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Operation Gladio - Zaire-Congo 1975-1978

1:58:33

Transcript

0:00 Hello, everybody. Thanks, Bridget. Turn on your mic. We're going to be talking about Zaire, which I'm going to give you a little bit of history about Zaire when it was called the Congo, and so that we can lead up into what we're going to talk about today. Well, I just saw Cousin It, and now she's gone. I gave her the...
0:31 Spike, Mike. OK, so just so that you guys know, we've kind of there she is again. We've kind of changed up the way we're doing this. We are not going to give out mics until we get done with the presentation. And that allows. I can tell you. Yeah. Verizon Nazis. All right. We're good. All right. So.
1:03 We're not going to hand out mics until the end because we get a lot of bots in here. We get a lot of crazies in our spaces, and they try to crash our sites. So Bridget and Cousinette are busy bashing bots.
1:23 while I'm doing the presentation, and it just makes it more streamlined and easy and less distracting if they're doing their job and I'm doing my job, and then we come together at the end and have a little chat. Yeah, and I'm old. I can't multitask, so. Yeah, I'm not even going there. All right, so just for a little, we've done the Congo in this series.
1:52 But just for a little history, because we do have a lot of new people joining us every single day, thanks to all of you and all of your hard work in sharing the material. The Congo story, as it goes, was a former Belgium colony for over a century. And it was a very awful situation, as all of those were.
2:20 more horrific for the Congo because they had discovered rubber, gold, diamonds, uranium, and they had people like little kids working in the uranium mine around poisonous material. And if you didn't produce the quantity that the Belgium leadership decided that they
2:50 thought you were capable of doing, they'd cut your hand off. So again, very horrific circumstances in the Congo as a Belgium colony. And in the late 50s and early 60s, there was a freedom movement that swept the African continent where people were throwing off the colonial powers, wanting their independence.
3:16 We have also discussed the fact that the colonial powers, while they understood they could not squash the appearance of giving independence to their former colonies in Africa, they were going to devise another way to colonize them nonetheless. And they did that in the form of the WWF and the Sierra Club and many...
3:41 1001 Club and many other things that we've talked about as well. But specifically with the Congo, they were given their independence. And I'm going to put that in big, heavy air quotes. And they elected a president and a prime minister. The CIA quickly bought off the president so that he was on their side against the more popular.
4:06 and more powerful, according to the way their government was set up, prime minister, which happened to be Patrice Lumumba. And when the Belgium kind of gave him the keys to the castle and said, you know, hey, it's yours, but here's the caveats. You don't get to manage any of your natural resources. We're going to keep those. And we're going to keep them under contract to Belgium companies. And you're basically not going to get jack crap.
4:35 And, oh, by the way, you're also not going to get to run your military. We're going to leave all the Belgium officers in charge, but we'll take your enlisted people to be the grunts of the military. And when Patrice Lumumba said, yeah, that's not going to work for me. I want my resources. I want to educate my people. I want to build health care because you didn't do it. You guys suck and get the hell out of my country. He fires all of the Belgium officers and begins hiring.
5:04 Congolese to round out the military so that they can support him and the protection of the resources. Well, Belgium, in collusion with the CIA and the U.S., basically go into, well, they never left, Katanga, which was one of the provinces of the Congo, and basically succeed and stand up a whole brand new government.
5:33 called Katanga. And the NATO proceeds to build the world's largest NATO base to protect all of the natural resources, the gold, the diamonds, the uranium, blah, blah, blah. They elect their own government and immediately all of NATO recognizes this breakaway country because they want all of the resources. And all of the people that are involved in it are corrupt. They're bought off CIA.
6:04 stooges. And as this is unfolding, they are also bribing the president of the Congo to fire, which he has no authority to do, Patrice Lumumba, which he does. And then he basically goes into hiding. They kidnap him. They kill him. They bury him. Then they dig him up and they boil him in acid. And then in 2020,
6:31 The Belgium NCO that stole one of his gold teeth when they were boiling him in acid finally returns the tooth to the family of Lumumba, you know, decades later. So it's a horrid story. It is a representation of a similar story throughout all of Africa in the destabilization, strategy of tension, colonialism, never having stopped saga.
7:00 of much of the continent of Africa. And you see today that they are throwing off the vestiges of some of the leftover colonialism, which I only have to say more power to them in doing that. So when all of this happens and Lumumba dies, is killed.
7:25 They basically go through some iterations and the reconstitution of the Congo to make it not so obvious what they did. And part of that process was renaming it Zaire, just to confuse all of us who's not paying attention. So this guy, President Mubatu, Sese Siko.
7:55 I'm not exactly sure that's the way you say that, but we're just going to call him Mubatu. And you spell his last name S-E-S-E. And then the second part of it is S-E-K-O. In 1975, he is the president, a strong man and completely under the control of the CIA.
8:23 He has at that point been in charge for approximately 10 years by 1975 because he took over in the aftermath of the Lumumba fiasco. And he is known for corruption. He is known for his relationship with the CIA. He has amassed a fortune.
8:52 to the tune of billions of dollars, which hide out in Swiss, Paris, and New York banks. And you can immediately see the banker's benefit to having these CIA stooges because they money launder money into them through the World Bank and such, and then they deposit that money, which is UNI's money, by the way.
9:22 into these fat cats banks, and then they can do all their derivative bullshit as a result of that in their fractional lending and all of the financial money laundering aspects. So these guys pay well to the international syndicate that has been set up around them. Meanwhile, the Congolese are starving.
9:50 The only thing worse than his corruption was the cruelty that he showed to the citizens. And in this book, William Bloom, Killing Hope, I'm going to read you a quote about Ubatu. He rules by decree with a grotesque impulsiveness that seems to shock even his former CIA case officers. One recalled that in June 1971,
10:21 Mubatu had forcibly enlisted in the armed forces the entire student body of a university. He was put out by the students' demonstrations. Mubatu finally relented, but 10 of the students were sentenced to life in prison for crimes of public insult to the state. One intel source recalls a
10:50 Mubato approach eventually deflected that either Zaire, with CIA help, or the agency alone, undertake an invasion against, quote, those bastards across the river, unquote, which was referring to the Congo Republic. He is a real wild man, one of the CIA officials said, and we have had trouble keeping him under rain.
11:19 Be careful what you ask for. In June 1975, Mobato announced that he had uncovered and suppressed a coup attempt against his physical elimination. Because that's what the CIA does when they get done with you. They'll just coup you too. He initially labeled it a large foreign power that was out to get him.
11:47 and that they were thirsty for the money and resources from Zaire. And in an accompanying editorial, it indicated plainly that the foreign power he was referring to was the United States. A few days later, the Zairean newspaper asserted that the CIA had organized tribal dissidents
12:17 and black Americans for a coup against Mubato planned for the 30th of September. Mubato declared that the quote-unquote imperialists were displeased with his breaking off relationships with Israel, his naturalization of many foreign-owned businesses, and the sincere and reciprocal friendships between Zaire in China and North Korea. Because again,
12:45 You are not allowed to talk to anyone the CIA tells you not to. Several high-ranking Zairean military officers, as well as civilians, were arrested, including most of the CIA's indigenous agents in Zaire, the ones on the CIA payroll. The government announced that one of the arrested officers had returned four months ago from a U.S. military school. Another had been the Zairean.
13:14 military attache in Washington until he was recalled two weeks before, and a third had recently came home from none other than courses at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, which is where we find many of our Operation Gladio players. So, as we have said many times in the past, the military schools
13:43 that the CIA arranges for these governments to send their people to is for the CIA to groom the students as spies to go back and infiltrate their appropriate governments. That's the whole purpose of international schools in bringing these people, who in many cases are known terrorists, into the population in America. So there has been many...
14:19 supposed coups, similar to what he's referring to. And a lot of them involve former students at U.S. schools that are arranged by the CIA. They do this undercover, quote-unquote, learning on how to suppress a coup, but what they are actually being done is how to actually orchestrate one.
14:48 And we also saw that in the bomb school in southern Texas, where all of the School of America's top graduates, when they graduated from School of America's in the Panama and for Operation Condor, the top graduates would go on to the closed military base in southern Texas and learn how to, quote unquote, defuse bombs.
15:17 when actually what they were being taught is how to create bombs. No time did any of those graduates, and there's been interviews with many of them, ever be deployed on a CIA deployment to actually defuse a bomb. They had repeatedly been sent on CIA deployments to assemble and blow shit up, to include in Washington, D.C., in the case of the former ambassador to Chile, where...
15:45 These same people, graduate of that same Texas school, had been deployed into downtown Washington, D.C. to put a bomb on a car, blow it up and kill Ambassador Leda Lara, who was President Allende's former ambassador. And they managed to severely injure two bystanders and killed a U.S. citizen.
16:14 In the bomb attack, that was the former ambassador's aide. So, FYI. Eventually, seven of those arrested were condemned to death for the alleged plot, including some CIA agents. Seven were acquitted and 27 were given prison sentence. No Americans were named as conspirators, but the U.S. ambassador, Dean Hinton,
16:43 was ordered to leave the country. And Zaire recalled its ambassador from Washington. So, of course, the first thing we're going to do when we talk about one of these ambassadors is we're going to look up the ambassador. And when you look up Hinton, he has a very interesting background. I'm going to read you just a small segment of it. Hinton was no stranger to controversy.
17:15 Now, keep in mind, this whole network has been set up in the mid-1940s. In 1949, while serving at the U.S. Embassy in Syria, he became aware of a U.S. plan to support a coup overthrowing the democratically elected government in Syria.
17:38 I want, he's quoted as saying, I want to go on record as saying that this is the stupidest, most irresponsible action a diplomatic mission like ours could ever get involved in. And that we've started a series of these things that will never end, unquote. And he damn sure was right because that series is called Operation Gladio and we're up to over 80 of them now. And this is one of the very first ones. However, the new government led by SUNY.
18:08 Al-Zaym did the U.S.'s bidding and allowed the Trans-Syrian oil pipeline to be built. It instigated talks with Israel and imprisoned trade unionists and basically anybody the CIA said they didn't like. He was executed in his pajamas within a year, just as Hinton had predicted. Hinton went on to serve in El Salvador.
18:38 and left it a mess. He also served in, oh, he was in El Salvador when they were doing all of the murders in 1980. He supposedly investigated the Santa Rita massacres, which is a whole story in and of itself, but basically blamed it all on the people that the CIA
19:11 wanted it blamed on. And it was later revealed that it was actually the American military advisors that had been present at the time of the massacre and that it was the people that the U.S. was supporting that did the massacre. But he served in Pakistan. He served in Costa Rica. And, you know, Costa Rica was where they were doing the drugs. And he was there from 87 to 90.
19:40 When they were doing the drugs, flying out of there, that's where the one aircraft that crashed and they found drugs on it actually launched from was Costa Rica. He was also the ambassador to Panama during the early 90s, again, while they're running all the drugs. So you kind of see he has a history here of working on behalf of Operation Gladio, as does...
20:07 all of these people that we come across. He also served time in lesser roles in Kenya, Guatemala, France, and Chile when they were getting ready for the coup in Chile. So there you have it. He's dirty as dirty can be. Just wanted y'all to know that. The State Department denied the allegations in Zaire.
20:39 that they were involved at all in a quote-unquote coup. And the Secretary of State Henry Kissinger announced that the charges were based on totally wrong information that fell into the hands of Zaire and was probably the result of forgery, although he offered no evidence of the sort.
21:06 On the other hand, it would not have been the first time the CIA was involved in a plot to eliminate an ally that they actually installed, because they did that with Batista in Cuba, Trujillo, Figueres, and Diem out of Vietnam. Mubato, at this time, for his own reasons, was deeply involved in the civil war in Angola. And we've already went over Angola. There is a...
21:36 Space is out there on Angola if you need to know more information about that. We've already covered it. And, of course, Mubato was involved on the side that the CIA was supporting, which, by the way, he was actually related to the guy that was in charge of the UNITA, U-N-I-T-A forces. So that's the reason why these two countries butt up against each other.
22:07 Katanga area that I was telling you about where all of their resources are is literally right up against Angola. And Angola shares many of the resources in that same, it would be their northeast region and the Congo's southwest region. That's where they butt up against each other. And so Mubamba was basically doing the CIA's bidding by aiding his family.
22:36 and providing troops for the fighting there. And then this is the irony of the whole thing. I love this quote. The senior CIA officer, upon returning to Washington, told reporters in a meeting, quote, he simply has no idea how to run a country, unquote. Doesn't that sound like Eric Prince and the...
23:06 recent podcast that he was on. You guys freaking installed a moron that you could control. You paid him billions of dollars, money laundering. He killed hundreds of people, if not thousands of people in his country. He supported the killing of people in all of the surrounding areas, thanks to you.
23:34 And then you have the audacity to come back to the United States and tell us he doesn't know how to run a country. That is like bizarre, even for the CIA. More propaganda. And then you have the Chinese and the North Korean military advisors that he had brought in to Zaire, training some of their military. And they were doing that side by side with the U.S. forces.
24:07 that kind of makes you scratch your head and say, is North Korea or was North Korea a CIA satellite? Because this isn't the first time we found North Korean military advisors operating side by side with CIA advisors in our Operation Gladio exploration. I'm coming more and more to the conclusion that that's exactly what North Korea ended up doing. All right.
24:42 Moving on. The expelled American ambassador, Hinton, was no ordinary Foreign Service career diplomat. And William Bloom goes on to tell us a little bit about what he found as well with Hinton. It says he worked closely with the CIA since the 1950s and was no stranger to this type of a diplomatic operation.
25:11 In 67 to 69 in Guatemala and the following two years in Chile against Allende, Hinton, under the cover of working with USAID, had played a role in the CIA operation. He then served on a subcommittee of the National Security Council before taking up his ambassador post in 1974. After the alleged coup,
25:42 was exposed by Mobato. Both the CIA and Mobato acted as if nothing even happened. The agency did make an appeal to the president for the freedom of their agents that were now sitting on death row, but no one was ever able to find out what happened to them. It did seem to be remarkable that Mobato was remarkably submissive to the CIA.
26:14 After that point, Mubato asked the CIA to help him annex a small province called Kabinda, K-A-B-I-N-D-A. It was actually property that belonged to Angola, but it was separated from the rest of Angola by a narrow strip of Zaire territory. Mubato had coveted this province since 1965.
26:44 His greed for it was heightened a few years later when they found oil off the coastline. The CIA, although busily involved in Angola for the exact same reason, because of their resources, promptly flew in a thousand-man arms package for use by Zairean troops who marched into Cabinda.
27:13 Agency officials helped to coordinate this almost casual invasion of a sovereign nation, but the operation was not successful. Now, this is a problem that I have with most authors that talk about this. The CIA did not do this for Mubarak. 1,000% the CIA did this for whatever oil company was going to get the concessions from Zaire.
27:44 The CIA works for an international syndicate. They do not work for CIA stooges in foreign countries. Six months later, and we'll prove that in a minute, six months later, in April 1976, the CIA gave Mubatu close to $1.4 million to distribute to U.S.-backed Angolan forces, thousands of whom were refugees in Zaire.
28:13 that were hungry and starving. Did Mobatu use that money for that? Absolutely not. He put it in his bank account. And the problem with this is the CIA, through all of their promised backdoors banking software, knows exactly where this money's going. They track it. According to CIA African specialist John Stockwell,
28:46 They rationalized that it would mollify him, bribe him not to retaliate against the CIA. He also goes on to say, according to Stockwell, it is an interesting paradox that the SEC has since 1971 investigated and the Justice Department has prosecuted several large U.S. corporations for using bribery to facilitate overseas operations.
29:16 While at the same time, the U.S. government, through the CIA, does exactly the same thing. They bribe the governments to do whatever they want you to do. And they will allow one of the U.S. companies to do it if they're in the international syndicate. The ones that they fine for doing it is when someone has become a whistleblower or something like that. They can't.
29:46 avoid doing that. The same plan can be said of murder. A few months earlier in January 1976, the Justice Department had concluded that no grounds existed for federal prosecution of CIA officials involved in the plot to assassinate several heads of state, including Patrice Lumumba in the Congo. So again, your government can assassinate foreign heads of state and domestic ones, for that matter, like JFK and potentially President Trump.
30:19 and not be ever held account for it, but don't you try it. In early March 1977, during a pause in the Angola War, members of the Lunda, L-U-N-D-A, tribal group of Zaire, who had been in exile in Angola and fighting along with their Angolian tribal kin on the side of the MPLA,
30:53 The MPLA was the good guys, by the way, not the ones they were not supported by the CIA. But the MPLA is the ones when we talked about Angola, they were the people that were they had been educated outside of Angola, most of the times in European schools. And they were from the cities.
31:16 They knew how to administer governmental organizations, very articulate. And many of the non-NATO countries all aligned behind the MPLA because they knew that was the only way for Angola to be successful, is to have these people in the initial presidential congressional leadership positions to get the country off the ground.
31:43 Which is exactly why the CIA and the U.S. and NATO lined up against it, because they wanted to maintain these countries and their resources as their colonial disheveled kids or wards of the state so that they could steal all of their resources. So hold on. Let me bring Bridget back up. So let me let me go.
32:16 I was distracted by having to bring Bridget back up. Where did she go? There. All right. I know. I know, Liz. Liza, I got it. I'm trying to get her back up. All right. So let me start this part over. Are you good, Bridget? Okay. All right. I've sent it to you like three times. So there you go. I just sent it to you again. All right. Thank you. Sure.
32:57 All right, so in March 1977, during a pause in the Angola War, members of the Lunda tribal group of Zaire, who had been in exile in Angola and was fighting along with the good guys in Angola, the MPLA, crossed the border back into Zaire to begin, because they basically at this point had...
33:24 The MPLA had gotten into the leadership in Angola and defeated the UNITA. So they decided to carry that success on into Zaire and resume the old civil war because they were the good guys in Zaire that had basically been kicked out when Lumumba had been murdered. So they want to take the success, the weapons that they have, and carry this forward. Can you guys mute?
33:57 into Zaire. But there was unfortunately only about 2,000 of them. And they were largely former residents of the Katanga area that had got kicked out when NATO stood up that big base. So it didn't go very far. Mobato urgently requested help from Zaire's traditional arms suppliers, Belgium.
34:28 France, and the U.S. Because again, Mubato is on the payroll to keep Zaire a ward state of NATO. So all of these people are going to help him keep the peasants down, the slaves down, and keep the resources coming into NATO to be exploited by the international syndicate.
34:59 So basically, in that province that these former Congolese were going back into, the Katanga area, it had upwards of 80% of the Zairen resources in that area. So the U.S. responded by giving them $2 million of military supplies a month.
35:27 But within a few months, it was $15 million each month for several months. France gave them Mirage jet bombers. Jimmy Carter had been in office less than two months as this stuff started happening. He was reluctant to give his administration a new foreign adventure.
36:00 sanctions that had been put on there by Congress and blah, blah, blah. Carter's action in Zaire constituted a very mild response, mild enough to get Washington to accuse him of non-intervention. The administration pointed out that its aid was all non-lethal type. Sounds like Obama in support of Ukraine.
36:26 It is a military transport plane, spare parts, fuel, communication equipment, blah, blah, blah. That the aid represented a drawing of credits already authorized by Congress for Zaire. As if the United States, therefore, had no other choice but to continue giving Zaire assistance. So, Jimmy Carter's position was, it's an African problem. Let Africa solve it. How novel.
37:00 Carter denied the suggestion that U.S. aid to Zaire was part of a coordinated venture with France, Belgium, Morocco, Egypt, and Sudan. And at the same time, the State Department characterized American policy as a neither help nor hinder position. Except the CIA was coordinating with all of those countries, whether Jimmy Carter knew it or not.
37:27 Yet only a few days earlier, the U.S. had given its tactic approval to Morocco's decision to send 1,500 troops that were armed with U.S. military equipment to Mobato to help him fight what he labeled an insurgency, which was actually just a return home of many of the former Zairen citizens.
37:54 So Morocco would have to obtain Washington's permission in advance to do so, which, of course, they did. And we explained that yesterday when we talked about Morocco. Morocco has been a word of the U.S. and NATO for, I mean, ever since World War II. In mid-April, Newsday broke a story that the CIA was secretly supporting efforts to recruit several hundred mercenaries in the United States and Great Britain to serve alongside Zaire's army.
38:26 A guy by the name of David Buffkin, B-U-F-K-I-N, was a Californian who responded to volunteer to be a mercenary. He was basically recruited by the CIA to do this. And he had lots of former combat experience. He had also done lots of former military missions for, well.
38:57 CIA missions is a better way of saying that. The New York newspaper stated that the CIA had strong links to Bobkin and had told the Justice Department that it would not cooperate in any investigation of him, basically shielding him from being held accountable as a civilian for any foreign service. So they were basically protecting him.
39:25 The New York Times reported that diplomats in Washington said that they understood that President Mubato had indicated several weeks ago that Zaire might have to recruit mercenaries to repel the invasion. Bufkin denied that he was being financed by the CIA. He claimed that his financial aid is coming from Africa, which, as we all know, it most likely was. However, it was the CIA paying.
39:55 Zaire through USAID that then would pay him. That's plausible deniability. They do this all the time. But what is really interesting about this is the fact that it was later revealed that he was actually working with the KCIA, the Korean CIA, and that they were intimately involved in
40:23 all of what was going on in the Angola area. And they told everybody, once that was discovered, they rationalized that by having said that there was North Koreans in Angola and therefore the South Korean version of the CIA, the KCIA.
40:50 Had to be in there and had to have people working for them there in order for them to keep tabs on what North Korea was doing in Angola. Isn't that convenient? And there's quite a bit of information about this whole thing. But one particular thing I want you guys to just so you can see how insidious this is. All right. So.
41:18 There was, and we talked about this when we did, there were Cubans in Angola. And that was another reason the CIA had lined up, they say, supporting the UNITA element. The real reason they were supporting it was because it was the corrupt element. And lo and behold, you find Cuba.
41:46 Actually, they're supporting the good guys and doing what little they could, which was not a whole lot. But as we have seen in many of these scenarios, they did have some people to help them set up schools, medical facilities and that type of thing. And I don't I find it strange, not really. But I just want to note that it is odd that.
42:13 Most of what we saw happen in Grenada, we also saw it happen in Guyana. Most of the time that we have found Cubans, they are not there as military people. They are there as trainers to the civilian side, almost like civil affairs in the army, in helping in the aftermath of a CIA coup that they lost.
42:41 And I think that's the irony. So our government has conditioned us to think every time we hear that Cuba is somewhere, that it's bad and that it's associated with communism. And what we are finding in country after country after country, that is absolutely not the truth. And I'm not just saying that, and I'm not relying on one author. This has to do with people that are interviewed on the ground in the aftermath of many of these coups. It is also documented in
43:10 places that you would least likely think you were going to find it. And that's in some of the human rights documents that nobody reads out on the UN websites. They will go in and do investigations afterwards as to the abuses of human rights. What you always find is whoever the CIA supports has the worst abuses of human rights. And generally, you find documentation after documentation.
43:40 that if there were any Cubans on the ground, they were doing things like setting up schools. So I just want to make note of that to try to begin to erase the brainwashing that we've been subject to. All right. So having noted that, the U.S. and France were there training white mercenaries.
44:13 and supported by Belgium and other Western interests, i.e. NATO, in the Katanga area, because I already told you they set up one of the biggest NATO bases outside of Europe in Katanga to protect the uranium. After fleeing to Angola in return for sanctuary, this group of former Congolese was, let's see, okay, hold on.
44:51 I got that. So the group that was there, they end up back in Angola and the ensuing civil war that occurred in Angola. So he's going back in time. That just confused me for a minute. Sorry about that. And they're just saying that the Cubans was on the MPLA side.
45:24 The invasion could not have taken place and it could not have continued without the material support of the U.S. on the side of Zaire and some support from the rebels from the Soviet Union. But I researched quite extensively, actually, when we were doing the Congo.
45:56 And it is almost impossible. I mean, I found documents. I have no idea how those people were even able to stay alive based on the minor amount of support that anyone could document that had came into Congo slash Zaire from the Soviet Union, because it was pennies on the dollar compared to what the U.S. was flooding.
46:26 into that area. To the credit of the Carter administration, it resisted the temptation to embrace all of the unfounded charges against the, that were being made, supposedly saying that Cuba was involved and that the U.S. did not view the conflict as a confrontation between the Soviet Union and the West. And increasingly,
46:57 Crazy Mubato had finally moved to declare that if the U.S. had indeed capitulated in the face of communist danger, it should be announced clearly. So basically, he's trying to bully us into doing more when the Carter administration was in and they refused to get involved. The day after the first.
47:19 U.S. shipment of military aid, Washington expressed its concern about the possible loss to American mining interest in Zaire. Again, this is talking about the uranium, and that's the whole reason we are doing this. However, there was not necessarily a logical connection between the Lunda capture of Shaba province or even toppling Mubato in a threat to a foreign investment and loans.
47:49 and the Carter administration offered no elaboration on its statement. No matter who controlled the mines, they would look to be selling copper, cobalt, and other materials. In 1960, the secession movement of those same Lunda forces in the Katanga province had been supported by both Washington and Belgium. So you see,
48:17 In one case, when they're going to control the resources, they support Katanga being its own province. But now when the former Kanganese people are coming back from Angola, having won that civil war, the U.S. is no longer in favor of that being its own entity, and they're going to protect it with everything.
48:41 Why Belgium now opposed them was not made clear by events, except that the rebel sabotage combined with the power failure had halted the mine's water pumps, leading to widespread flooding. In a neighboring Angola, as we have seen, when the Marxists, what they referred to as Marxists, MPLA took control of the oil-rich Kabenda province,
49:08 It cooperated fully with business as usual with Gulf Oil Company. So what the author is clearly saying here is you could have allowed the MPLA its natural rise to power and have gotten the same result without all the dead bodies, but they refused to do that because they couldn't control that government. The Zaire government, on the other hand,
49:39 in 1974 took over most of all the small businesses and the plantations without ever compensating the owners because that guy was bought and paid for, installed by the CIA, and had no vested interest because his money was coming from elsewhere. He was not a nationalist. He didn't give a shit about the Congo or Zaire. He was in it for the money. The MPLA people cared about Angola and wanted it to be a success.
50:07 That's the reason why we should stay the hell out of other people's business. All right, we're almost done. In a newspaper article called Why Zaire, there's a quote, a highly dubious proposition for the United States to deepen its involvement in the murk of Zaire in the way that it has, unquote. That was a quote from President Carter. He went on to say, quote,
50:42 It has not explained the contingencies or stakes which require such an abrupt American response, nor the risk of delaying it, unquote. In other words, he's questioning why the hell are we there? And that was portrayed in the international syndicate media as being indecisive. He doesn't know what he's doing.
51:08 Blah, blah, blah. Because he's not a bloodthirsty international syndicate goon, they made fun of him in the media. In the middle of May 1978, when the Lunda again left Angola and invaded their home province in Zaire, the Carter administration was once again drawn into the conflict.
51:34 This time, particularly with the meeting in 11 days in Washington of the heads of NATO governments to act decisively, made all the difference. Within days, the U.S. had sent several million dollars of non-lethal military aid to Mobutu, who they had just three months earlier completely condemned because of his human rights violations.
52:00 They also sent him a fleet of American military transport planes and began ferrying Belgian and French troops into Zaire. And they framed it as a quote-unquote rescue mission of white foreigners trapped by the war. But they were shipping massive amounts of military aid into the country. The American airlift was extended to delivering Moroccan armed forces into the province.
52:28 And they also went out and picked up army troops from Senegal and Gabon to come in and also help, on behalf of Mobato, the dictator. The fighting in Shamba this time was over in less than a month. At its conclusion, the New York Times reported that, quote, discussions with officials in recent days have produced no single cohesive explanation for the American policy in Zaire.
53:00 You've got a very simple one. They want control. Also, the president, for example, had discovered something which it seems he had not realized the year before, namely that aiding Zaire was in the national security interest of the United States. Administration officials also professed concern for the territorial integrity of all countries in Africa and elsewhere. That's actually a quote, and they're not joking.
53:31 They just split up five or six years ago, 10 years ago, the whole country of the Congo to murder, assassinate the president. But now they're all concerned about the territorial integrity while they're stealing all the resources. Several African governments, which came to the aid of Mubato during these two years, likewise expressed concern about their states.
54:04 And they all just so happened to be CIA-controlled dictatorships that had been set up by the same organizations that Mobato had been. So that's kind of where they eventually get rid of him, but none too soon. But I do want to share with you, because I think this is funny, because Castro obviously had been...
54:36 villainized through this whole process along with the Soviet Union as the place of last resort that people can go fighting the CIA for weapons. On May 25th, 1978, let's see, it was declared that Cuba obviously did nothing to hold back the invasion. And then it came to light that Castro had informed, all right, so Carter comes out.
55:10 in May of 78. And he says that Cuba had done nothing to help stop the invasion into Zaire of the people that had, you know, the people that were former Congolese that wanted their country back. But it then came to light that Castro had been involved, had informed the U.S. government earlier that he had learned of the rebels' plan.
55:41 A full week ahead of the invasion that it was going to happen and the CIA did nothing to stop it. So Fidel Castro goes on to say it's not even half a lie. It's an absolute, total, complete lie. So now the U.S. is completely embarrassed. And you have the president come back out and say Castro could have done more.
56:13 If he genuinely wanted to stop the invasion, he could have interceded with the Katanganese themselves, which is just ludicrous. And it also says later on, one U.S. official said that the whole reason that they didn't do anything when Castro told them about what was going to happen is that
56:48 The entire room where it was briefed at one of the, what did he call that, 40 committee. That was what Kissinger used, this group of 40 foreign policy people to make their quote unquote decisions. When it was brought up there that week before when Castro had originally told him it was going to happen, that no one believed Castro.
57:15 He told them what was going to happen. They didn't believe him. It happened. And then they blamed Castro for it happening. So that's it. That gets us up to the end of the period 1978 for the Zaire segment of that. And as I mentioned at the beginning, they end up going back to their old name, the Congo, once they decide they're going to put Katanga.
57:46 back in as part of the country and the CIA has monopolization of the resources under control, they go back to their original name. So that's that. Does anybody have any questions? We can go ahead and open mics if you guys would like to come up and ask a question. Come on up. And just for those who came to the end so we can.
58:22 Keep the bots out. Bridget and Cousin It do a great job in keeping the bots out. But doing that and juggling the microphone at the same time, it's a waste of effort. So we're going to go ahead and start the process of holding mics to the end because bringing them up and people talking out is very distracting.
58:56 I'm trying to do the actual presentation, and I was in a couple other spaces that did this, and I just think it's much more organized and completely less distracting for me. You're banding a little bit, Colonel, just letting you know. James, you came up? I didn't have necessarily anything to say specifically yet, but I appreciate the invite to speak again, so thank you. Okay. Jeff?
59:29 Did you have a question? Virgil, were you speaking to me? I apologize. Yes, sir. Yeah. Sorry, your hand up. Yes, I just keep getting a call in from, and I'm just trying to get rid of the call. Just my question to Colonel. Considering the present circumstances of BRICS being formed in the big meeting in November around the presidential election,
1:00:03 The failures of intelligence in Africa, along with Barack Obama's poor, leaving Africa in very poor taste, turning their backs on America, and he imposed sanctions against them. All of this, is it all connected to where we're at with BRICS, in your opinion?
1:00:31 BRICS is a long time in coming of people getting tired of being coerced into adhering to the U.S. driven global policy and not just U.S. I mean, it's literally the West. It is all of NATO.
1:00:51 walking around with the big stick of Gladio beating people over the head with it to do whatever they want so they can steal all of their resources. And Bricks, to me, is the resistance gathering the wagons in order to be able to defend themselves collectively against the impending New World Order that the West wants to...
1:01:20 Because the rest of the world doesn't want that. And that's kind of a defensive mechanism for them to put a stake in the ground and say, we're not going any further. That's exactly, exactly the way that I was that, that I had taken it. And now my second question is the other night, I think it was a Thursday or Friday night. We were discussing to the WWF fraud organization out of Africa.
1:01:48 And the front, we called it the front. And we had mentioned Teddy Roosevelt as being a conservationist, but we also had mentioned that he was shot before a rally and carried a bullet 90 minutes for the speech. And I just thought it was a strange coincidence on Saturday what happened. What was your take on that?
1:02:17 I would not consider Teddy Roosevelt in the league with Trump. But just to be clear, when we talked about the WWF, the World Wildlife Fund, they operate in Africa, but they are not located in Africa. They are very much a NATO-driven, Western-driven entity to recolonize the continent of Africa.
1:02:43 Yes, and I agree with you 100%. I don't compare Teddy Roosevelt to Donald Trump. They're in two different leagues, considering. But I do give President Trump credit for standing tall during very difficult times as well. I'll end. Okay. Does anybody else have any questions? Albert, did you have a question? Well, thank you. I mean, I was trying to, first of all,
1:03:17 Thank you for this space. And I passed by yesterday, and I was trying to figure out what we're speaking about today. I see the Congo, but I came late, so I wanted to hear a little bit more. What is this about? I heard about Fidel Castro in the Congo, and what I can say is I know when the war started
1:03:48 in Brazzaville, started in Brazzaville. And then he moved up to Angola. And that's when, back then, they were protecting the wells, the oil, similar to what the group of Wagner do, similar to Blackwater. It's like you have an entity which gets into a conflict. But what I know...
1:04:20 Now, most of the Cubans are not well recognized as they were before back then because they knew that if they have natural resources, they could get their own weapons. And having this opportunity today, having this space and so much information.
1:04:55 Well, we can really separate the truth from what has been programmed to us. It's very difficult for people to understand what's really going on. I mean, I don't know if I'm in the same...
1:05:24 Communication, as you want to discuss today. But what I can say is that, for example, we have a leader in Cuba, which everybody knows them as Diaz-Canel. And Diaz-Canel is the president of Cuba put by the Castro regime. Now, if you go back to history, we all know that.
1:05:56 Fulgencio Batista was overthrown by Fidel Castro in the beginning of the revolution. But we have records. We have, how can I put it? We have so much information that we have shared to leaders like Marco Rubio, Bob Menendez, Crook, Bob Menendez. And what they would do for...
1:06:28 Not to be able for the people to know the real truth in history. And it's kind of confusing what I'm trying to compress here because it's so much information and we have so much, the space is limited. But what I can tell you from all of this is that you find out that it was a show.
1:06:57 The biggest lie in history, 65 years of suffering to find out that the actual president is the son of Batista himself, which what I mean with this is that, you see, Batista had three brothers.
1:07:25 The one that I'm saying that is his father, his name is Hermelindo Saldiva Batista. And, you know, it's very simple. You can check the DNA. But anyway, I never thought that not United States, but the people which are put in place, for example, about this administration, we have Alejandro Mallorca.
1:08:00 which is in charge in the cyber... Hello? I'm still here. Okay. Yeah, the cyber security, which he has the opportunity who he allowed who can speak and who can be censored. In my case, I've been censored, put in jail by...
1:08:34 These leaders are supposed to fight for the truth, defend. Hello? Can you hear me? Keep going. Yes. Yes. And we gave all this information to Bob Menendez, Marco Rubio, which in this case, it was through Vivian Bobo, which is the wife of.
1:09:13 Esteban Bobo, which they are the community leaders that can talk and speak to Washington, but against the brokers and the lobbyists and so much money, interest in all of this, that this is the reason that we have been 65 years separated.
1:09:40 Alberta, let me ask you something. Why do you think it is that Marco Rubio and Medendez and those people will not tell the truth about Cuba? Because they are all family. Diaz-Balart is family of the first wife of Fidel Castro, which just recently passed away. And it's like a...
1:10:08 It's more than a conspiracy. It's like two families fighting and deciding now to make peace. And this is the reason there's no embargo or blockade in Cuba for the fact that most of the chicken is brought from the United States. And you see luxury cars entering into the port.
1:10:40 from the port of El Mariel, which is run by Luis Alberto Rodriguez Lopez Calleja, which is the... But Alberto, you would agree that the bottom line is those people are benefiting by the current status. Is that correct? Say it again. The people in our government, like Marco Rubio,
1:11:10 They have to be benefiting by the current... Of course, of course. No, you hit it. And the sad thing is that we, the taxpayers, are paying for all this bullshit. For example, Congress approved Republicans, okay? And I'm talking specifically of the Cuban community.
1:11:41 the Cuban exile, they do not have no power. The only power do they have is the power of the purse. And the power of the purse is which they get the money and they give it to the monopoly, which are all these people involved, which is like having a cemetery, being owner of a cemetery. And of course, you might say, but you know, do you like your business?
1:12:09 Well, you know, I don't want nobody to die, but I want my business to prosper. So for your business to prosper, people need to die. Hello? Hello? The colonel, you're banding a little bit. Can you hear me? Yeah, we can hear you, brother. Okay. Yeah. Okay. So, you know, I made a letter.
1:12:44 to Bob Menendez, and I passed it through two channels directly, certified mail and everything, before he entered into this scandal, because this is what he's been doing for years. But when you speak about Cuba, who you may ask, oh, this is the people that know. How can they know if they've been doing this for 65 years? And there's no solution.
1:13:17 I'm sorry. No. Alberto, you're good. Colonel, you are banding. May I continue? Give the colonel just a minute. I think she's trying to fix her signal. Okay. I cannot hear her well, but I can hear you clear.
1:13:53 Copy that. We can hear you, sir. Thank you for listening. Very interesting story about Cuba, sir.
1:14:01 We like that. Very interesting. Thank you for your info and your information. No, and this is the solution to this problem. I mean, we need to, it's like, you know, it's not what the country can do for you, but what the people can do for the country. And we need patriots like you guys getting together, like Darren Aquino, which I know, and he has been helping many people. But again.
1:14:31 It's like a mafia, which it is. They just find out right now. You can look it up. Search recently, yesterday, Sergio Pino, a billionaire, a billionaire that pay up like $300,000 for two hit squad to kill her wife. This is the same people that received.
1:15:00 Sergio Pino, look it up. This is the same person that was introduced in La Brigada 2506, which is where the Cuban leaders are making billions and billions. I can hear you a little bit, Colonel, but you are banding. Yes. Yes, I can hear you, but the communication keeps dropping.
1:15:32 on your side. But anyway, the question is, what are we going to do about it? I'm willing to, I've been doing this for years for free. I've been put in jail because of it. Okay. I've been exposing all this truth. It's all over my channel and nobody speak about it. It's like I'm being censored. I'm like a ghost. You know, why don't you take me to court for defamation?
1:16:03 Because I got all the emails. Bridget, can you hear me? Yeah, that sounds better, Colonel. Yes. But anyway, as I was saying, I have all the emails. I have all the proof. Everybody knows about it. And, you know, I keep wondering what's going on. What's going on? I mean, why do you think they put Mallorca was part of the team of Obama?
1:16:36 So in this case, Alejandro Mallorca, having him there is a conflict of interest because he had allowed of all the intelligence from Raul Castro, which his son is the one in charge, Alejandro Castro to be in charge. And they have filled Florida with operators of the intelligence of Castro legally in.
1:17:05 to the United States. The people that really want to come here to work, they do not receive no visa. So it's a huge monopoly. It's before our eyes. Nobody can say that it's not true because that's why we have data. We are in G5. What do we need? Do we need the Starlink to open up so everybody can see what's going on so we can go live? And, you know, I see now that...
1:17:38 I'm glad Trump told Marco Rubio. I'm glad that he told him, which I called him a team feature. I'm glad that he told him that to redeem himself, there was too many people watching. And these people need to be stopped. And I'm talking about the same people that for 65 years.
1:18:11 have played a role to become rich of the suffering of the Cuban people. Albert, we've been covering exactly, you're exactly right. And we've been covering exactly what you're talking about in so many different countries. Oh, yes. And you're absolutely right. No, yes. It's the same groups of people. And in many cases, it's...
1:18:41 Their relatives, where they leave off, their relatives end up in power. As you've seen, it perpetuates itself. And that's part of the reason why we're doing what we are doing here is to educate people because the news does not cover the real history. And the history books are being written by the ones who are perpetrating the crime.
1:19:13 Exactly. Bridget, can you hear me? Yes, ma'am. I can. Okay. All right. Alberto? Yes. Alberto. Yeah, we've got your point. We want to keep this open for other people to be able to make comments on the topic here. So thank you for being part. I was able to hear you. I guess you guys just couldn't hear me. Right.
1:19:43 Right. All right. Well, thank you for this opportunity. And whoever wants more than talk, I got all the evidence. So whoever wants to get in contact with me, just I can send you everything I have. Awesome. Thank you. Okay. Thank you. Did anybody else have any questions or want to mic? Eduardo, I think you had a question. Yes, I have a question. Hi, Colorado. Hi, everybody.
1:20:16 Listening to this part of the story about the invasion and the war on Angola, Congo, all these copy leaders and all of that, how Cuba was part of that too. But there was something that you said, but it was a lightly...
1:20:43 by you and I have a small question because some of our guys, some of our people in our movement have been digging into the story of Angola and we have some testimonies from people that were there talking about the oil fields on Cabinda. They say that there was a part of Angola that was rich full of petroleum oil and they pretty much didn't participate
1:21:14 in any war or fight or whatever, they were just staying there to protect that oil field. But some of our guys are saying that those oil fields were the property of the Rockefellers. So my question is, is that right or is it not right? Is it something that is wrongly understood or is that right? No, as far as I know, the Cubans that were there, unlike what we were told, we were told that the...
1:21:45 The Cubans were there as part of an expeditionary force and was actually fighting. There's no evidence of that at all. The Cubans, and again, this is something that I've ran across repeatedly. That was the exact same story we were told in Grenada. We were told that in Venezuela. We were told that in Guyana. We have constantly been being told that.
1:22:11 When Cubans go, and like in the case when we covered Grenada, they were there as school teachers and mechanics and teaching people different trades. And yet in America, the whole reason that we invaded Grenada was this communist scare. Oh my God, there's Cubans there and they're teaching them to fight. They're going to be more communist on our doorsteps, blah, blah, blah. And none of that was true.
1:22:41 And that is all, everything that I have read in Angola, they were there as non-combatant people. Because again, you have to understand that each of the, especially in Africa, these are brand new countries. They have never been in leadership. They've never ran their own country.
1:23:06 They have been colonies in some cases for a couple of hundred years. And all of a sudden they're thrust into these leadership roles and the entire West is fighting them. It's not even that they won't help them. They're actively launching wars and sabotaging them. So the only people in the entire world with the cojones.
1:23:35 And the backbone in the resources to come in and help these fledgling countries do something was Cuba and the Soviet Union. Because they basically threw up the middle finger at America and the West and said, screw you. If you're not going to help these people stand up after you've done the last 200 years of subjugating them and using them as slaves, then...
1:24:04 for humanity's sake, we're going to help them. So that's been my experience, and that's what my research shows. Well, yeah, I'm just asking because I have heard from some people that were there on Angola and were stationed there on Cabinda, protecting those fields, the refineries and all of that. And some of them were saying that part of that refinery, oil fields or whatever, they were...
1:24:35 the property of the Rockefellers, blah, blah, blah. And in that case, what was that? Cuba was protecting some part of the businesses, American businesses in Angola. What was all of that? Because for Cubans, for the Cuban people, there's no real reason for anybody, for any Cuban to be participating in that war or trying to support whatever communist or revolution or whatever it was. There was nothing about that.
1:25:05 Instead, from that operation on Angola, that participation of Cuba in Angola, was born one of the most scandalous cases in Cuba's history. It was the case of General Ochoa. This guy was pretty much using the same techniques as a lot of the operations, heavily trained in arms, drugs, diamonds, marbles.
1:25:38 Ebony, a lot of things. They were doing pretty much the same thing, covert trafficking and all of that, getting money, using the money to introduce new guerrilla wars on America and all of that. So pretty much the same tactics of Gladius. So I think that we really need to pay more attention to that, more attention to whatever Cuba was doing there, because it seemed to me that Cuba was acting
1:26:06 and still acting as if he approaches, you know? I don't know. There's no reason for Castro to gain power so easily in Cuba. And it was because Batista didn't have any longer support from the United States and had to go. But then they put in, they moved in Castro. It's pretty much the same stupid thing. It's the same thing that happened on China.
1:26:36 with Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong. It's the same thing. Repeated it over, over, and over, and over again. So that was my question. Okay. All right, James, go ahead. Yeah, I just, I mean, the Congo, it sounds so similar to kind of what happened in Afghanistan, like kind of what happened or what's been happening in the Middle East, and correct me if I'm wrong, obviously.
1:27:08 But it's almost like like so whenever I used to think of America I thought of like hey, we're the good guys Why well the evidence for us being the good guys was post World War two We had one thing that no other nation had ever done after we completely obliterated our enemies we went back over there and we Rebuilt the countries that we destroyed because we knew it's not the people that we were fighting It was leaders who were leading people astray that we were fighting
1:27:34 And so now, like, you hear the Congo and saying that, you know, Cuba and Russia came to help out, basically giving the middle finger to America. You see the same pattern happen in the Middle East with China in the sense of we completely turn our back on Afghanistan and leave everything there. And then the Chinese come in and go, hey, we just want to build a road for resources. We'll be your friend.
1:28:00 you know we'll help you as well we'll give you whatever and and so it kind of seems like there was a similar thing or a reoccurring trend where america will come into a place mess it up completely destroy it turn our backs on it and then our adversaries will come over and be like hey that was messed up with them we don't like them either and then it's like enemy of my enemy is a friend so is that is that kind of the gist of so but is that in congo
1:28:30 Let me rephrase that a little bit. If you start with the premise that there is what I refer to as an international syndicate, that their entire goal has been from the late 1800s to monopolize all of the resources and subjugate all of the people.
1:28:56 All of them, not just Africa, not just South America, but us too. This is not about the United States as all of us. This is about all of them against the world population. So these conglomerates and these people that make up the controlling element of this international syndicate decided.
1:29:24 Um, well before the first world war one and world war two, we had those wars in order for them to set up international institutions to do exactly what they're doing right now. Without those world wars, you would not have the UN. You wouldn't have had the league of nations. You wouldn't have had, you wouldn't have NATO. So you had to have those world wars in order to set up the manipulation infrastructure. Once they had the.
1:29:52 infrastructure set up, they needed a paramilitary capability to subjugate all of the countries who actually thought that they were a country. And so their goal was to install a fascist dictator. They never did the rebuilding of these countries out of the benevolence of a good heart. They did it to build into these countries a controlling mechanism that they controlled.
1:30:21 And West Germany and Germany in particular is very illustrative of that, because when the West German government was set up, the entities to be the CIA at this point installed SS Nazi General Reinhard Galen as the chief of intel to Adenauer, who was the first, quote unquote, non-Nazi West German chancellor.
1:30:51 If you actually do research on him, he was anything but non-Nazi. He had all kinds of ties to fascist elements of Germany. And he, in fact, had a whole bunch and reinstalled everybody that was acquitted and anybody that had a life sentence, he commuted to basically time served. So all of the Nazis are now all back out on the streets and, quote unquote, denazified West Germany. The entire thing was a scam.
1:31:23 And the BND basically reported to Alan Dulles. Galen basically worked for Alan Dulles at the CIA. They co-owned front companies like Crypto AG. Everything about our history has been a scam as far as what you and I believe to be true. It's all a lie.
1:31:48 And they went country by country by country under Operation Gladio throughout Europe and Operation Condo in Latin America and installed dictatorships that they controlled so they could steal all of the resources from all of these countries. They kept getting richer and we kept getting poorer. They did it here. They did it with NAFTA. Yeah.
1:32:13 How that's so interesting that you say it started in the 1800s, because that is when we adopted the Prussian model education system is in the late 1800s, which it's not a coincidence. No, it's not at all. And the more I think about, I mean, it's, it's, you control the Senate, you control information, you control how people think, or if you control the flow of information, you control the people. So it's like the fact that it starts in the late 1800s. Exactly. They were eugenicist. They were, um,
1:32:42 propagandists. They were controllers. And they set the ball rolling with initially the takeover. And again, I don't know if you've ever read anything that Antony Sutton has written about how the same people in London and New York funded the Bolshevik Revolution. They also funded Hitler. They funded FDR. And so they basically put us on the roll to serfdom.
1:33:11 while writing telling us they were doing it. Wait, so then I guess I'm going to ask a very tinfoil hat question here, just because I'm curious of your thoughts on it. I don't remember when or where, but I'd read somewhere that apparently we were notified that Japan might hit Pearl Harbor. Are you saying that Japan hitting Pearl Harbor wasn't just overambition from the Imperial?
1:33:42 But it was actually like a very deliberate thing to pull us into the war. If you go back in time and believe me, I have read so much about this. If you read the book at dawn, we slept. They make a clear documented history of about 10 years before World War before Pearl Harbor. There was a.
1:34:12 Wargaming annual exercise at what we now call PACOM in Hawaii, home of the Pacific Fleet. And during this wargaming exercise, it went on for decades. Never had any Asian force ever come across the Pacific and successfully
1:34:40 Did a like in the military, we call it red air. They had never been able to in the war game successfully get access to the ships to bomb them. They were thwarted every single time until 10 years prior to the bombing with.
1:35:04 People that were assigned to, I'm just going to call it PACOM. I don't know what the actual term, PACOM was not what it was called, but basically the Pacific Fleet. There were people that later turned out to be spies, part of this war gaming facility. And what they discovered through a couple of cruises to the northern route.
1:35:34 into the Pacific or into Hawaii. They had always assumed that at particular points in the year, that it was impossible to take a northern route into Hawaii successfully because of icebergs and all this other stuff. The war game at that 10-year point proved that to be a false assumption. And for the first time ever, the red air,
1:36:04 was able to successfully access and neutralize the Pacific Fleet. And the Japanese had access to that plan. It was later found and provided after World War II that they actually had that information.
1:36:27 There are a lot of people, and I'll get even more tinfoil hat on you. There's a lot of people that believe, I don't know if you know what Operation Golden Lily is, where Japan went all over Asia, invading all of those countries. And we were always told they did it because they needed the resources because they live on an island and they couldn't just buy resources. They were stealing all the resources. And to some degree, that may be true, but that isn't what they were actually taking.
1:36:57 They were taking, during those 20-some years where they took Korea as a colony, they invaded China, they invaded Vietnam, they were actually taking all of these people's gold, silver, all kinds of gems, antiquities, art. They basically looted. They even took kitchen sinks.
1:37:23 They took wiring out of these big, ginormous buildings over there. They literally took things down. And during this process, a lot of that was either taken back to the emperor's palace on the most valuable stuff, or they dug huge, like ginormous double football sides.
1:37:50 tunnel facilities underground in the Philippines and buried all of this treasure. And there were people in the United States that knew that they were doing this. After the war, there were funds set up. And one of them in particular was called an M fund, the letter M and then the word fund. But there were three of them in particular that had like trillions of dollars worth of gold.
1:38:19 that had been stored in the Philippines. Marcos, I don't know if you know this, was sued because he tried to steal one particular guy who dug up some of that gold and was this guy who black marketed a lot of the gold into banks throughout the world for him for decades. His cut of 10% amounted to $42 billion. And he successfully sued Marcos after the CIA.
1:38:47 that he was no longer useful to them, and they removed him. He was brought to Hawaii, and there was a lawsuit by this guy's family to recover the $42 billion that they had tried to steal from him, because primarily they were in U.S. banks, the gold was. And they never got their gold, but they were awarded that gold by the court.
1:39:12 So there was a 40. It's the biggest lawsuit ever brought in the world. Forty two billion dollars. And that was just his 10 percent cut. Jesus. So there there was a lot of money to be made by what Japan was doing. And there was a lot of people that knew what Japan was doing. How deep do you want to go? Ten foot high. Try me.
1:39:40 Okay, so this is kind of where I try to figure out the parallel between military and criminal organizations or crime syndicates. And there's been one question that I'm still trying to figure out how to properly word, so bear with me. But have you ever heard of Moore's Law? No. Okay, so Moore's Law is a law in IT. It's about the number of transitions.
1:40:05 transistors to, I think it's a capacitor, doubles every two years. But the problem is, is Moore's law used to be linear. Now it's exponential, meaning that our technological advancements are just rapidly increasing by the day. And so I sit here going, well, if we're in the 21st century with all of these amazing feats of technology behind us, right?
1:40:27 why are certain things not being solved? Like, why are certain problems staying stagnant and not being solved? And then I arrived to the answer that, well, when you solve a problem, you lose a lot of money. So where I go from here is I say, okay, well, in places like Singapore, they burn trash cleanly.
1:40:47 They figured out how to chemically burn trash and take care. Everybody's heard, don't throw plastic in a fire, right? There's chemicals. But they figured out how to do it. And then they used that thermal energy to power their city. And I go, well, I mean, we made the Enigma machine, the first computer. We have that in our pockets now. And it's like that version snorted a line of Coke and did steroids and lifted 500 pounds. We have very powerful computers in our pockets. So I go, why do we not have personalized trash cans that can burn trash?
1:41:16 Well, then I start getting into, gee, who was, after Prohibition, who was controlling the unions of America? I mean, everyone here has seen The Sopranos, right? That's a great show. But seriously, I mean, waste management, you factor that in, you factor in casinos, you factor in the labor unions for plumbing and the trucking union and all that stuff. And then it kind of clicked with a book from Buckminster Fuller called Operation Manual for Spaceship Earth.
1:41:45 where he talks about the pirates were the ones who were able to... The pirates were the ones that ran the world, basically, for a very long time. Because if you wanted to move something that you didn't want anyone to know about, you had to ask a pirate to move it for you. And then on top of that, they were specialists or jacks of all trade with information. So then when you track that, I guess, through modern history, you come to realize that the people who run the world are the people who can move things without...
1:42:12 getting caught or getting noticed. And also there are people who can remove other people without getting caught or getting noticed. And so it's just crazy to me that we still have, you know, this global issue, I guess. I don't really think it's that big of an issue personally, because if you have an issue with global warming, just plant a tree. But anyways, we have... But hold on just a second. Don't make light of that, because in order for all of this stuff to work,
1:42:40 They have to have a thing called strategy of tension. That's what makes all of this work. Their monopolization of all of the answers only is possible if they keep us at each other's throat. So they have to have things like global warming. Global warming isn't real. It's bullshit. We all know it's bullshit. But in order to have that.
1:43:04 They that is what they use to drive wedges into people so that you can't collectively recognize what you just recognized. Right. Exactly. And then on top of that, you factor in. OK, well, I mean, if if our cars are causing so much, you know, so much issue for, I guess, the level of CO2 in the atmosphere, what impacts the atmosphere more in a legal wood trade that.
1:43:31 could put numbers in the drug business to shame, basically illegally chopping down wood all over the earth for an illegal wood trade. And who's doing that? Oh, the people who own 80% of everything. The people that are doing that officially right now is the World Wildlife Fund under the auspices of conservation. Right. You follow that chain up high enough, you'll figure out it's just one company that's been doing a lot of shit. BlackRock, right? So then...
1:43:58 That's a whole different can of worms. But it's just one. Yeah, it's not just one. It's a very elaborate network set up. And you're right, it is a syndicate. Sorry, I don't mean to jump in, but I'm like biting my fingers. You're right, it's a crime syndicate. It's an international syndicate, group, conglomeration. And it's not really about the money. It's about the control. It's all about...
1:44:29 control the wealth goes with the control we are nothing more than a commodity to be controlled right yeah and and so i guess where i was initially ending up is now who are the modern day pirates and well it's like whoever can control information how do we all get our information these days well i mean look at us now in a space right so when the gentleman earlier alberto is talking about you know what do i do i have all this information i try to get it out but i can't
1:45:00 It's like, unfortunately, there are filters and barriers on the Internet now that will prevent certain things from getting out, which is why, Colonel, I was so hesitant to email you what I want to share with you. I did post a picture of a stack of documents, and that's not even all of it. We're still digging through all this stuff. So I'm trying to get everything prepped and figure out how to share that with you before we get to Vietnam. But, I mean, there's all sorts of stuff in there.
1:45:27 It blew my mind to find out that there was a triple joint operation between MI6, Mossad, and CIA in South America just after World War II, talking about that they were still looking for Hitler. And I'm just like, what? This is either propaganda or... No, that is absolutely true. And what do you find out in 2012 when we get better forensic testing, right?
1:45:55 that the, the, the skeleton that the Russians, you know, grabbed from the, uh, what was it called? The Eagle's nest, whatever, wherever we, yeah. So the skeleton you have, the genetic makeup of that was actually a woman. So, I mean, there's just a lot of things. Well, but that is, that's just the same thing as the Dutch finding out their moon rocks would wait. What? Yes. Yes.
1:46:26 Say that again. The Dutch royal family, a quote unquote moon rock and it's wood. I'm not even lying. That's hilarious. So when I, when I, yeah, when I say everything's a lie, I literally mean everything. And so go back to your pirate analogy, because I too have oftentimes thought of that because one of the very first.
1:46:56 memories of me getting excited about history was Thomas Jefferson sending the Marines over. When I found out that the references to Tripoli and us going to save Americans from pirates that kept kidnapping and holding Americans for ransom, not only were the quote unquote pirates Muslims, but it was off the coast of Africa.
1:47:26 And I'm like, what? Why do we not know that? And I'm not saying it as a pejorative to the religion, but it's a relevant artifact, piece of history, because I never associated the Ottoman Empire with the Muslim religion, even though it was literally driven.
1:47:50 by the Muslim religion because our history books never associate the two things together, which is completely different than the Christian crusades in which they used to deride Christianity all the time. So why is it the Ottoman Empire and the Christian crusades and then you can't figure out as a little kid the fact that our entire first
1:48:17 military expedition as a new country was to go save Americans from being kidnapped by Muslim pirates off the coast of Africa. Well, yeah, I mean, the Islamic slave trade is still alive. And I guess, I mean, as you could see probably from my Twitter, I'm very religious because I kind of just gave up on cybersecurity and ethical hacking and just said, you know what, I'm just going to put my faith in this because it was making me way too paranoid.
1:48:45 But with regards to the Crusades, I mean, the Crusades were launched after seven centuries of constant Islamic aggression. It's like before the very first Crusade in 1095, Muslims had invaded Christian Syria, Christian Jordan, Christian Palestine. Yeah, like all these Christian countries. I just think it was weird how our history has like segregated these little stovepipes of information and you're only allowed to know certain parts.
1:49:13 form opinions that end up being completely not right. I was in fifth grade when they took the words under God out of the Pledge of Allegiance, sixth grade when we stopped saying it all together. And then also like middle school when we started, you know, there's no more God basically talked about in school because you'll offend someone, right? This was happening to me in elementary school. For context for everyone here, I'm 25.
1:49:37 So it's like I literally was growing up as things were getting segregated out, as information was getting segregated out. The problem for them is I have a really good memory. So what ended up getting twisted is that we're the bad guys because of this war. You know, like, oh, yeah, like, no, the Crusades were bad, mean. They were very, very mean. We shouldn't have done that. It's like, no, no, no. The Crusades were at least the first Crusade was morally justified. And the craziest part is it took us about 100 years.
1:50:06 to get the Orthodox Pope and the Catholic Pope to see eye to eye so that we could actually launch the first crusade. Like, like they were so caught up in this power that their church is right. And all the other churches are wrong, you know, that they wouldn't even join forces together to combat, you know, these people who literally got as far as Sicily, which we didn't even get back until the reconquista of 1492, you know? So it's just like, I'm so interested as to how the church,
1:50:35 has played a part in holding the pin of history, especially now that things come to light with regards of the child trafficking and things like that. So I don't know if it's good or not, but I am interested if you know anything about how the church has played into this or not. Hey, James, if you get a chance, go back and listen to the space we did on...
1:51:02 Italy or back on her Rumble page because it goes through a lot of the CIA assets and connections in the Vatican and how they were money laundering through the Vatican. Interesting. Yeah, I'm definitely going to check out on Rumble. There's so much stuff on Rumble, it's hard to catch up quick. The best book...
1:51:27 So I did a series on Paul Williams book. It was the very first book review I did on the Colonel's Corner on Rumble. Go listen to that. And then come after you've listened to the book reviews, come listen to The Space on Italy. The Space on Italy is a large kind of an extract of that that kind of goes over the integration of. And I also have a sub stack where I just began.
1:51:56 talking about the money laundering aspect. I'm going to be doing a series of articles on Badland Media about all of this. So you can definitely check that out as well. But anyway, we're up on two hours, guys. So Alberta, I'm going to take Bartoli first because Alberto had already.
1:52:21 I had a question. Bartoli, you go and we'll close out with Alberto, but please make the question short. Yeah, I know. I was I was I was I just tuned in. I was listening that you guys were talking about the Crusades. And, you know, I just coming with a, you know, with a kind of a neutral point, just to emphasize that the Pope authorized the Crusades and implicitly allowed for looting.
1:52:49 It was Pope Urban II, I guess it was year 1095, during the Council of Clermont. And this guy, Urban II, called upon Christians in Europe to join a military campaign to liberate the Holy Land, Jerusalem, and other sacred places from the Muslim control. This call was what marked the beginning of the First Crusade.
1:53:18 And in that speech, Urban II promised plenary indulgences, which means complete forgiveness of sins, to all those who participated in the crusade, attracting a lot of nobles and peasants to join the cause. Although he didn't explicitly say they could loot all as they pleased, he promises the spiritual and material rewards.
1:53:45 around all this idea of the Crusades, that they could seize wealth and territories that they encountered along the way. So, I mean, going back to what you were saying, I don't see that we the Christians were the good guys in here. You know, I think in wars, there are no good guys or bad guys. And all these kind of wars that involve religion, I think we're just...
1:54:14 He had an ego trap, you know, when we think that we were right in going there and conquer and the Pope lying to people about indigencies and stuff like that. You know, that's my point. Okay. Thank you for making your point. But let me tell you from my perspective, this space was not about the Crusades. He just mentioned it in relationship. His point is that.
1:54:44 The Crusades followed 600 years of Muslim conquest. He did not say that there were good guys and bad guys. He said it was justified to take the territory back from the Muslim Ottoman Empire as it had encroached into Europe and along the way murdered.
1:55:10 Hundreds of thousands of people, because at the time, their edict, since you mentioned the edict of the Crusades, the edict of the Muslim aggressors was you either convert to Islam or you will be killed. And I've been in the Italian churches where they invaded and chopped people up into little pieces. I've seen those pictures.
1:55:39 of some of the later conquest into Europe through the peninsula of Italy. They have this weird church and I need to, I still have the brochure from it. My daughter went on a, she was like in third grade. It was a school and it was traumatizing to me as an adult. For some, I don't know how they did this, but there's glass cases in this church in Southern Italy that the pieces of people and their clothes,
1:56:09 not in formaldehyde or anything else, are in glass cases that are shuttered in the turrets of this. And they were all in the basement of this particular church when the Ottoman Empire arrived. They went down into the basement, chopped everybody up. And somehow, in the aftermath of that, these glass cases were...
1:56:32 constructed, sealed, and still have the people inside of them in pieces. And they opened the shutters in front of these little kids. I about puked, but I've seen the aftermath of that. It's gross. Nobody's justifying anything. What we were talking about is how our history has been perverted, and we only hear particular versions of it as opposed to all of it.
1:57:01 No, I totally understand. That's what I wanted to give a little bit more of context, because there was a political and economic context behind all this, you know, because the European nobles saw the Crusades as an opportunity to gain some land, wealth and prestige. Additionally, as did the Ottomans, as did the Ottomans. So if you ask an Ottoman, he was right in doing what?
1:57:31 Okay, we're moving on because that's not the subject here. Alberto, go ahead. Yes, and what I wanted to say is great space again and finding out in history that Adolfo Hitler died in Argentina or the Pope Francisco hold the money of all the narcotraffickers of Latin America. It's not going to fix our problem today. As I said before,
1:58:00 We have the information now where we can make a difference. So it's up to the people who wants to hear and who want to expose. I've been doing it for years. So that's all I have to say. Thank you. Okay. Thank you. Thank you. Okay. If we don't have anybody, other questions, we're going to go ahead and end for today. We'll be back here tomorrow at noon. And then we go to four o'clock permanently on Monday.
1:58:30 Thank you all for being here. Appreciate it.

Entities here

Congo38CIA28Mobutu Sese Seko25United States25Angola25Cuba23Belgium12Jimmy Carter10NATO10Crusades10MPLA9Operation Gladio7Dean Rusk7Patrice Lumumba6France6Fidel Castro6Ottoman Empire5Marco Rubio4Morocco4China4Fulgencio Batista4Bob Menendez4Attack on Pearl Harbor4Cabinda4Korea4Japan4Chile3Alejandro Mallorca3UNITA3Pope Urban II3Theodore Roosevelt3Adolf Hitler3Donald Trump3West Germany3South Africa3Vietnam3David Buffkin3Costa Rica2Israel2Afghanistan2

Claims made here

Belgium funded Congo host_asserted ▶ 1:52
“But just for a little history, because we do have a lot of new people joining us every single day, thanks to all of you and all of your hard work in sharing the material. The Congo story, as it goes, …”
CIA funded Patrice Lumumba host_asserted ▶ 3:41
“1001 Club and many other things that we've talked about as well. But specifically with the Congo, they were given their independence. And I'm going to put that in big, heavy air quotes. And they elect…”
CIA carried_out_attack Patrice Lumumba host_asserted ▶ 5:04
“Congolese to round out the military so that they can support him and the protection of the resources. Well, Belgium, in collusion with the CIA and the U.S., basically go into, well, they never left, K…”
NATO funded Congo host_asserted ▶ 5:33
“called Katanga. And the NATO proceeds to build the world's largest NATO base to protect all of the natural resources, the gold, the diamonds, the uranium, blah, blah, blah. They elect their own govern…”
Belgium carried_out_attack Patrice Lumumba host_asserted ▶ 6:04
“stooges. And as this is unfolding, they are also bribing the president of the Congo to fire, which he has no authority to do, Patrice Lumumba, which he does. And then he basically goes into hiding. Th…”
CIA installed Mobutu Sese Seko host_asserted ▶ 7:55
“I'm not exactly sure that's the way you say that, but we're just going to call him Mubatu. And you spell his last name S-E-S-E. And then the second part of it is S-E-K-O. In 1975, he is the president,…”
Mobutu Sese Seko laundered_money_for CIA host_asserted ▶ 8:52
“to the tune of billions of dollars, which hide out in Swiss, Paris, and New York banks. And you can immediately see the banker's benefit to having these CIA stooges because they money launder money in…”
Mobutu Sese Seko attempted_coup_against Congo Republic book_quoted ▶ 10:50
“Mubato approach eventually deflected that either Zaire, with CIA help, or the agency alone, undertake an invasion against, quote, those bastards across the river, unquote, which was referring to the C…”
CIA attempted_coup_against Mobutu Sese Seko host_asserted ▶ 12:17
“and black Americans for a coup against Mubato planned for the 30th of September. Mubato declared that the quote-unquote imperialists were displeased with his breaking off relationships with Israel, hi…”
CIA trained Mobutu Sese Seko host_asserted ▶ 13:43
“that the CIA arranges for these governments to send their people to is for the CIA to groom the students as spies to go back and infiltrate their appropriate governments. That's the whole purpose of i…”
CIA carried_out_attack Orlando Letelier host_asserted ▶ 15:17
“when actually what they were being taught is how to create bombs. No time did any of those graduates, and there's been interviews with many of them, ever be deployed on a CIA deployment to actually de…”
CIA attempted_coup_against Syria book_quoted ▶ 17:15
“Now, keep in mind, this whole network has been set up in the mid-1940s. In 1949, while serving at the U.S. Embassy in Syria, he became aware of a U.S. plan to support a coup overthrowing the democrati…”
CIA covered_up El Mozote Massacre host_asserted ▶ 19:11
“wanted it blamed on. And it was later revealed that it was actually the American military advisors that had been present at the time of the massacre and that it was the people that the U.S. was suppor…”
CIA trafficked Costa Rica host_asserted ▶ 19:40
“When they were doing the drugs, flying out of there, that's where the one aircraft that crashed and they found drugs on it actually launched from was Costa Rica. He was also the ambassador to Panama d…”
CIA trafficked Panama host_asserted ▶ 19:40
“When they were doing the drugs, flying out of there, that's where the one aircraft that crashed and they found drugs on it actually launched from was Costa Rica. He was also the ambassador to Panama d…”
CIA attempted_coup_against Chile book_quoted ▶ 25:11
“In 67 to 69 in Guatemala and the following two years in Chile against Allende, Hinton, under the cover of working with USAID, had played a role in the CIA operation. He then served on a subcommittee o…”
CIA supplied_arms_to Mobutu Sese Seko book_quoted ▶ 26:44
“His greed for it was heightened a few years later when they found oil off the coastline. The CIA, although busily involved in Angola for the exact same reason, because of their resources, promptly fle…”
CIA paid Mobutu Sese Seko book_quoted ▶ 27:44
“The CIA works for an international syndicate. They do not work for CIA stooges in foreign countries. Six months later, and we'll prove that in a minute, six months later, in April 1976, the CIA gave M…”
Mobutu Sese Seko laundered_money_for CIA host_asserted ▶ 28:13
“that were hungry and starving. Did Mobatu use that money for that? Absolutely not. He put it in his bank account. And the problem with this is the CIA, through all of their promised backdoors banking …”
CIA ordered_assassination_of Patrice Lumumba documented ▶ 29:46
“avoid doing that. The same plan can be said of murder. A few months earlier in January 1976, the Justice Department had concluded that no grounds existed for federal prosecution of CIA officials invol…”
United States supplied_arms_to Mobutu Sese Seko host_asserted ▶ 34:59
“So basically, in that province that these former Congolese were going back into, the Katanga area, it had upwards of 80% of the Zairen resources in that area. So the U.S. responded by giving them $2 m…”
France supplied_arms_to Mobutu Sese Seko host_asserted ▶ 35:27
“But within a few months, it was $15 million each month for several months. France gave them Mirage jet bombers. Jimmy Carter had been in office less than two months as this stuff started happening. He…”
Morocco carried_out_attack Congo host_asserted ▶ 37:27
“Yet only a few days earlier, the U.S. had given its tactic approval to Morocco's decision to send 1,500 troops that were armed with U.S. military equipment to Mobato to help him fight what he labeled …”
CIA recruited David Buffkin host_asserted ▶ 39:55
“Zaire through USAID that then would pay him. That's plausible deniability. They do this all the time. But what is really interesting about this is the fact that it was later revealed that he was actua…”
USAID paid David Buffkin host_asserted ▶ 39:55
“Zaire through USAID that then would pay him. That's plausible deniability. They do this all the time. But what is really interesting about this is the fact that it was later revealed that he was actua…”
Cuba trained MPLA host_asserted ▶ 41:46
“Actually, they're supporting the good guys and doing what little they could, which was not a whole lot. But as we have seen in many of these scenarios, they did have some people to help them set up sc…”
Belgium funded Congo host_asserted ▶ 47:49
“and the Carter administration offered no elaboration on its statement. No matter who controlled the mines, they would look to be selling copper, cobalt, and other materials. In 1960, the secession mov…”
Fulgencio Batista overthrew Cuba caller_asserted ▶ 1:05:56
“Fulgencio Batista was overthrown by Fidel Castro in the beginning of the revolution. But we have records. We have, how can I put it? We have so much information that we have shared to leaders like Mar…”
Fidel Castro overthrew Fulgencio Batista caller_asserted ▶ 1:05:56
“Fulgencio Batista was overthrown by Fidel Castro in the beginning of the revolution. But we have records. We have, how can I put it? We have so much information that we have shared to leaders like Mar…”
Miguel Diaz-Canel member_of Hermelindo Saldiva Batista caller_asserted ▶ 1:06:57
“The biggest lie in history, 65 years of suffering to find out that the actual president is the son of Batista himself, which what I mean with this is that, you see, Batista had three brothers.…”
Hermelindo Saldiva Batista member_of Fulgencio Batista caller_asserted ▶ 1:07:25
“The one that I'm saying that is his father, his name is Hermelindo Saldiva Batista. And, you know, it's very simple. You can check the DNA. But anyway, I never thought that not United States, but the …”
Luis Alberto Rodriguez Lopez Calleja headed El Mariel caller_asserted ▶ 1:10:40
“from the port of El Mariel, which is run by Luis Alberto Rodriguez Lopez Calleja, which is the... But Alberto, you would agree that the bottom line is those people are benefiting by the current status…”
Sergio Pino member_of Brigade 2506 caller_asserted ▶ 1:15:00
“Sergio Pino, look it up. This is the same person that was introduced in La Brigada 2506, which is where the Cuban leaders are making billions and billions. I can hear you a little bit, Colonel, but yo…”
Alejandro Mallorca member_of United States caller_asserted ▶ 1:16:03
“Because I got all the emails. Bridget, can you hear me? Yeah, that sounds better, Colonel. Yes. But anyway, as I was saying, I have all the emails. I have all the proof. Everybody knows about it. And,…”
Alejandro Mallorca spied_on Raul Castro caller_asserted ▶ 1:16:36
“So in this case, Alejandro Mallorca, having him there is a conflict of interest because he had allowed of all the intelligence from Raul Castro, which his son is the one in charge, Alejandro Castro to…”
Rockefeller secretly_owned Cabinda caller_asserted ▶ 1:21:14
“in any war or fight or whatever, they were just staying there to protect that oil field. But some of our guys are saying that those oil fields were the property of the Rockefellers. So my question is,…”
Cuba supplied_arms_to Angola host_asserted ▶ 1:21:45
“The Cubans were there as part of an expeditionary force and was actually fighting. There's no evidence of that at all. The Cubans, and again, this is something that I've ran across repeatedly. That wa…”
Soviet Union supplied_arms_to Angola host_asserted ▶ 1:23:35
“And the backbone in the resources to come in and help these fledgling countries do something was Cuba and the Soviet Union. Because they basically threw up the middle finger at America and the West an…”
United States installed Fidel Castro host_asserted ▶ 1:26:06
“and still acting as if he approaches, you know? I don't know. There's no reason for Castro to gain power so easily in Cuba. And it was because Batista didn't have any longer support from the United St…”
United States overthrew Fulgencio Batista host_asserted ▶ 1:26:06
“and still acting as if he approaches, you know? I don't know. There's no reason for Castro to gain power so easily in Cuba. And it was because Batista didn't have any longer support from the United St…”
Antony Sutton funded Bolshevik Revolution book_quoted ▶ 1:32:42
“propagandists. They were controllers. And they set the ball rolling with initially the takeover. And again, I don't know if you've ever read anything that Antony Sutton has written about how the same …”
Antony Sutton funded Adolf Hitler book_quoted ▶ 1:32:42
“propagandists. They were controllers. And they set the ball rolling with initially the takeover. And again, I don't know if you've ever read anything that Antony Sutton has written about how the same …”
Japan carried_out_attack Attack on Pearl Harbor host_asserted ▶ 1:33:11
“while writing telling us they were doing it. Wait, so then I guess I'm going to ask a very tinfoil hat question here, just because I'm curious of your thoughts on it. I don't remember when or where, b…”
Japan carried_out_attack Operation Golden Lily host_asserted ▶ 1:36:27
“There are a lot of people, and I'll get even more tinfoil hat on you. There's a lot of people that believe, I don't know if you know what Operation Golden Lily is, where Japan went all over Asia, inva…”
Japan trafficked Philippines host_asserted ▶ 1:37:50
“tunnel facilities underground in the Philippines and buried all of this treasure. And there were people in the United States that knew that they were doing this. After the war, there were funds set up…”
Ferdinand Marcos laundered_money_for Philippines host_asserted ▶ 1:38:19
“that had been stored in the Philippines. Marcos, I don't know if you know this, was sued because he tried to steal one particular guy who dug up some of that gold and was this guy who black marketed a…”
Mossad carried_out_attack South Africa guest_asserted ▶ 1:45:27
“It blew my mind to find out that there was a triple joint operation between MI6, Mossad, and CIA in South America just after World War II, talking about that they were still looking for Hitler. And I'…”
Thomas Jefferson ordered_assassination_of United States Marine Corps host_asserted ▶ 1:46:56
“memories of me getting excited about history was Thomas Jefferson sending the Marines over. When I found out that the references to Tripoli and us going to save Americans from pirates that kept kidnap…”
United States Marine Corps carried_out_attack First Barbary War host_asserted ▶ 1:48:17
“military expedition as a new country was to go save Americans from being kidnapped by Muslim pirates off the coast of Africa. Well, yeah, I mean, the Islamic slave trade is still alive. And I guess, I…”
Ottoman Empire overthrew Italy host_asserted ▶ 1:50:06
“to get the Orthodox Pope and the Catholic Pope to see eye to eye so that we could actually launch the first crusade. Like, like they were so caught up in this power that their church is right. And all…”
CIA laundered_money_for Catholic Church host_asserted ▶ 1:51:02
“Italy or back on her Rumble page because it goes through a lot of the CIA assets and connections in the Vatican and how they were money laundering through the Vatican. Interesting. Yeah, I'm definitel…”
Pope Urban II founded Crusades caller_asserted ▶ 1:52:49
“It was Pope Urban II, I guess it was year 1095, during the Council of Clermont. And this guy, Urban II, called upon Christians in Europe to join a military campaign to liberate the Holy Land, Jerusale…”
Pope Urban II founded Council of Clermont caller_asserted ▶ 1:52:49
“It was Pope Urban II, I guess it was year 1095, during the Council of Clermont. And this guy, Urban II, called upon Christians in Europe to join a military campaign to liberate the Holy Land, Jerusale…”
Adolf Hitler removed_from_power Argentina caller_asserted ▶ 1:57:31
“Okay, we're moving on because that's not the subject here. Alberto, go ahead. Yes, and what I wanted to say is great space again and finding out in history that Adolfo Hitler died in Argentina or the …”
Pope Francis laundered_money_for South Africa caller_asserted ▶ 1:57:31
“Okay, we're moving on because that's not the subject here. Alberto, go ahead. Yes, and what I wanted to say is great space again and finding out in history that Adolfo Hitler died in Argentina or the …”