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The Colonel's Corner The Great Pretense Part 9

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0:00 whoa i love that song okay chapter 25 amen i know that video is so freaking cool um all right so chapter 25 cia asset arrested this chapter starts off in panama on a small island off the pacific coast
0:41 In late September 2007, they arrested the island's owner, who happened to be a middle-aged Colombian, Jose Nelson Yorrego Cardenas, and his 20-year-old girlfriend. They also found a sophisticated communication center on the island.
1:14 Wonder what he was doing with that. Wonder where he got it. It was a clue as to what Yorago was doing and his connection to the CIA-linked Gulfstream 2 that we talked about yesterday. Communication equipment, island off the coast of Panama, CIA drug-linked airplane. Baroque Vega.
1:50 The Colombian citizen, who we've talked about throughout this book, that has a long association with the CIA, confirmed during an interview with the author that the Gulfstream II was part of an operation led by ICE. DEA sources told the author the same thing, indicating that the cocaine jet was linked to Mayan...
2:20 Vega, in early 2008, offered a key revelation about the aircraft that connects it to cocaine on board and the U.S. government via an informant, Eurego. In addition, press reports in Latin America actually validated some of what Vega had said.
2:54 which helped piece together a long-running DEA, ICE, and CIA operation that involved Panama, Colombia, and Mexico. Urega was a notorious narco-trafficker, according to the DEA's own records. He had been doing work for major Colombian drug organizations for years, including Medellin, Cali,
3:25 and the North Valley cartels. He also was a money launderer for them and a communications expert that helped them set up communication equipment. Urega was arrested previously in Colombia in 1998 for narco-trafficking and landed in Bogota's infamous prison.
3:58 A U.S. State Department report described Urega in the wake of his arrest in the 1990s. DEA in Colombia and Colombian National Police conducted a joint investigation and resulted in the arrest in Colombia of former Lanero target Jose Urega, along with his accountant Urega.
4:26 Cardenas was charged with cocaine trafficking and is currently incarcerated in Colombia. He is a Colombian multi-ton cocaine trafficker and money launderer who was mentioned in over 80 DEA cases dating back all the way to 1982. Isn't that 80s when we were doing Iran-Contra? Yes, it was. Unquote.
4:57 Urega's role as a communications chief in the Colombian narco-trafficking network detailed in the following report in Business 2.0 magazine, which is owned by Time. This is a quote. Urega's network command and control was hidden in a Bogota warehouse, outfitted with a retractable German-made Rode and Schwartz transmission antenna.
5:30 That would go up to 40 feet tall. It also had 15 to 20 computers networked to servers and a small mainframe computer. The same kind of state-of-the-art setup existed in communication centers at Eureka's Ranch in Medellin, at the island resort that he owned, and in hideouts in Cali. Seized invoices and letters showed...
6:01 that Urega or his associates had recently bought roughly $100,000 worth of Motorola gear, 12 base stations, 16 mobile stations installed in trucks and cars, 50 radio phones, and eight repeaters to boost the signal over long distances. The ranch of Urega's network extended across the Caribbean.
6:29 in the upper half of South America. He and his operatives used it to send text messages to laptops in dozens of planes and boats to inform their pilots when it was safe to go and to receive confirmation when loads were dropped or retrieved. According to one intelligence official who analyzed Eureka's network, it was transmitting a thousand messages a day and not one of them
6:59 was intercepted by U.S. spy planes, unquote. That's physically impossible, just so that you guys know. Physically impossible. So Eureka, obviously, was not a small fish. So why did Colombian authorities release him from jail in September 2001, after he was only in jail for three years? If he's a...
7:33 Big fish in the narco-trafficking. According to Vega, it's because the US government recruited Urega as an informant in exchange for the promise of a better deal related to narco-trafficking charges he was facing at the time in the United States. In other words, put another narco-trafficker on your payroll of the United States government under the auspices that he's an informant.
8:04 And now he's protected. For years, he was in charge of negotiating deals with dozens of Colombian traffickers. Vega was the guy that his next tier down had approached those guys to get them deals with the United States. That's how Vega knows all of this stuff. Vega also said that Urega had been indicted in the United States.
8:40 The DEA sources also confirmed that Eureka was under indictment at that time in the United States. But don't go looking for paperwork on that because you won't find it. It is not an uncommon practice for court records of high-value U.S. cooperating sources to be sealed. That's very convenient.
9:09 Vega says he initially approached Eureka in the late 90s on behalf of the U.S. government to give him one of those deals. After several setbacks due to interference of allegedly corrupt federal agents in Bogota, DEA agent Ed Fields finally managed some time around 2001 to set up an operation involving Eureka. One of Eureka's initial missions involved targeting Colombian FARC.
9:38 Oh, big surprise. Eureka helped carry out communication stings that played a role in the article that was ran in Miami Herald, where 50 FARC members were charged for narco-trafficking. You can't make it up. Fields, with the help of the NSA, worked with Eureka in carrying out the sting, which involved clandestine planted,
10:11 Government satellite phones with the FARC leadership. According to a leaked memo drafted by the DOJ's attorney, Kent, that's the same leaked memo. The CIA also would have been involved in monitoring the operations, especially recordings. In the event, information surfaced about one of their own agents. Vega says Eureka worked as a CIA.
10:45 agent, asset, while also doing work for the DEA, because of course he did. Urega is the man behind the cocaine on board that Gulfstream 2 that crashed in Mexico. In the wake of his arrest on his island sanctuary, also in September 2007, Urega revealed that he was working for the CIA and other U.S. government agencies.
11:15 to include the FBI and DEA. The entire time he was in Panama. If the Panamanian government charges against Urrega are true, they suggest that he was making huge sums of money in drug trafficking and money laundering while being monitored by the United States government. So let me go back to say, not one of his text messages
11:46 supposedly was intercepted by the United States intelligence network that scours that area with a fine-tooth comb. That's crazy. From a September 20th, 2007 article in the Panama newspaper El Siglo, quote, Jose Urega, communication chief for the Norte del Valle.
12:18 cartel, North Valley cartel, implicated U.S. security agencies and stated that several U.S. officials gave him satellite phones to use against insurgent groups in his country or just to protect himself. During his 40-page statement, which lasted until almost 3 a.m. Wednesday, Urega stated that the officials of the CIA
12:46 DEA and FBI gave him the most sophisticated, hard-to-detect devices. Urega's statements confirm the allegations published yesterday by this newspaper, in which he explains the DEA agents traveled to Panama to install the communication equipment in the town of San Francisco to monitor and listen to his conversations with drug traffickers. So I'm going to go back to this again. Not one of them was intercepted.
13:16 Buy U.S. spy planes. Really? Pandemonium authorities raided Eureka's home on the island off the coast on September 15, 2007. That was only nine days before the Gulfstream jet with a CIA-associated tell number crashed in Mexico. He was arrested on money laundering charges related to narco-trafficking.
13:49 Reports in the Panamanian press claimed Urega had established an impressive communication center on the island. He bought the island for $12 million and that he had numerous bank accounts, properties, and shell companies that served as fronts for his money laundering. Reuters reported on the following September 21st, 2007, quote,
14:14 Panama said on Friday that it would investigate how a known Colombian drug trafficker managed to obtain Panamanian residents' ID cards, bank accounts, and even $12 million island without anyone noticing. President Martin Trujillo said a probe would be opened into Urega, who was detained by Colombia in the late 1990s for drug smuggling, carried on illicit activities unnoticed.
14:47 in Panama for at least three years until his arrest last week. Urega, 53, was arrested on Chaparra Island off the Pacific coast. Police said he was working as a communications chief for the Colombian North Valley cartel, unquote. Urega claims that he was not engaged in any illegal activities and denied ever serving as a communications chief.
15:16 After his arrest, Urega told prosecutors he had connections to the CIA, which provided him training on how to use all of that equipment. And that since 2005, he had had a driver's license, work permit, and multiple entry visas into the United States. They were provided to him, according to him, by ICE, according to Panamanian Las Princes.
15:46 Urega had been in the United States numerous times in 2007, as recently as July. Here's what that newspaper had to say. Quote, contrary to what has been repeatedly stated by spokespersons for the DEA in Panama, always through informal channels, Colombian Urega detained last September for alleged links to major drug cartels.
16:15 is or was linked to the government of the country, U.S., although not specifically to the DEA, but rather the CIA and the DOJ, 2007. Meanwhile, through ICE, the Department of Homeland Security and the DOJ, he was issued a work permit and a driver's license in 2005 and a multiple entry visa that was renewed for the U.S. Documents.
16:45 That, according to the public prosecutor's office, are still valid. Urega's immigration status indicates that he entered the U.S. without any problems. On February 15th, March 21st, and 27th, July 5th, the 9th, and the 19th, in 2007, three months earlier in April, Panamanian authorities
17:11 Supported by the DEA had already begun investigations. Given ICE well-publicized efforts to round up and deport immigrant families, you would be shocked, or you should be, that we're deporting, supposedly, in 2007, illegal aliens, but allowing a known drug trafficker to come and go as he pleases in the United States.
17:41 If Ureger was allowed to come and go, he likely was allowed to roam around. What was he doing? A retired DEA commander, Gonzalez, who served in the mid-90s as the head of the DEA South American operations, said, quote, usually you relocated a source to the states for safety, but if Ureger was going back and forth, he obviously wasn't worried about his safety, unquote.
18:11 Vega contends that his arrest by Panamanian authorities compromised Mayan Jaguar operations, leading to circumstances that caused the crash. Vega also said that it was even possible that Urega's arrest led the narco-traffickers involved in the Gulf Stream to cocaine transport to ditch the aircraft, avoiding airport landings.
18:44 that they thought was a trap. So they purposely didn't land at those airports, potentially. They also would allow their operatives in Mexico to get to the scene of the crash to make off with as much of the cocaine as possible. Reports in Mexican publications at the time raised the possibility that the jet's payload, some of which was...
19:14 unaccounted for, which we learned a couple of chapters ago. A retired CEA agent and case officer, Luttrell Osborne, told the author that Urega's arrest might well have been a surprise to the U.S. government, who was using him as an informant. Osborne also says there's another possibility that the CIA set him up in order to protect a bigger guy.
19:47 Vega points out that the ISIS Mayan Jaguar was being carried out unilaterally in Latin America absent formal approval. In other words, the government and police officers in Panama, Colombia, and Mexico had no idea the operation was even happening. Law enforcement officials that the author talked to said it could not have been pulled off in secret south of the border absent CIA.
20:21 involvement. Vega says the secrecy was necessary because U.S. officials were concerned that corrupt elements within those governments, political and law enforcement, would compromise the operation. If that's the case, Eureka and Ice Mayon Jaguar were breaking the law in all of those Latin American nations. Vega, an actual
20:56 I mean, we verified the fact that he's an informant, says that Eureka was a highly valued asset to the CIA, DEA, and FBI, and that each of them might have used Eureka on various missions. Eureka essentially became a narco-trafficker and money launderer employed by the U.S. government.
21:31 with the knowledge of the U.S. government. Because again, in that system where they code these people, they code whether or not they're an informant. Vega says that in the case of the Gulfstream, Eureka played a key role in organizing a syndicate of buyers who put together the cocaine shipment packed into the jet, including removing all of the seats for delivery to the U.S.
22:00 He claims Urega's share of the deal involved contributing part of the cocaine with the rest of the cocaine coming from paramilitaries in Colombia. The game plan, Vega said, was to track the cocaine after it was delivered in the U.S. That's what the DEA's story after the fact was. Kind of like what they were saying they were doing with the CIA cocaine coming in from Venezuela way back when.
22:31 Yeah, that's always going to be the story, by the way. Just like we put those Fast and Furious guns into the hands of cartels so we could quote unquote track them. But we didn't track them, nor do we track the cocaine. Vega goes on to say that Eureka was participating as an investor.
23:01 Vega says that once the drug shipment arrived in the U.S., Eureka was to be notified by his partners, and he in turn, unbeknownst to them, according to authorities in the United States, would then tell the agencies that he supposedly was an informant for. The problem, according to legitimate DEA officers, is that allowing drugs into the country in the first place
23:32 especially under the nose and with the help of government agencies, doesn't allow you to be able to track the flow of it. Eureka fails to provide accurate information on where the drug jet is landing in the U.S. or if there was any last minute changes that he was not aware of, which again allows four tons of cocaine to enter the U.S. market.
24:05 unaccountable. Gonzalez, the DEA guy, the retired guy, says what sense does it make for the government to smuggle drugs into the country itself to try to make a case? It literally makes no sense at all. The U.S. market is flooded with cocaine. Follow it. Track it down. Get rid of it. You don't bring more in. Vega contends that before the Gulf Stream crashed, the DEA
24:41 did know about the ICE involvement in that operation. DEA spokesman Steve Robertson told the author that his agency played no role in the Gulfstream case, other than being in charge of investigating it after it crashed. Quote, our Mexico City office is working an investigation on it. It started after the seizure of the aircraft.
25:08 It is not a DEA operation, he said. The briefing I've gotten is that our investigations started after the plane crashed. What else can he say? DEA would have the most to lose if linked to such an operation, given it operates openly and closely with governments in the region. If that was exposed, there'd be more countries potentially, if they had legitimate governments, kicking them out.
25:41 like Evo Morales did in Bolivia. Law enforcement officials told the author that it is likely the DEA leadership would not have openly challenged the ICE operation, particularly if it was approved at high levels in the Bush administration. If that's the case, the irony is that the DEA is now charged with investigating a crash that they know is linked to the U.S. government and, as such, violated multiple international
26:15 So what's the chance of them actually finding that out and publishing that like less than zero? One CIA veteran said that if Eureka is a CIA asset, he would have been high value for three reasons. His connection to the narco trafficking world, his skill proven as a money launderer, and his communication capability.
26:48 That was given to him by the United States government. He also says that the CIA might well have turned a blind eye to his criminal activity, including drug running, in order to advance a quote-unquote national security objective. What national security objective do we have in Panama and Colombia? Gonzalez, who also held leadership positions in the DEA field office in Miami and El Paso,
27:21 prior to retiring, makes it clear that in all likelihood, Eureka remained involved in narco-trafficking and money laundering, even as a cooperating source with valid driver's license and visas to come and go into the United States. Gonzalez also says that when he was working overseas, the CIA was often an obstacle to the DEA doing their
27:53 J-O-B. Quote, the problem with putting U.S. police and spies overseas is that the spy agenda comes first before law enforcement. Unquote. Again and again and again. So that's crazy. Chapter 26. This takes place in a cotton field in Nicaragua where a group of armed men was placing
28:34 a series of torches along a runway about a half an hour later at 9 p.m. that evening on Friday, November 26, 2004, a Beechcraft Air 200 touchdown on the Rule runway with no lights, which is why they were lighting torches to put along the runway to signal it was clear to land.
29:01 Armed men at the scene began to unload the plane, which was packed with cocaine. It also had a witness that was in the nearby field that they captured. During departing, the men attempted to set fire to the plane. Unsuccessfully, it didn't burn. They departed the area in trucks with the plane's narcotics.
29:32 leaving behind the witness, which they didn't kill, even though they all had AK-47s. Several days later, Nicaraguan law enforcement apprehended a truck headed for Honduras carrying over a thousand kilos of cocaine. The driver was arrested. The cocaine seized. Nicaraguan law enforcement said.
29:57 the source of the sea's cocaine appeared to be that Beechcraft 200 abandoned in the cotton field. Police found traces of cocaine on the aircraft that didn't burn. The Beech 200, not seriously damaged by an attempt to set it ablaze, was eventually turned over to the Nicaraguan military. The storyline provided by the Nicaraguan newspapers that reported the Beech 200 incident in late 2004
30:28 caught the attention of the author. He wrote several stories about it. This Beach 200 was a former U.S. ice craft that had been used. The press reports about the Beach 200 incident didn't smell right, given the members of a non-profit Venezuelan search and rescue group obtained photos of the abandoned aircraft.
31:01 That photo shows the Beach 200 tail number N168 Delta, which FAA had records indicating that it was registered to a North Carolina company called Devon Holding and Leasing, Inc. According to press reports and an investigation conducted by the European Parliament into CIA terrorist rendition programs, Devon Holdings is a CIA contract company. And that particular...
31:31 Aircraft was tied to the rendition program. Again, former ICE agents went on to explain that if the armed men involved in the cocaine shipment were indeed real narco traffickers, they would have not left a witness, nor would they have bungled the attempt to burn the plane, which is not a hard thing to accomplish since it had fuel.
32:04 on board. Nothing about the story sounded right. The author was told by an ICE agent that those guns were only for the people's protection, not to be used. And because they had limited ammunition, maybe they didn't want to expend it. Sounds very fishy. The former agent said that the press was fed a big fat worm of a lie and they bid on it.
32:38 The ICE agent also said the Beach 200 incident had all the markings of a U.S. government-run operation. He says the reason the plane was not burned is that the plan all along was to reuse the aircraft later. The CIA-linked tel number Beach 200 then raises some interesting questions, like the ultimate destination of the cocaine.
33:02 Similar questions was raised about the planned destination of the nearly four tons of cocaine on the Gulf Stream. CIA asset Baroque Vega claims the Gulf Stream was part of a U.S. government operation that utilized a well-known Colombian narcotic trafficker, Yurago. Yurago, again, we already know he was arrested and was working with ICE, DEA, and CIA.
33:32 And the Gulfstream itself had been connected to the same CIA program. Given that, Mark Conrad, who became an attorney after retiring as a supervisory federal agent, speculates that Mayan Jaguar operation wasn't really an ICE operation at all, that that was a cover story, but that it was a CIA operation using ICE as a cover.
34:04 He said the CIA has agents operating inside all federal law enforcement agencies as quote unquote official cover. And we know that to be true based on all of the research that we've done. The former ICE agent who spoke to the author about the Beach 200 also suspects the CIA was running the show. He says ICE is the perfect cover for CIA. Quote.
34:35 All an ICE agent has to do is make a call and the cargo will be cleared through a checkpoint, unquote. Journalist and author Doug Valentine, who by the way, has been DMing me and he's going to send me his most recent book that he just published. So I'm excited about getting that.
35:10 In a story he wrote for Counterpunch, quote, by 1977, some 125 former CIA, and he has air quotes over former, had been infiltrated into the DEA at every level of the organization, especially in intelligence units, making everything possible from black market arms exchange to negotiations with terrorists to political assassinations. It also put the CIA in control of targeting, unquote.
35:40 And yes, we have seen that repeatedly. Law enforcement and intelligence operations has become one and the same, a former CIA officer said. We as citizens are all affected by this because it has major impacts in the United States. Yeah, like flooding our country with narcotics. The Beach 200 and Gulfstream 2 cocaine planes, both linked to the CIA,
36:15 The war on drugs, a joke. The connection is magnified by the fact that a third cocaine aircraft also appears in the mix, a DC-9. That was apprehended in Mexico in April of 2006 with 5.5 tons of cocaine on it. According to the European Parliament, which did an investigation, the CIA rendition program provided
36:53 um a report they were reporting on the CIA's rendition program quote ultimately there is also the possibility that single aircrafts change their registration numbers there are indeed 51 airplanes alleged to have been used in the rendition but according to the FAA records only 57 registered numbers
37:22 Among the 51 airplanes alleged to be used by the CIA, 26 airplanes was registered to shell companies and sometimes supported by operating companies. 10 are designed as CIA frequent flyers. They belong to Blackwater, USA. The other 15 planes are from occasional rental companies working with CIA. Those companies...
37:56 Included Crowell Aviation Technologies, Path Corporation, Rapid Air Trans, Stevens Express Leasing Aviation Specialties, Devon Holding and Leasing, Bayard Foreign Marketing, Teeler and Tate Management. The rotating tail number scenario seems to have played a role in the Beach 200 incident in Nicaragua.
38:24 The number on the plane, N168D, as shown in the photograph taken by the Venezuelan nonprofit, actually is registered to a completely different aircraft, according to FAA records. The tail number, according to FAA, belongs to a large cargo plane known as CN235-300, and it's registered owner.
38:53 is the same CIA contract company, Devon Holding. Huh. The Beach 200's real tell number, the Venezuelan search and rescue report, is N391SA, which is registered to, oh my gosh, another company in St. Petersburg called Skyway Aircraft, Inc., according to the FAA. The same St. Petersburg where...
39:23 the original plane that crashed in Mexico, was from. So it seems the entire paper trail of connected coincidences lead right back to the CIA. Huh. Doug Valentine, in that article he wrote in Counterpunch, said the following. With Bush's war on terror, the situation has only gotten worse.
39:55 In Afghanistan and Southwest Asia, the DEA is entirely infiltrated and controlled by the CIA. DEA headquarters is basically an adjunct of the Oval Office, and the establishment continues to keep a lid on the story. After sending his manuscript to two reviewers, one with CIA connections and the other with the DEA connections, my publisher has stopped communicating with me.
40:24 I think my editor just wants me to go away because they don't, they're scared to death to publish anything that has to do with the CIA. That's crazy. That's two chapters down, I think, because I have to leave early today. We're going to stop right there. This next chapter, it's not a long one, but we can do a couple more tomorrow. You have to give them credit. There was a reason why,
41:01 They're afraid of reporting on the CIA. You can't totally blame them because how many suicide attempts can there be linked back to them on people trying to report on them before people don't want to? I know. That makes me want to ask, and maybe I will, ask Doug Valentine, how is he still alive? Because it just...
41:32 It's crazy. Good point. Yeah. Crazy, crazy, crazy. All right. SR, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel, and thank everyone for attending here on Spaces and on Rumble. Y'all make this show what it's worth, and you help a lot. But I want to get into the point about this plane. This plane has got one heck of a sordid history when you take a look at it.
42:06 Before they changed the tail number, it was already involved, like you say, in renditions and other stuff that was going on. But this plane was photographed at the Rusni Airport in Prague on April 8, 2005. The Danish inquiry on October 3, 2005. It was owned then by Devon Holding and Leasing.
42:35 So there was a parliamentary inquiry on that plane. There was a Canadian inquiry on the plane. And there was a plane spotting logs activist tracked N16D landing at Johnson County Airport in North Carolina on July 24, 2007. So this plane has been involved in narcotics from day one.
43:07 Yeah. And renditions. And renditions. So let me look something up real quick. Hold on just a second. Let's see. Hold on. It's not going to give it to me. Because you guys know my friend used to work at Blackwater as an intel officer. Oh, okay. So Johnson County.
43:53 Yeah, that's right by where one of Blackwater's facilities is. And let's see. Let's see if I can find where. Let me look up where he's at real quick.
44:26 He doesn't live there anymore, but yeah. Yeah, that's actually right down the road from where Fort Bragg is. Very, very interesting. Yeah. Not good. Not good at all. You're right, Colonel. That's not good at all. There's another interesting aspect to this about Yuriego as well.
45:01 This man is mentioned in more than 80 cases and yet he walks away from everything. That's what happens when you're protected by the CIA. Yeah. And that's a good indication. And thanks for looking that up because that confirms. So even if you now he didn't walk away from everything because he did spend a little bit of time in jail.
45:33 back a long time ago in the 90s. But that is generally where they recruit them from and make them an informant. Because one of the things that they do in order to, so if they approach somebody that hasn't been to jail and they're working outside their system, then the way the CIA flex their muscle is they get them arrested.
45:58 They pay off somebody in the government, get them arrested, get them convicted to show them who's boss. And then they play by the rules of the CIA after that. So that still makes a lot of, that's consistent with what we've seen in the past of how they quote unquote recruit these people to run their drug network as opposed to operating as an independent. Renee, go ahead. I think Why Are You So Mad is ahead of me.
46:30 Okay, why are you so mad? Go ahead. It kind of goes along with a longstanding joke that when it comes to the DEA and Latin America and certain places that you get the best drugs from the DEA. And that really holds true with what I've been hearing and actually seeing. So it's interesting that you also said that the location is right over by Fort Bragg.
47:01 kind of actually disturbing well fort bragg um unfortunately has um a history of because um there is a large cia presence at fort bragg because fort bragg being jsoc and all of that other stuff at the special operations um they basically have in the past always deployed um
47:31 to covert CIA operations. They're like the beeped up version of a CIA paramilitary capability. And unfortunately, because they're around CIA officers all the time, and the CIA basically, the words not grooms them, but
47:59 The CIA monitors them. And if one of the special forces guys fits a particular psychological profile, the CIA is known to approach them and suggest to them with funding that they open their own private military companies. And then...
48:25 they go off on their own and become part of the paramilitary piece as opposed to the official military piece. And in many articles that I have read about how these guys, I've watched videos, they have videos of them talking about this.
48:50 When they do get off active duty and they open these, basically, they quote unquote call them security firms, they do almost exclusive work for the CIA. They do work for MI6 and some of the other intelligence agencies as well, but primarily the CIA. And a lot of them have registered companies in North Carolina because that's where all of their friends are.
49:20 And so it does make, it's consistent with some of the other stuff that I've read. And there has been occasion when people still on active duty has been caught with cocaine and setting up networks for distribution. So it's definitely not unheard of and it is disturbing. Renee, go ahead. Thanks.
49:50 Thanks for painting that picture. That answers a lot of questions. Hi. Okay. For the non-military people here, can you please kind of explain what, with airplanes and stuff, what rendition means? I'm not really clear on understanding that. That's where they took all of the people. They took off the battlefield and took them to black site prisons. Ah, okay. Thank you. And then, yeah, talking about Fort Bragg.
50:22 and its history, is there a year that comes to your mind of when kind of covert operations began at Fort Bragg? Well, the original stand-up was during JFK's administration. Right. I came across recently when was looking into
50:54 all the terror training facilities and whatnot. And came across a French guy. Hold on a sec. His name is, it's a long name. It's like Alciere or something like this. And he, it seems even he was in Brazil. He was in Argentina and he was at Fort Bragg.
51:24 with his technique or whatever. But anyway, yeah, I found this guy. He wasn't OAS, but he was part of the French military and at Fort Bragg. And also I found some links, I guess Cynthia Chung brought up his name in that, in her journeys as well as kind of under...
51:48 you know, uncovering the origins of the terror and all that stuff. Yeah, send me his name on DM because the OAS is not the only French organization that was hooked to their Gladio program. The 11th Shock Group, the... Yes, yes. Yeah, that one was too. There's like four of them that was... Yeah, yep. Yeah.
52:14 Yeah, was trying to was trying to see if there was any connections with his history from Indochina to France, to Algeria, to the Suetra. I don't know how you say his name. The French guy from the assassination of JFK. And I couldn't find any overlaps yet. But this this Osier, I'm not sure how to say the name. He's kind of been all.
52:43 All over the place. And even in Brazil, because a lot of South America, it seems, was trained in this French torture technique. But some of the Brazilian torture bastards or guys or whatever were trained.
53:08 by the French more than the Americans because I thought, oh, okay, well, it had to be Dan Mitrione, you know, and that whole lot of them. But it seems like a lot of, there were a lot of French guys involved in this torture technique with Brazil and Argentina and whatnot. But anyway, I'll send, I'll DM you his name. Okay, thank you. Sean, go ahead. Hi, thanks, Colonel.
53:37 Yeah, one thing that's always puzzled me about 9-11, if we want to go back to that, is that, you know, the terror attacks on 9-11 in 2001. The fact that there is this narrative that it was a Mossad operation. It was basically Mossad wanted to get America to start a war on terror, a global terrorist war against terrorism.
54:02 Terrorism had never really affected the United States in the same way they had Europe and the rest of the world. They were isolated geographically. But so, yeah, to get them to do that, they had to carry out a spectacular, as the provisional IRA would say. And they did that on 9-11. But the thing that confuses me about it is if it is a Mossad operation, how did it get?
54:31 However, a number of guys, it was from Saudi Arabia who actually hijacked the planes who are supposedly Muslims to actually do that. How did they achieve that? So there's no terrorist attack that is that large that happens in the United States without a lot of the U.S. government complicity in it. It just it's physically impossible to do that. If you read.
55:00 about the FBI's involvement and cover-up, they're not doing that for Mossad. They're doing that for whatever it is that orchestrated that event was higher than any single intelligence agency. We refer to it as the International Syndicate. There's a lot of people that are involved in it.
55:27 it works the agenda around the world. There has been several terrorist attacks in the United States, by the way. They blew up the Capitol in the 1960s. We've had lots of terrorist attacks here. I mean, we had Oklahoma bombing that killed a ton of people. They all involved the same people.
55:57 at the end of the day. And when you start going back through the history of all of these terrorist events, they have some very common threads to them. The complicity, if not approval, of the government.
56:18 I mean, you can even go back to Pearl Harbor and look at what we knew, what we now know we knew at the time in order to orchestrate our involvement. So the end state is true. 9-11 was done to get us into a war footing. The same thing with Pearl Harbor because
56:48 of our geographical separation from the rest of the world, it takes an event like that to generate the quote unquote patriotism that they, it's a psychological manipulation of the American public to go off and do things like that. And so again,
57:14 Just like the people that want to point out every single Jewish person that was involved in the JFK surrounding area and want to attribute it 100% to Israel, they fail to look at the broader, what we know to exist, operation of all of these intelligence agencies.
57:44 working hand in hand with each other and the step above them this international syndicate of them manipulating the entire world population into eventually um shuttling us into this one world government where the people and the resources are and they they have because they're evil they have
58:15 no second thoughts about killing mass amounts of people to do it. That's just a fact. So I look at it in its total scope. I don't pull any punches when we come across, and we have on multiple occasions in our research where the IDF
58:44 The state of Israel, Mossad specifically, has been involved in these operations. They were really, really involved in Latin America to an extent that I was really surprised. And we've talked about that openly. But to say that they are running the operation is just ridiculous. Those guys got their visas handed to them by Brennan.
59:10 John Brennan issued their visas to the United States. The last time I checked, he was in charge, at the time he was a CIA agent. He eventually becomes in charge of the CIA. I don't remember anybody ever accusing him of being a member of Mossad. They couldn't have got here without the United States government's complicity in it. The FBI was given multiple reports on multiple occasions.
59:41 that these people were all over the United States taking these flying lessons, one of which was in Oklahoma at one of the hangars that the CIA had operated out of. So yeah, you're not going to sell me on that it's only Mossad that was behind it. None of these operations are done without coordination of other state intelligence entities.
1:00:14 And no matter what you put out, as far as facts, there's going to be at least a handful of people go, where was Mossad in this operation? Where was Mossad in this operation? If I find them, I say it. If I don't find them, I'm not making shit up. So that's just it. That's it for today. I got to run. I got dinner tonight. And then tonight on the Alpha Warrior Show, we're starting at 830.
1:00:50 I don't know what's going on with Alpha, but he keeps backing us up. So the Alpha Warrior show tonight, we're going to continue our Permadex deep dive, which of course is adjacent to the JFK assassination and mind blowing. So if you guys want to join us at 8.30, otherwise we'll be back here at four o'clock tomorrow. Take care, everybody.

Entities here

United States25Jose Nelson Urega Cardenas25Panama17Colombia16Baroque Vega15Beechcraft 200 Incident10Mexico9Gulfstream II Crash9Mossad8Chaparra Island8Fort Bragg5Operation Mayan Jaguar5Devon Holding and Leasing, Inc.5Doug Valentine4Henry Gonzalez4Nicaragua4North Carolina3Bogotá3Blackwater3Brazil3North Valley Cartel3European Parliament3September 11 attacks3Attack on Pearl Harbor2Israel2John Brennan2Miami2France2Ed Fields2Johnson County Airport2FARC2Venezuela2Cali Cartel2Medellín2Argentina2San Francisco1Operation Gladio1Vietnam1Oklahoma City bombing1Algeria1

Claims made here

Jose Nelson Urega Cardenas member_of Operation Mayan Jaguar book_quoted ▶ 1:50
“The Colombian citizen, who we've talked about throughout this book, that has a long association with the CIA, confirmed during an interview with the author that the Gulfstream II was part of an operat…”
Jose Nelson Urega Cardenas member_of North Valley Cartel documented ▶ 2:54
“which helped piece together a long-running DEA, ICE, and CIA operation that involved Panama, Colombia, and Mexico. Urega was a notorious narco-trafficker, according to the DEA's own records. He had be…”
Jose Nelson Urega Cardenas laundered_money_for Medellin Cartel documented ▶ 3:25
“and the North Valley cartels. He also was a money launderer for them and a communications expert that helped them set up communication equipment. Urega was arrested previously in Colombia in 1998 for …”
Jose Nelson Urega Cardenas carried_out_attack FARC book_quoted ▶ 9:38
“Oh, big surprise. Eureka helped carry out communication stings that played a role in the article that was ran in Miami Herald, where 50 FARC members were charged for narco-trafficking. You can't make …”
Jose Nelson Urega Cardenas front_for North Valley Cartel documented ▶ 14:47
“in Panama for at least three years until his arrest last week. Urega, 53, was arrested on Chaparra Island off the Pacific coast. Police said he was working as a communications chief for the Colombian …”
Jose Nelson Urega Cardenas carried_out_attack Gulfstream II Crash guest_asserted ▶ 21:31
“with the knowledge of the U.S. government. Because again, in that system where they code these people, they code whether or not they're an informant. Vega says that in the case of the Gulfstream, Eure…”
11th Parachute Shock Regiment connected_to Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 51:48
“you know, uncovering the origins of the terror and all that stuff. Yeah, send me his name on DM because the OAS is not the only French organization that was hooked to their Gladio program. The 11th Sh…”
Mossad allegedly_carried_out_attack September 11 attacks speculative ▶ 53:37
“Yeah, one thing that's always puzzled me about 9-11, if we want to go back to that, is that, you know, the terror attacks on 9-11 in 2001. The fact that there is this narrative that it was a Mossad op…”