other people as well. And I'm on Telegram. I just don't do very much there. SR71, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel. I just want to thank Shannon for her comments because I have felt the same way. I just haven't said it. She hasn't said it all.
2:03:11
She said it all. And I'll tell you, Colonel, and I'll name a name for sure that I believe is exactly that. And that's Mike Fence. Now, other than that, I'm done for the day. Go have some family time and laugh. OK, I will do that. And and thank you. I appreciate it. Anyway, thanks, everybody, for being here. I'll see you tomorrow at four.
Entities here
CIA32Vietnam29Operation Gladio22Tom Donahue19Colonel Towner19Viet Cong9Vietnam War9Frank Scotton7Revolutionary Development Program7Edward Lansdale6Census Grievance Program6Ridge Camp5Elton Manzoni5Department of Defense5Stuart Unger5Trần Quốc Bửu5USAID5Harry Monk4Phoenix Program4John Hart4Chau4Cuba3Vũng Tàu3Badlands Media3Philippines2South Vietnamese Army2Cliff Strathairn2Afghanistan2Lê Xuân Mai2U.S. Congress2United States Marine Corps2Lockheed2Can Lao Party2Montagnards2Paul Robeson2U.S. State Department2USS Liberty2U.S. Air Force2Danny Costolero2Vietnamese Federation of Labor2
Claims made here
Paul Robeson member_of
CIA host_asserted
▶ 2:53
“because it is definitely a good 101 and kind of hits them very... Ron Partain, just so that you guys know, he fashions himself as a historian. And many of the points that I made during this interview,…”
Pat McGarvey spied_on
Viet Cong book_quoted
▶ 16:25
“For this reason, some people suggest that the Cow Day Eye of God endowed Phoenix, the all-seeing bird of prey, that selectively snatches its prey with its talons. In South Vietnam, the Eye of God tric…”
Stuart Unger appointed
Trần Quốc Bửu book_quoted
▶ 22:45
“Mephin did this with the help of Tran Quoc Bu, B-U-U. He was a very wealthy Vietnamese warlord and a founding member of the Can Lao Party, who in 1954 had headed the CIA-funded Vietnamese Federation o…”
CIA funded
Vietnamese Federation of Labor book_quoted
▶ 22:45
“Mephin did this with the help of Tran Quoc Bu, B-U-U. He was a very wealthy Vietnamese warlord and a founding member of the Can Lao Party, who in 1954 had headed the CIA-funded Vietnamese Federation o…”
Trần Quốc Bửu funded
Can Lao Party book_quoted
▶ 23:12
“it's considered a communist thing to do because these federations of labor are controlled by the CIA. It's just like an NGO. It's like USAID. So Boo had been charged by them with laundering Can Lao's …”
Trần Quốc Bửu sold
Vũng Tàu book_quoted
▶ 23:43
“When you're dealing with black ops money. So after Dem's assassination, the tables got turned on Boo, who basically was a Dem lackey. And he got imprisoned. And so he needed to buy his way out of jail…”
CIA trained
Montagnards book_quoted
▶ 25:37
“And unlike the normal army, they stayed at their posts at night because that was their job. With Powell's consent, Methvin arranged for a CIA contract employee to start training these counter-terroris…”
Tom Donahue succeeded
Cliff Strathairn book_quoted
▶ 30:34
“like bought lock, stock and barrel Thailand. Maybe that's why there's so much pedophilia over there now. Just a thought. So anyway, when he arrived in Saigon, he replaced a guy by the name of Cliff St…”
Tom Donahue appointed
Lê Xuân Mai book_quoted
▶ 33:04
“to rent another chunk to expand their operation down on this island slash peninsula. He then got his counterpart, Mai, M-A-I, a promotion and arranged for him to begin training not just the Vietnamese…”
Tom Donahue founded
Ridge Camp book_quoted
▶ 34:29
“buildings for our training. This ends up being called Ridge Camp, R-I-D-G-E, and was five miles beyond the airport. So we built roads, we built barracks, mess halls, classrooms, armories, offices, the…”
Tom Donahue headed
Census Grievance Program book_quoted
▶ 37:27
“Donna Hugh explained the census grievance program like this, quote, everybody knows the government takes a census. So you'd have a guy make a map of every house in the village, put everything into per…”
Census Grievance Program funded
Vietnam book_quoted
▶ 38:56
“Giving you a hard time. Are the police at the checkpoints charging you a toll every time you take your wares to market? Number three, is there anything you want to tell me about the Viet Cong? If the …”
CIA covered_up
Vietnam book_quoted
▶ 41:18
“Further complicating things was the fact that corruption in the provinces was basically part of the culture. So Donahue spent a good till of his time trying to keep the local parties from using the mo…”
CIA trained
Vietnam book_quoted
▶ 44:35
“wait for it, Filipino trainers, like the ones brought over by Lansdell, to train these people how to be basically gladio operators, for lack of a better word, or Phoenix program operators. They had fl…”
Nguyen Cao Ky headed
National Security Council documented
▶ 47:04
“And that's basically what they're saying. They elected one of the military generals as being the chief of state, you know, because, of course, they assassinated the president at this point. And in 196…”
Nguyen Cao Ky appointed
Nguyen Ngoc Ly documented
▶ 47:34
“And the guy, let's see, as prime minister controlling the interior ministry, Kai appointed his people to the CIA covert action program and appointed his confidential agent, General Nguyen Ngoc Luong, …”
Nguyen Ngoc Ly member_of
CIA book_quoted
▶ 48:04
“basically their version of the CIA. And he basically became the liaison between the South Vietnamese government and the CIA. So let's see. Frank Scotton would later say that he shied away from anythin…”
Frank Scotton exposed
Revolutionary Development Program book_quoted
▶ 52:04
“and to make constant efforts in study in order to progress in behavior, education, and techniques, unquote. This is frickin' scary as shit. Scotton's biggest complaint, however, was that the shift fro…”
Harry Monk headed
Revolutionary Development Program book_quoted
▶ 53:03
“So when Robert Kelly joined the CIA and took his team of instructors to duplicate this program in other provinces, a guy by the name of Harry Monk, M-O-N-K, took over Ben Dem province and began workin…”
CIA recruited
Joe Vaccaro book_quoted
▶ 56:57
“So Donahue began recruiting military people like a guy by the name of Joe Vaccaro, V-A-C-A-R-R-O. He was a special forces sergeant who was working as a, wait for it, public safety advisor. Because rem…”
USAID front_for
CIA book_quoted
▶ 57:20
“That was actually to train people to assassinate and torture each other. But they did it under the guise of public safety. And he says that he thought that the guy looked interesting. And I forgot abo…”
Tom Donahue recruited
Barry Zorthian book_quoted
▶ 59:19
“This is a quote. So I went out to try to get some co-sponsors for the record. They weren't easy to come by. So he goes to the U.S. Information Services chief, which is just another front for the CIA, …”
Edward Lansdale appointed
General Thang book_quoted
▶ 1:01:10
“that as a way of monitoring the Saigon station in 1965 in August, the special group assigned Ed Lansdale, he's back, as a senior liaison to General Thang, P-H-A-N-G, who instantly advocated transferri…”
Hubert Humphrey appointed
Edward Lansdale book_quoted
▶ 1:01:38
“was an invention of Hubert Humphreys. And the idea was, we did it before, we can do it again. So Lansdale came out two years too late. He brought a lot of his old cohorts because he's not really there…”
Jordan Gorganson succeeded
Tom Donahue book_quoted
▶ 1:02:08
“And he names Jordan Gorganson, who had by this point replaced the guy we talked about earlier, De Silva, said, tell them everything. I said, OK. And I spent two and a half hours briefing his full grou…”
Tom Donahue reassigned
Chau book_quoted
▶ 1:03:08
“He ends up getting transferred to the training camp so that they can keep him under watch because they're not sure what to think of him, whether or not he was crooked like them or not. So they're goin…”
Lockheed supplied_arms_to
Department of Defense host_asserted
▶ 1:19:54
“is spent contractually. So if Congress tells the Air Force they have to buy 100 airplanes, they're buying 100 airplanes because Lockheed's going to be the next day at the door knocking, going, where's…”
Department of Defense trafficked
Timbuktu host_asserted
▶ 1:20:50
“They're flown to Timbuktu because they were sold on a black market. And just so that you also know, many of the aircraft, just like the CIA pretends to be military people, it could be the CIA that's s…”
Department of Defense trafficked
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:21:21
“Dollars worth of equipment is missing, but they don't want to tell you that. There is $1.3 trillion worth of weaponry floating around the globe fielding Operation Gladio caches of weapons and hardware…”
Department of Defense funded
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:21:51
“contingencies done for operation gladio specifically in africa where they're buying airplanes they're buying helicopters for these things they're buying patriot battery systems where the hell are they…”
Department of Defense trafficked
Egypt host_asserted
▶ 1:22:16
“when it's all staying inside the United States and not being quote unquote deployed. That's how you don't lose shit. So you understand in order to traffic weapons systems, you actually have to have a …”
Department of Defense trafficked
Niger host_asserted
▶ 1:22:16
“when it's all staying inside the United States and not being quote unquote deployed. That's how you don't lose shit. So you understand in order to traffic weapons systems, you actually have to have a …”
Operation Gladio front_for
Operation Baby Drops host_asserted
▶ 1:31:30
“kind of tie things from now to then, you know, that this operation is still going on. I mean, even though it goes by different names, even though the situations are different, one of the things that w…”
Operation Gladio trafficked
Golden Triangle host_asserted
▶ 1:37:46
“and understanding that, you know, this other faction of evil things happening is all a part of it, if that makes any sense, you know, with the, you know, the human trafficking, the Golden Triangle, al…”
Operation Gladio front_for
NATO host_asserted
▶ 1:39:29
“Costolero is talking about is Operation Gladio. He didn't know the name of it, which most Americans don't because most Americans have never lived in Europe and understand what they went through. And t…”
Operation Gladio front_for
Phoenix Program host_asserted
▶ 1:39:29
“Costolero is talking about is Operation Gladio. He didn't know the name of it, which most Americans don't because most Americans have never lived in Europe and understand what they went through. And t…”
Israel carried_out_attack
USS Liberty host_asserted
▶ 1:42:50
“Followed up and they go on every other show and say, oh, yeah, if anybody wants me to be on their show, I will. They will not come on my show. So I find it very and I don't know if it's because I mean…”
Colonel Towner exposed
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:55:12
“have done i've made myself available anybody that isn't uh let me caveat this because a friend of mine and she's gonna know i'm not gonna say her name um just sent me a thing going oh my god this guy …”
John Hart exposed
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:55:41
“But I am also not going to go out and these people know that I know this stuff. And I mean, John Harold put it in his movie, the movie that they released. Operation Gladio is there. He even mentions P…”
Colonel Towner investigated
Nugan Hand Bank host_asserted
▶ 1:56:27
“I'm not going to jump up and down to them. I just said what I said to you guys because we're all family now. But it does get, and I can tell you unequivocally of anybody, and I'm not patting myself on…”
Colonel Towner investigated
BCCI host_asserted
▶ 1:56:27
“I'm not going to jump up and down to them. I just said what I said to you guys because we're all family now. But it does get, and I can tell you unequivocally of anybody, and I'm not patting myself on…”
Paul Wallace authored
Operation Gladio (book by Paul Williams) caller_asserted
▶ 2:00:51
“Badlands Media has been around. They claim themselves as being, you know, we know what's going on and we're cutting edge. It makes me think that their ego and they just don't even want to share their …”