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The Colonel’s Corner Drugs,Oil and War Part 12

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0:00 I see snow in miles. Tony. Let me see. Else Benjaminson. I've not recognized that one. Love USA. Sven, one of my favorite Swedish followers. So, hello, everyone. There's SR71. Let's get him in here so we can get this party started.
0:30 Let me get going over here on Rumble as well. And I think Bridget will be in shortly. So if you guys wouldn't mind reposting out the space so we can get everybody in here and we can talk about another wonderful day on X. There she is. Let's get her over here. Having so much fun with all the people showing the real colors.
1:15 Just another day in the neighborhood. All right. So I'm going to jump on the chapter. This one will be a relatively short one. We'll probably finish a little early today. I do have house guests in for this week. Oh, and let me just share with you guys, if you don't know this. Lakeland, Florida, my hometown.
1:41 is home to the second largest air show in the United States called Sun and Fun. It's gone on for, you know, my whole life. Our airport used to serve as one of Piper Aircraft's main manufacturing hubs. And as a result, every year in April, they would release their new models of aircraft and they'd have an air show.
2:08 People would fly in from all over and it was really more like a sales event. But over time, like the Red Baron demonstration team would come in. Then the Thunderbirds started coming in and now they alternate between the Thunderbirds and the Blue Angels every year. And it's a.
2:31 Huge. It is the busiest airspace during the air show. It's second only to Oshkosh air show. And it's just an amazing time. Obviously, lots of Air Force people fly in. I get to see a lot of my old friends. I have my last job. My deputy commander was also a colonel and her husband was retired lieutenant colonel AWACS back in.
3:00 The radar guy, they come and stay with me every year. So they're here for the week. And again, it's just a wonderful time. It's like being on an Air Force base again because there's like a million planes in the air flying over your house. No matter where you live in Lakeland, I don't live anywhere near the airport. And they're in the sky the entire time. People taking off, landing, and that type of thing.
3:27 It's like my one week a year that I get to pretend like I'm still in the Air Force or at least on active duty. But anyway, lots of fun, lots of excitement and a lot of things to do around town. You just don't want to go out to dinner because every restaurant in town is packed because there's so many people in my little town.
3:59 Anyway, we're going to start with chapter 10. It's called Cambodia and Oil in 1970. So again, this is, it's going to start off with, these are chapters that he wrote in a previous book, but each one of them are preceded with like a little preface update of information when he printed this book with some passages from his old book that he went ahead and updated.
4:30 So we're going to read the update first. What I have to say about Cambodian politics in this chapter is less up to date than what I had to say about oil. Two recent excellent studies, one by an Australian guy by the name of David Chandler, C-H-A-N-D-L-E-R, and the other by French Marie Alexandrian Martin.
4:58 tell us more about the internal reasons for Cambodia's collapse in the 1970s, but both books either discount or ignore external factors to which I refer, above all of the intervention of U.S., Japanese, and Indonesian covert operators. Neither book addresses the detailed charges of Seymour Hearst in 1983 that Sahanak overthrow
5:28 in 1970 had been for years a high priority of the U.S. Green Beret reconnaissance units operating inside of Cambodia since the late 1960s. Hearst reports in particular that U.S. intelligence officials proposed to insert a U.S.-trained assassination team disguised as Viet Cong insurgents into Phnom Penh to kill Prince Thananak as a pretext for a revolution.
5:58 I say more about this later on in the chapter. With respect to what I say below about Union Oil, now called Unical's offshore concessions in Cambodia, Unical now has at least three petroleum concessions in what is referred to as Thailand-Cambodia overlapping area in the Gulf of Thailand. All three are held conjointly with the Japanese Mitsubishi
6:26 Oil Exploration Company, also referred to in this chapter. Now, Mitsu was also one of those companies that date back to World War II that was involved in the slave labor of U.S. service people. By the oldest of these, gas cell agreements number one dates back to March 1972, in the brief period while Richard Nixon was still successfully propping up General Lund
6:56 in Phnom Penh. That's the capital. Another concession held by Chevron with British Gash Asia Inc. is dated March 8, 1972. When in 1995, Cambodia first offered three offshore blocks near Chanakaville for bidding,
7:22 Unical was reported to have been among the 17 firms expressing interest. Two years later, the offshore border disputes between Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam were finally resolved. It was announced then that after decades of waiting, Unical Thailand now expects to begin next year an exploration program over an area awarded to it in 1968 by the Thai government.
7:50 I would like to supplement this earlier analysis published in June 1970 in the New York Review of Books of a secret crisis decision to send regular U.S. ground troops to Cambodia. The analysis, which detailed the strategic requirements of the air war impelling the Joint Chiefs and the National Security Council, was limited in the same way as the Pentagon Papers.
8:17 At the same time, there are clues in the Pentagon Papers, i.e., that covert U.S. air ops against North Vietnam immediately preceded the Tonkin Gulf incident, which justify greater emphasis on the role of covert air and ground forces in Cambodia preceding Nixon's decision to invade that country. One can now see the strategic requirement of an air war in a broader context.
8:47 politically, economically, as opposed to militarily, both in Cambodia and in America itself. At first glance, these other considerations might seem to overshadow the role of intelligence agencies to which I draw passing attention. On the contrary, this larger perspective reinforces and even explains the role of covert operations and bureaucratic intrigue rather than overshadow them.
9:16 It also raises grave questions about the role of President Nixon and his political backers. An undoubted crisis had been slowly developing for some years in Cambodia under the more and more nominal leadership of Prince Shenanug. In retrospect, one can see that Shenanug's efforts to maintain a neutral position, because that's not allowed, were increasingly hopeless.
9:48 Lon Null's coup of March 1970, which paved the way for the American and South Vietnamese invasion, was only the ultimate and most visible stage of a shift of power that had begun three years before. This was due to, quote, pressures which were part the result of steadily deteriorating economic conditions over the past several years.
10:17 the Cambodian economy had become subject to increasing strains. Cambodia had been extraordinarily dependent on manufactured imports, both in a day-to-day consumption and for industrial purposes. The exports exchanged for some of those goods had been rubber and rice. But the surplus of these commodities had never been enough to meet the country's foreign exchange needs. Until 1963,
10:47 These needs had been met largely by U.S. economic and military assistance. When in 1963, Shanuk terminated the agreement with the U.S. in his efforts to remain free of political persecution, the flow of dollars stopped. And since 1964, there had been a rebalance of payment deficits, end quote. By the fall of 1967, Shanuk was forced to seek
11:18 a rapprochement with the American-dominated World Bank and the IMF, which is a kiss of death, and the Asian Development Bank, all of which had prospects of aid to the abandonment by Shannanuk of his faltering experiments in the way he was managing the government and nationalized foreign trade. In this context,
11:47 Shanunak shifted to be more aligned with the U.S., received Chester Bowles, B-O-W-L-E-S, in January 1968, and we covered him when we covered Cambodia in our world tour, and began increasingly to crack down on the Khmer Rouge and NLF troops. In August 1969, Shanunak formed a new government headed by Long Nol.
12:17 and Sarek Matek, M-A-T-A-K, the men who would soon overthrow him. Meanwhile, in June 1969, Fanunuk resumed diplomatic relations with Washington and the U.S. Embassy in 1959, caught red-handed in the act of plotting to overthrow him, was allowed to reopen. Economic necessity, not fear of the Vietnamese
12:49 retaliation seems to have been the prime reason. In Washington, new political and economic pressure lent weight to the strategic decisions of the Joint Chiefs of Staff for widening the war into Cambodia. Defense Secretary Laird, a hawk by everyone's standard in 1968, found himself increasingly bypassed and overruled by military demands for escalation in 69 and 70. The reason lay in the White House.
13:18 A president who had recently been elected on a program of peace proved to be highly receptive to military proposals that promised to end the war quickly. More receptive than a secretary of defense who saw the proposals as an overcommitment of limited resources that would weaken our military posture. Nixon and Kissinger began to deal with the Joint Chiefs over the head of Laird, the defense secretary.
13:45 By the time of Nixon's election in 1968, the interest of the large American oil companies had been drawn to the possibility of offshore oil discoveries in and around Cambodia. The first offshore geological survey were made in the late 1950s by Chinese mainland geologists.
14:12 as a result of which a French company drilled the first oil well unsuccessfully in 1971. Leases in the adjacent offshore waters of Thailand had been awarded in September 1968 to six oil companies, five of which were American. This lent urgency to unresolved offshore border disputes between Thailand and Cambodia that were resolved after the CIA coup.
14:42 in 1970. Meanwhile, in the wake of the U.S. Navy-sponsored hydrographic and geomagnetic surveys dating back to 1957, the months of November and December 1968 saw a highly successful seismic refraction oil exploration survey around South Vietnamese island of Polo Panjan.
15:09 which lies directly south of Cambodia. This survey was only the last and most promising of a preliminary series conducted under the auspices of the UN Economic Commission for Asia and Far East. The State Department denials notwithstanding, official documents reveal that the great bulk of the technical assistance for these surveys came from the U.S. Oceanographic Office.
15:37 And according to them, in an annual report in 1969, or excuse me, 68, the Navy's coastal survey ship, which included no less than seven chartered from commercial petroleum survey services, were completely employed in charting operations off the coast of South Vietnam. So just to rephrase all of that, that's a bunch of words.
16:03 The oil companies is driving the policy of what we're going to do in Cambodia, much as we have talked about the oligarchs being in charge of Operation Gladio, the CIA activities and everything, basically. And so they have people working just like we saw in Indonesia, just like we saw in Latin America.
16:33 They go out in the field and they do these quote unquote surveys for geographical regions. And all they're actually doing is looking for resources to steal. And then if they find them and it looks good, they will destabilize the country if it has a neutralist who is not going to be in their pocket that they can't manipulate.
16:57 So here's a quote. The following magnetic studies were carried out during the fiscal year 1968. A complete low level aeromagnetic survey of South Vietnam, including all of the land surface and at least part of the offshore waters for military and or scientific purposes. A detailed survey of the Formosa Strait off the coast of Thailand. You know.
17:26 because that used to be Formosa, in fulfillment of a U.S. offer to provide aeromagnetic surveys of the Asian continental shelf for the UN in the Far East, unquote. This language explains the chicanery of the State Department's written assurance to Senator Fulbright that the U.S. government had not provided South Vietnam
17:52 any technical assistance related to offshore oil exploration. Strictly speaking, the assistance had not been provided to South Vietnam, but either as support of the fleet or basically they couched supporting Taiwan in the Formosa Strait while they were basically looking for it all around Cambodia and Vietnam. They did it under the guise. And keep in mind,
18:22 This is Chiang Kai-shek, the drug guy in charge of Taiwan still at this point. And I'm going to beat, is he here all along? I'm going to beat him to the punch because I know what he's going to say. 1968, what was happening in 1968? It was an election year. It was the election year that the entire thing blew up. It's the year that RFK was assassinated and they had the convention. I did a whole story on it.
18:51 That looked exactly like the Democratic convention this time where somebody gets nominated that had never even ran in the primaries, blah, blah, blah. So the U.S. is in all kinds of crazy turmoil, but they rigged the election so that Nixon's going to win anyway. And that's why all of the turmoil and the third party guy and all of that crap happened. So you can see.
19:18 The reason why they wanted a president in the United States White House, that was a controlled asset because they were on the move and couldn't afford to have somebody like a RFK that they didn't have their thumb on. So anyway, the Polo Pajan seismic survey.
19:45 was in an area close to Cambodia and affected by the unresolved border dispute between the two countries over offshore islands. It was also very close to ESSO, another oil company, concession northeast of Malaysia, in which, according to reported rumors, oil had already been discovered. This may help explain why
20:11 All of this proceeded before June 1967 to make a broad regional study of the northeastern portion of the shelf of Southeast Asia, including the Gulf of Thailand and the adjoining offshore areas of Cambodia and South Vietnam. Even though Cambodia at this time was not even a member of the organization that was doing the surveys and may not even have been consulted at all.
20:40 In 1969, the same committee formulated proposals for further seismic refraction surveys and selected Cambodian offshore waters as quote-unquote suggestions to move forward with Cambodian authorities. Meanwhile, the special aeromagnetic survey planes of the U.S. Navy proposed to carry out
21:04 profiles along the shelf at opportune times while in transit between major projects in the region. So in other words, they were doing all this shit and didn't tell anybody. Well, didn't tell all of the people. They told the people they controlled. And they passed it off as they were doing other things in the area. These surveys of Cambodia's offshore area apparently never asked for by Shannanak government should be investigated closely by Congress.
21:34 By the end of 1970, when it appeared to many that the Lon Nol regime could not possibly survive without increased U.S. support, Union Oil of California had a concession for all of the offshore Cambodian oil and much of the offshore former French concession as well. All these diverse economic and political factors, both in Cambodia and America, will suggest to people,
22:03 that a picture of historical complexity into the minds of others as a historical inevitability that there's going to be turmoil. Either of these pictures might seem to rule out a hypothesis that conspiracy played any major role in prompting the U.S. invasion of Cambodia. However,
22:27 If we now look at covert U.S. military operations and intelligence for the same period, a complex picture becomes much simpler in which the long-range operation of economic factors turns out to have been helped along by bureaucratic means. In particular, the Cambodian balance of payment crisis, which forced Chananuk to install his domestic enemies in power.
22:56 and reopen relationships with a hostile U.S. bureaucracy represented a historical process that had been considerably accelerated by U.S. covert operations. From early 1964, but with particular intensity in 69, U.S. planes from South Vietnam systematically defoliated as much as one-third of the French-owned
23:24 rubber plantations in Cambodia. In other words, they were dropping napalm on the plants to lessen Cambodia's annual income and force them into poverty and force them to reach out to the United States. Although the Department of Defense denied at first that the
23:55 found the exact opposite. Quote, the fact that rubber plantations, which are readily distinguishable from the air, were so heavily hit, one-third of all of the major Cambodian crop suggests that an attempt was punitive in nature by the U.S. Air Force. The U.S. pilots are, we are told,
24:21 understanding orders in South Vietnam to avoid the spraying of rubber adds further support to the hypothesis that number one, they could distinguish which was which, but they were controlling South Vietnam so they didn't want to diminish the U.S. concessions that Diem had already granted to United States businesses. So the fact that they could control where they were spraying
24:51 in South Vietnam, let everyone know when they looked at Cambodia that the heavy hit rubber plantations would have been purposely hit because you could distinguish the difference. So if you were trying to penalize the prince and overthrow his government, you would not have hit the rubber plants. And so in effect,
25:16 He had to invite his enemies at the insistence of the U.S. as a condition for U.S. aid to begin again, and he only was in that position because the U.S. was basically attacking him. The biologists concluded that the spraying carried out just before the beginning of the growing season had caused up to 80% damage in some areas. It represented an economic loss in 1969 of $11 million in rubber, plus an additional $1.2 million in other crops.
25:47 because it's not usually controlled. Those losses totaled more than half of Cambodians' exports. In 1968, their exports was basically $22 million, and they lost $11 million, of which rubber represented 64% of the exports. An ensuing economic crisis, including budgetary deficits,
26:19 basically influenced Shanonuk to talk publicly in July and August about accepting U.S. aid again and inviting the U.S. back in. After being questioned by the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee, Thomas Pickering of the State Department, who we've come across multiple times, finally sent written confirmation that the greatest part of the damage was caused by a deliberate and direct overflight of the rubber plantations. He claimed, however,
26:48 that there was no U.S. mission targeted for the Cambodian areas involved, nor were the investigators able to determine whether U.S. aircraft had directly been involved in the spring. Which, of course, now that we know how they do this, matters absolutely zero because they hire companies like Air America so they can say things like we just said. No Americans were doing that.
27:15 No, no, the CIA wasn't doing that. The fact that the CIA's front company, Air America, had airplanes equipped to do that very thing and you were paying for it allows you to get in front of Congress and say, we didn't do it. They weren't asked if they paid for it. They were asked if they did it. So as in the case with covert U.S. operations against Cambodia in 59 and 67, the public was allowed to draw conclusions.
27:47 Presumably that South Vietnam or, you know, the communists supposedly that was in North Vietnam, somebody else was responsible. But one cannot accept this excuse for defoliation program dating back eight years to the days when the South Vietnamese didn't even have an air force and the only one flying in South Vietnam were the U.S. Another explanation may have been Air America planes.
28:15 And pilots were involved since Air America officials have admitted to extensive defoliation programs having been flown, you know, in every other country but this one during this one time. They flew them in Thailand. They flew them in Taiwan when they were trying to burn the country down to take it over. They flew them in South Vietnam. They flew them in North Vietnam. They flew them in Laos.
28:42 American responsibility for this extensive and repeated use of defoliants for international aggression cannot be denied. It is particularly instructive to learn from a pre-invasion article in a journal called Far Eastern Economic Review that was published in April 1969.
29:07 Henry Kissinger and Nixon ordered bombing strikes against bases in Cambodia. In other words, secret strikes for the two months of the covert defoliation program were ordered by the advisor, who is chairman of the National Security Council Special Actions Group, presided over the covert operations and the invasion in Cambodia one year later. It's called softening up the target.
29:35 President Nixon's covert operations against Cambodia in the first year of his presidency are part of a series dating back to that era when he was vice president in 1958 and 59. The CIA financed, equipped, and advised the brief military uprising in the Khmer Syrie area, whose part Vietnamese political leader, Son Ngoc Thang,
30:01 had been premier of Cambodia under the Japanese reign when they were invaded during World War II. To show CIA complicity in the uprising, Shananuk is said to have given as evidence the fact that a political officer from the U.S. Embassy, a guy by the name of Victor Masui, M-A-T-S-U-I, was found in the Khmer
30:29 Seri rebel headquarters, and that is true. As far as I am aware, it was 11 years before this fact was even alluded to in U.S. press. Quote, South Vietnamese uncover agents who had directed the uprising subsequently explained that Matsu's presence on the scene was only accidental. We just accidentally had a CIA.
30:56 guy embedded in the middle of a political uprising to overthrow the government. It's an accident. Holy shit. But it was later discovered that not only was it not an accident, the entire thing was funded by the CIA. Matsu's present appears less accidental when we learn that he was in the U.S. Army for 12 years before joining the U.S. Embassy in Cambodia as a quote-unquote political officer.
31:26 In 1966, he was expelled for the second time from Pakistan for renewed charges of subversion. Yeah, going around doing Operation Gladio shit all over the world, just like we've discovered repeatedly. Throughout the 60s, the CIA in Saigon continued to use its contacts with Sun Nak Thang and Khmer Syri in at least three ways. For intelligence gathering,
31:56 in both Cambodia and South Vietnam for special missions inside of Cambodia and for the recruitment and training of paramilitary forces from the large ethnic Khmer minority of the Delta provinces of South Vietnam. They are setting up more Operation Gladio using the Khmer, which if you guys don't know, there's...
32:26 Over a million people and some people say up to like four or five million that end up getting killed as a result of this. The instability that was brought to this country. This is where the killings fields are. This is where all of that shit that I explained to you guys where they have like that 40 foot tower of human skulls that they dug up out of some of the killing field graves. This is where that.
32:50 school had been turned into a prison and people were killed where they had marks on the chalkboard of how many people had been killed in each classroom. This is Cambodia. We went through that entire lesson. This is what I'm talking about. This is the precursor to us doing all of that. Many, if not most of the latter, was taking in from the armed bandit Khmer Khapakia Khom.
33:20 which was referred to over there as the KKK, of whom an unflattering portrait is found in Robin Moore's book called The Green Berets. Trained by U.S. Special Forces, the Khmer Syri, and later the Thai officers in Thailand, these troops became part of the so-called Mike Force, M-I-K-E, of ethnic minorities who were controlled along with U.S. Green Berets.
33:48 and operational teams to operate not only just in Cambodia, but they also used them in Vietnam against the North Vietnamese. The Saigon-based studies and operation groups called ASOG, in turn, reported in theory to General Westmoreland and General Abrams, but it is said that they actually was doing the work of the CIA.
34:18 The U.S. public was given a hint of the deep splits within the U.S. military and intelligence communities in the wake of two Green Beret murder scandals in 1969. Some of the results leak concerning Cambodia. Both of the murdered agents it developed had operated in Cambodia. At least one of them, an Inchen Hai Lam, had been a member of the Khmer Syri, like an embedded guy, shortly before.
34:50 Sinonuk's overthrow, the New York Times report revealed that the U.S. had used the Khmerist theory, an organization dedicated to the overthrow of the legitimate government of Cambodia on covert missions in that country in 1967, according to testimony of a Green Beret captain convicted in 1968 of killing one of the members of the set. In 1967, Sinonuk
35:18 renewed his charges that the CIA was still plotting against him as they had in 1959. The Khmer Syri harassment, especially along the Thai border, markedly increased. The changes had since been, the charges had been corroborated. A Greenbrae officer says he took part in a secret mission in 1967 designed to aid the overthrow of the prince. Captain John McCarthy,
35:48 said the clandestine operation in Cambodia was directed from South Vietnam by the CIA. The mission was known as Operation Cherry. It involved McCarthy working undercover as a member of the Khmer Seri. According to the same New York Times article, sources said that the several hundred former Khmer Seri members in Cambodia had pledged allegiance to the prince's government. This happened in 1960s. Excuse me.
36:18 1967, when Long Nol was briefly prime minister. But the indications are that the Khmer series retained their identity, their militant opposition to the prince, and their links to the U.S. CIA. In other words, it was all bullshit. Of these, DIA at least continued to maintain a safe house in Phnom Penh.
36:44 even when diplomatic relations with Cambodia had been broken off. A man by the name of Wilford Burkett, B-U-R-C-H-E-T-T, has charged that more violent events surrounding the overthrow of the prince, like the planned raids against North Vietnamese embassies on March 11th and the ensuing massacre of ethnic Vietnamese civilians in the Cambodian countryside,
37:14 were all spearheaded by CIA-trained Khmer Syri with some U.S. embeds. In the weeks and months following the coup of March 18, 1970, it became abundantly clear that the most reliable cadre in the Cambodian army were those recruited and trained by the Khmer Syri and Green Beret, all managed out of South Vietnam. Although the majority of these entered Cambodia after the coup,
37:42 Their central role lent credence to the Burkett hypothesis. So did the unprecedented and unexplained demonstrations on March 8th and 9th in the eastern province, where villagers, with the help of Cambodian troops, seized weapons from Vietnam. These must have been well-trained villagers to accomplish without U.S. support taking away weapons from people that had been fighting in a war.
38:12 for a very long time. The more plausible explanation is they were given the weapons by the U.S. from people that they had already trained that were ethnically Vietnamese. So, a special relationship between Long Nol's army and the Khmer Syri KKK units was at the center
38:36 and it implicates the U.S. intelligence community, not only in the coup itself, but also in the ensuing strategy of provocation, we would call it strategy of tension, in which a series of hopeless attacks on larger and superior enemy forces brought about a debacle, followed by official U.S. intervention. This involvement of U.S. intelligence personnel above all of the paramilitary personnel under SOG and the CIA
39:03 does not imply that the Cambodian history in 1970 followed a master blueprint, but it does have CIA fingerprints all over it. The intelligence structures of other nations were also involved, like Thailand and South Vietnam. The prince himself claimed that much of the plotting took place in Japan between Prince Saramatak, the coup leader,
39:33 who was then the ambassador to Tokyo, and Song Sak, who was the Khmer Syri leader and alleged CIA agent, and Phnom Penh, and that they had a budget of $10 million and used CIA personnel for the coup. The analysis of the coup and La Mayonne, which is the French like New York Times, refers to the contacts of a third coup member leader.
40:01 who belonged to a Japanese secret society that had been manipulated by the CIA. And Song Nak Thang himself owes much of his influence in his three years in Japan during World War II. As noted above, this collaboration in Cambodia between CIA and Japanese elements was followed in March 1972 by the granting of a joint concession.
40:27 to the Thai-Cambodian offshore waters of Union Oil of California and Mitsu Oil Exploration of Japan. Now, he doesn't make the correlation because a lot of people don't know how the World Anti-Communist League comes into play. But if you guys remember, the leaders, the original founders, included the two war criminals from Japan.
40:55 And a lot of the finagling in the Asian theater was done by Ri in Korea, in South Korea, Chiang Kai-shek in Taiwan, and those two war criminals whose names escape me right now. So just keep that in mind as well. A country, let's see. So Cambodia, it was reported on by Newsweek.
41:26 that General Suharto's Indonesia was also involved in some of this fronting for Japan. Now, remember, Sukarno was the good guy. Suharto is the guy that the CIA installed after the coup in Indonesia so they could steal the gold and oil there. Sensing a pattern anywhere? So this is what was written in Newsweek.
41:54 A team of Cambodian officers secretly visited Indonesia last November, which would have been 1969, and again in January to study in depth how the Indonesian army managed to overthrow President Sukarno in 1965. This, some Indonesians say, gave Jakarta advanced knowledge of the operation to overthrow the prince that occurred shortly thereafter.
42:23 It also helps explain Indonesia's prompt offer to send arms to the newly installed CIA officer. Unquote. Psychological warfare experts in Indonesia arrived in Phnom Penh within days of the coup. Like they were already given a heads up that it was going to occur or something, you know. And it was said that they were going to quote unquote advise to make sure that this new leader.
42:50 who they pretended to know nothing about, or the fact that he was installed by the CIA, may have some leanings they didn't necessarily agree with. So he was going to be groomed, which they knew exactly who he was because they planted him there. These additional external factors suggest a prevailing trend towards repressive capitalism for which the U.S. and its agencies are solely responsible. At the same time, all of the known facts about
43:19 foreign involvement reemphasized the central coordinating role of U.S. intelligence, especially paramilitary factions of the CIA, and that they used these front companies like Civil Air Transport and Air America, that the Civil Air Transport supplied complete and tactical air support for the aborted Indonesian military uprising in 1958.
43:45 Tony Poe, their legendary ground operative who spearheaded the guerrilla operations against Tibet and in Laos and South China from 1958 to 1970, has been identified as also working with the Khmer Syri insurgents in Cambodia. Again, they use the same people over and over again, which was our first clue that all of this stuff was related. Air America and its personnel finally do contract work for Southeast Asia.
44:16 For the large oil companies, many of them maintain their own intelligence networks recruited largely from the veterans and CIA. Yeah. And that's not correct. Their quote unquote own intelligence are CIA assets because CIA controls all of this. They don't have private ones. They all work together. In contrast to 19th century flag imperialism, the mercantilism that.
44:45 Warhamster always talks about the 20th century equivalent is multinational like large corporations and operate as a syndicate. Yeah, we noticed after the fall of the prince proceeded to it. It basically resulted in the dividing up of the whole southern South China Sea for oil exploration. Indochina, Indonesia.
45:15 and all of the other areas participated in the planning of the coup. And it's instructive for it is a striking fact that successful military coups against Sukarno in 1965, like the unsuccessful military uprising in 1958, was not only linked to the CIA, but followed quickly announced moves by Sukarno to nationalize the rich Indonesian oil industry.
45:44 The power of the U.S. and Japanese oil interests with the new Suharto regime is likewise a matter of public record. The Long Null Coup of 1970, like the coups of 64 in Saigon and 64 in Laos, would have been counterproductive if they had not been swiftly followed by and stepped into with U.S. involvement. In 1964, U.S. clandestine ops
46:13 also came first with the initiation of operations against North Vietnam in February 64 with bombing raids with Thai and Air America pilots in Laos. In both cases, these provocations, although inadequate by themselves to prove the U.S. military position, aggravated a conflict that already existed and exacerbated a strategy of tension that then the CIA takes advantage of.
46:41 The Pentagon Papers indicated that the Hawks had the support of Director McComb, but kept other key administration in the dark. McNamara in particular claimed he was ignorant, which I find ridiculous. Even while he released the order for August 5th bombing of North Vietnam, later in 64, a State Department official could only report that the bombings...
47:09 August 1st and 2nd probably took place as the North Vietnamese had claimed, but McNamara ended up denying that they even occurred, which was patently ridiculous. In like manner, the overt U.S. intervention in Cambodia in 1970, although vital if months of covert U.S. operations were not to collapse, seems only to have been accomplished after intrigue, secrecy, and deception within the massive U.S.
47:40 The only significant change in the role from 64 seems to have been the CIA director. In 64, McCone held $1 million worth of stock in Standard Oil of California, one of the two largest oil companies that was involved in Indonesia. Their subsidiary, Caltech, accounted for 70% of the Sumatran oil production.
48:08 that he should be revealed as one of the Washington's most ardent hawks in 64 and 65 provides plenty of motivation for why we were there doing what we were doing. Richard Helms, who was the director in 70, was a career intel officer who didn't appear to have any connections, but the fact that he got named director means that he's going to help. Like other disputed escalations in the Indochina,
48:38 war. In 1970, invasion of Cambodia was preceded by an intelligence battle in Washington. The policy debate was disguised as a factual one over relevance of deteriorating scenes in Cambodia to U.S. prospects in Vietnam. In this debate, the issues that emerged were the truth or false of two propositions, finally subscribed to by President Nixon in the invasion announcement of April 30th.
49:07 in the so-called Cambodian sanctuary of the key control center, quote, the headquarters for the entire, quote, unquote, communist military operation, which is ridiculous because it was the CIA's operation, not a communist operation. The enemy supposedly was concentrated in these sanctuaries where they were building up to launch a massive attack.
49:36 on our forces in South Vietnam, but the CIA completely controlled Cambodia. So how'd that happen? The military imagination, as revealed to Newsweek, seems to have envisioned this massive buildup, which he likens to a James Bond spy thriller, that basically was a figment of their imagination.
50:06 There was a lot of skepticism within the bureaucracy of any of this stuff even being true. There was, quote unquote, alleged documents that talked about this that had basically later was proved to be fake. And it says Nixon's two propositions were finally discredited by the failure of U.S. forces to either find this massive troop buildup or any sanctuaries at all.
50:33 But long before April 30th, the proposition had been authoritatively and repeatedly refuted in the U.S. press. Robert Shaplin, S-H-A-P-L-E-N, an informed journalist who had contacts inside the CIA, said that the forces had moved out of the sanctuary at exactly the right time so that they were not detected.
51:04 He also was corroborating quote-unquote authoritative reports in the New York Times that had happened a month earlier that had detailed maps of the things that didn't exist. So, earlier reports pinpointed General Wheeler and General Moore, M-O-O-R-E-R, as the key hawks in the administration with plans to input a 30,000-man amphibious U.S. invasion.
51:32 and corroborated columnist Jack Anderson's report that the Joint Chiefs of Staff had endorsed all of the fake intel. So, almost done. The new information does not explain the error of Army intelligence in the Joint Chiefs of Staff. On the contrary, it increases the possibility that there was an intelligence conspiracy to present fake information to justify
52:02 something that shouldn't be happening. And that was basically this large-scale operation that was going on in Cambodia that, like I said, basically just empowered the Khmer Rouge eventually. And as a result of that, millions died. Literally millions died. And it was done for oil.
52:34 And maybe control of the rubber trees. But it was definitely done for oil. So that basically finishes up that chapter. So let's open it up. I knew all along would be here. I already preempted you with your 1968 stuff. SR-71, go ahead and go. Thank you. And thank everyone for attending. Really appreciate it. Great show today.
53:08 I can tell you, Colonel, the package arrived and I am more than ecstatic. I've got a coin I can put on a table and challenge anyone to find one better. There you go. And there's no doubt in my mind. Now, unfortunately, I missed yesterday, but I got some words to say about Kyle. Kyle is a total misogynist. His view of women.
53:39 is they belong in the kitchen, they belong raising kids, they belong taking care of family, and that's where they belong. Now, I knew that when I first started following him, because he does have good ideas afterwards. But now that he's shown his true colors and the hatred he's got for it, I'm done with it. Colonel, what he did and what he said...
54:10 is totally inconsistent with having an open mind and i i just can't deal with it so that's my two cents on him thank you um yeah i mean the the more you think about it the more you realize that in someone especially with all the stuff that we've uncovered
54:37 About how the and basically the FBI is our national police. OK, we don't call it a national police. It is absolutely the national police. When you look at what the national police force that we set up all over the world in Iran, in Chile, in Uruguay, Paraguay, Colombia, they were basically.
55:08 used to repress the people and hold the people in check. And when they couldn't do that legitimately, they would basically kidnap and torture them. They would disappear them. And so you start looking back over the history of America since we've had
55:36 a national police force. And you find that a lot of the training that these people went to were training very similar to the training that was set up for these people, not the School of Americas, but the other police training is very similar. So it is not surprising that you find some very aggressive, like,
56:06 Completely irresponsibly aggressive people in that line of work. Now, what I keep and I've stopped myself from going there, but I've got to say this. Can you imagine that you're a parent and your child has injured themselves or someone else? And you are told because this actually happened in Texas, by the way, you are told.
56:35 that they were groomed by this 764 transnational terrorist group. And you are visited by the FBI from the local FBI office. And the son of a bitch sits across the table from you and tells you that that doesn't exist. That there's no such thing as a...
57:03 Seven, six, four organization. That's silly. It's a conspiracy theory. And your child has either injured themselves or injured someone else. That's literally what he did. He is telling people in a very public forum since he told her that she was welcome to post it, that he.
57:33 think she's silly for talking about something that he had to know the FBI has already charged and convicted someone for that very offense. Now, if he knows that and he is telling someone that it doesn't exist, that is an MKUltra operation to make her feel marginalized and
58:02 in the attack that he did on her to get her to fear or question whether or not what she knows to be true is true. That's a psychological operation, people. That's what he was engaged in. That's why that piece of information is so important to outline who he really is.
58:31 He will psychologically intimidate people to disavow knowledge what they know to be true because for whatever reason, and I'm not going to attribute motive to him, that he has decided it's not true and you're not going to talk about it and he's going to do what he can to make sure it doesn't get talked about, to include contacting podcasters who had scheduled her to come talk.
59:00 and get them to cancel her appearances. That, to me, is beyond the Pell. It indicts him in the court of public opinion as an aggressor and someone that should never have a badge and a gun. Miles, go ahead. Okay, thanks, Colonel. Yeah, I'm so glad that we're doing this because back when I was younger,
59:30 I was arguing with people about what was going on in that area because of Vietnam, the conflict in Vietnam. And I was saying, no, it's about resources because that's what I was reading about. Because they kept saying, no, it's domino theory. The red wave is going to take over that whole region. And I went, no, I think it's more about resources. Now, the weird thing about Cambodia.
59:58 When you look into the history, I mean, they had some kings and, you know, there was some, you know, probably some conflict going on going back centuries. But there was two dominant religions. There was Hinduism and Buddhism. And those aren't genocidal religions. So I'm sure that it was pretty peaceful for hundreds of years until the 20th century.
1:00:25 For some reason, there's all these coup d'etats and genocide. I don't think it was from the Hindus or the Buddhists that were doing that. Maybe it was something else, Colonel, right? Like the CIA? Yeah, exactly. And it was for resources. So thanks, Colonel. I was right when I was a teenager, even though people were laughing at me. It was definitely about resources. All along, go ahead. We can't hear you.
1:01:06 Bridget, you want to take him down and bring him back up? Yep, I want to. Does anybody else have anything? Well, it seems to me, Colonel, the way this works, and they got the plan down to an arc, first thing they did was install the drug routes. And then we go from there. It's just unbelievable. I agree. Let's see. Yeah, William mentions over on Rumble about today's spraying.
1:01:46 And I assume he's meaning the, you know, the seeding of clouds and all of that. Obviously, that is being done. We have done it for decades. We've done it all over the world. We've killed crops. We've poisoned the soil. We've done all kinds of things. We've released insects to ruin crops.
1:02:15 So, again, whatever they do over there, they bring home. And you're absolutely crazy if you think that's not the case. Go ahead, all along. Still nothing. Carrie, go ahead. Yeah, I was going to talk about the spring as well. But when I was thinking about it, I was thinking, well, they actually do that. They've done that for a really long time through Monsanto.
1:02:50 They kill rivers from the runoff, and they just directly hit us. They don't do it in a covert way. But another thing I wanted to ask, when you were serving, Colonel, did any of this stuff get talked about? I mean, I know you maybe can't say what you talked about.
1:03:20 all, you know, the whole time, but was there any like data that you look back on and you, you're like, Oh my God. Cause I know you, you traveled back to that region, right? Or Korea. I can't remember exactly where you traveled back to. I went to Cambodia, Laos, Thailand. Yeah. I was in all. Okay. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I misread. And so no.
1:03:50 But again, just as Miles indicated, the indoctrination in the military is the domino theory. That's all they ever talk about. They you know, we were the good guys. We stopped communism. We lost Vietnam, but we stopped communism because we scared, you know, the rest of them. And there was never any talk about the drugs. There were never you know, it's not that you didn't read about that, but.
1:04:18 That was like isolated incidences. It wasn't the whole purpose of it. There's some rogue element that got involved in that, blah, blah, blah. So everything had a plausible excuse for anything that came up, whether it's a downed aircraft or whatever. There was always a plausible excuse that was provided. And then it's provided over and over and over again. So basically they produce.
1:04:48 people like myself that's indoctrinated. The problem is that when you get out and you start traveling and reading documents that is not part of an approved reading program, and it's not that you weren't free to read them, you didn't have time. We had a chief reading list every year. And most of the settings that you were in politically, because
1:05:17 At a senior officer level, everything's political. If you hadn't read those books, they're going to get talked about. And you didn't want to be the only person that hadn't read the book and know what everybody else was talking about. So through peer pressure, you read the approved books on the chiefs. And there was like 10 a year. It wasn't like a horrific reading schedule. But at the same time, you're getting your master's degree.
1:05:46 And at the same time, you're doing professional military education and correspondence before you can get selected to go in residence. So you have so much shit on your plate. It's by design. They do this on purpose. You are inundated with information that's all bullshit. And you feel like, you know, you're the dedicated airman running on a really fast treadmill and that you're doing God's work because we're the good guys.
1:06:15 you don't have time to stop and think about anything until you retire. The problem for them is because you're so highly educated slash indoctrinated, you still have all of the factual information, the timelines and all of that stuff. And so when you start reading books like Anthony Sutton, all of a sudden you're going.
1:06:42 Well, if that part's not true, then the other 25 things that came after that, because you know what they all are, means that all of those were done for a completely different reason. And you are able to sift through much more information much quicker and make it more relatable because you've actually been to these places. You've actually seen this stuff.
1:07:08 You've had conversations in joint PME, professional military education, like our class at Air War College had officers. We had the Saudi guy, but all of our seminars had a different country and you have dinner with them. They put on events from their country so that you can understand the culture. They give seminars, speeches in the auditorium about their country. So you have a very.
1:07:37 wide understanding of cultures and it's again that situationally when I read these books because I've been to a lot of the countries and I've talked to people from those countries fairly extensively in joint assignments and therefore
1:08:00 It's a lot easier for me to process that information, put it into words and spit it back out than other people would be able to. Do you mind? I'm sorry. Do you mind talking about what motivated you to go travel to that region? Well, it wasn't a motivation. I was I was on active duty.
1:08:21 That was my area that I selected at Air War College. I had done so much reading because I came in right after Vietnam. I had done so much reading on my own about the Vietnam War that when we the first day of class at Air War College, you write the top three regions that you want to specialize in your master's degree. My number one choice was Southeast Asia. And I just happened to get selected to do that. There were 13 people in my group.
1:08:50 whose specialty was Southeast Asia. And basically that means that all of your papers and all of that other stuff is going to be geared to that region, all of your research projects. And then in March of that academic year, you travel there for a month and you tour the entire region. Alfred, go ahead. Thank you. Sure. Alfred, go ahead. Hey, Colonel.
1:09:20 It's interesting. I've traveled a lot in Southeast Asia, Laos. I've been up to, like, Luang Prabang in Laos and Battambang in Cambodia. I've read a lot of the books in Cambodia. It's really sad, you know, what happened. But my question actually is, so do you see, like, it seems like with all the stuff we're talking about, do you see the CIA as the top
1:09:51 the people that benefit the most from this whole international drug trade? Or do you see them as maybe kind of being the soldiers of a much higher level of criminal? I know we've kind of talked about this. Yeah, they're not either. They're not the soldier and they're not the top.
1:10:17 So you have an international syndicate like the Rockefellers who own Standard Oil, who obviously was behind the instigation of all of the instability in Southeast Asia so they could get oil concessions. And not just Rockefeller. I'm just using them as an example. But they're making all the money. They're laundering. They're the resource dealers. They're the imperialists. They're the ones that are.
1:10:40 at the, you know, top or semi-top. You know, there's the whole conversation about there's this, you know, the 13 families and all that other stuff, but you can't leave out this upper echelon of the Rockefellers, the Rothschilds, the JP Morgans, and all of them. Okay, so let's just say for conversation that that's the top.
1:11:05 The CIA, if you went back to the 30s, where Sullivan and Cromwell was an actual law firm, and you had like Hill and Knowlton, the PR firm, and you had Pinkerton's, which was private intel. And then you had all of those things were basically employed by the JP Morgans, the Rothschilds, the Warburgs, the Rockefellers. All they did was take those facilitators.
1:11:33 Did any of those lawyers and bankers ever go out and buy a gun and kill anybody for, you know, John D. Rockefeller? No, they hired people to do that. So those people, that middle tier of mafia-styled bankers and lawyers just got stuck into the CIA. That's all they are. They function, a shit ton of them are lawyers.
1:12:01 A lot of them started off in banking because they do the covert funding things and setting up a fake businesses and all this other shit. So they are professionals. They orchestrate all of this. They don't do all of this. They hire Operation Gladio cells to do all of this. So there's an entire bottom layer of operators.
1:12:26 Like the Otto Skorzenys, like the Yves Guérin, all of those people that led the individual Gladio programs are employed by these intelligence agencies. And so if I had to draw on a diagram, I would have the bottom of the pyramid, the Gladio cells, the middle management is the intelligence network, and the top of the peer are the oligarchs.
1:12:54 Which I lump into an international syndicate. Got it. So, yeah, that's it strikes me that there's nothing really in place in the world to to stop these people. And even when they do get caught, they get out because they buy the judges and lawyers and whatever. And that seems like the kind of case like the world being run by really evil people. That is. But I will tell you that since Trump's first term.
1:13:21 There has been a lot of changes and there have been people, large groups of people that have been caught and prosecuted. We just don't hear about it in the United States and we certainly don't hear about it on mainstream media changes. Yeah. And so, well, the I told you.
1:13:43 and you may not have been here, but I did the biggest happy dance when he made the announcement of USAID, because that's where a lot of the covert funding had been coming from. Then he goes into the National Endowment for Democracy, and now he's into the, what is the latest one? I've got a whole segment on that that hopefully we'll do on an upcoming thing of Alpha Warriors.
1:14:12 Taking down USAID with all of the machinations of the still existing, under a different name, Office of Public Safety, which is where they were doing all the training of these national polices to torture and kill people, and the Office of Transition Initiatives, which, again, was another destabilization program. It's being dismantled right in front of us. Benjamin, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel.
1:14:43 Something I was thinking about when you were talking about how while you were active duty, you just didn't see any of this. The same thing happened to me. That's why when they talk about the Romans with give them games and food, though, it'll keep them busy. And with Trump and all these people and organizations being highlighted that it just shows you all the level and degrees. That's why I believe Gladio is so important. That's why the whole Kyle Serafin.
1:15:13 Why why he was doing the things that he was doing and saying the things that he was saying threw me off. You know, it's like you're you're supposed to be this reputable person, you know, and then you're appearing this way. Why would you try to hide the information or just easily like push to the side the satanic cult?
1:15:32 stuff that you were putting out you know like what's your thoughts on his angle like do you think he's like one of those people that we talked about that that are being used to to you know control the narrative of what people see in the world today he is definitely opting for controlling narrative now whether it is an overt way of doing it like he's actually being paid to be divisive or
1:16:03 Whether it's part of the programming that he received in the FBI that is a carryover that now he's not an active FBI agent. Either way, it's very dangerous. Again, I don't know enough about him to make that determination. But either way, the results are the same. Whether he is actively being paid to be divisive or.
1:16:29 He is being divisive as a result of some long term programming, whether it's personal or professional. He obviously and I do not say this lightly. You guys know that I've spent my entire career in male dominated trades to include the construction business that I now have. He is probably one of the most overt.
1:16:59 Women hating in a overt fashion that I have come across in a very long time. You guys have heard some of my stories when I was 18 and 19 years old and I was working around maintainers and all male. I was the only female around. I was the only female for two years on the UPS ramp at Stanford Field in Louisville around 350 maintainers. Some.
1:17:29 didn't necessarily care for women being in maintenance. Some overtly hated it. Quite frankly, the funniest part of the entire thing for me was the women, the wives, hated me more than the men didn't like working around me. Because the women didn't, they loved the fact that their husbands went to work with all males and came home.
1:17:54 as soon as they approved women being in these career fields, because you go TDY, you go, you know, on deployments. When your aircraft go, you go. That freaking drove them crazy. And the women were the nastiest bitches I've ever seen in my life. I mean, they did everything to make your life a living hell. And believe me, they could.
1:18:18 The whole thing is just a very interesting dynamic. But to live in 2025 and have somebody as overtly demonizing women as he does and the way he just overtly says it, the fact that that man could ever work in the federal government is just mind boggling to me. Illini. Hey, Colonel.
1:18:43 I'm not sure. You probably didn't see the JFK files testimony today. But if you're familiar with Jefferson Morley, who's one of the big JFK researchers, it looks like he kind of came out of the hearing and said that James Angleton, his secretary, had Lee Harvey Oswald's file, 180-page file, before the shooting.
1:19:12 He had it on his desk about a week before the shooting, based on some of the recently released documents. I don't know if it was 2025 or it might have been 22, 23. I think I've read that already. Okay. It came out, like, there's been news on it over the past week or so, but you got to look for it on Xinhua or a couple of the other things. But he testified to it at the hearing. There were a couple of other interesting things there.
1:19:42 It might be worth some time looking at it. Sure. Thank you. What else did you find interesting? Bolden didn't come up, but I think it was just sort of a weird hearing where like the Democrats, like the Republicans were asking like direct questions of the folks, you know.
1:20:05 I mean, Oliver Stone was there and like, you know, the Republicans. It was kind of funny, like the people providing testimony were all basically liberal Democrats. And the Republicans basically just handed it over to them and basically said, guys, you know, tell us what you think is pretty notable in all of this. Jefferson Morley basically cited, you know, three or four different really important instances where there was clearly a cover up.
1:20:33 done, you know, by, by the CIA in the whole process. And he basically said, you know, can we pinpoint, can we say that there's a smoking gun and we've got it and we caught somebody red handed? No, but can we basically build a circumstantial case that we've got, you know, admissions from, you know, the agency that they were the only people in the room, the doors were locked, nobody else was there. And JFK came in.
1:21:01 And he went out with like six bullets, you know, three bullets. Right. And it couldn't have been anybody else. Have we got that kind of a case? Yeah. Right. We basically got that was kind of the gist of of the hearing from, you know, this testimony. And they raised the fact that there was some new documents, particularly Angleton's testimony to the House Committee on Assassinations in the late 70s.
1:21:28 They kind of basically said, yeah, Angleton lied. And yeah, we kind of know that there was, you know, false testimony about Oswald because he wasn't supposed to be able to speak Spanish. And they were claiming that he did. You couple that with all the Bolden stuff, which didn't even get mentioned, which they didn't even get to in that hearing, because everybody was kind of time limited. That was interesting.
1:21:52 And then the Democrats' behavior, they didn't really let these liberal – the Democrat congressmen really kind of kept a lid on things in terms of how much leeway they gave people to answer questions with. While the Republicans were just kind of handing it over to them, basically like, guys, just riff. Like, tell us what you think is the most important thing in these documents. Right. The Democrats were doing controlled op. They weren't quite saying – they weren't quite giving the –
1:22:21 They were clearly saying we got to go after the agency, but they weren't letting the witnesses speak. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Limited hangout. OK. SR 71. Thank you, Colonel. I want to circle back to Carrie and her question about not seeing or not knowing what's really going on in the military. As the colonel stated, all of that's true. But I'll take it a step further.
1:22:50 No matter what you look at in the U.S., when you go to monuments, when you go to Washington, D.C., wherever you go, they're giving you all of this propaganda about the U.S. And it's all good. All the memorials, everything, everywhere you go. So when you look at it in that light, it's easy to understand why people have no clue what's going on. And thank the colonel for pointing it out.
1:23:22 Yeah. Thank you, Colonel. Sure. All along. I'm going to try your mic and then we'll go to Omega and then Miles. Hi. Yeah. Can you hear me? Yep. OK. Yeah. Different medium here, Colonel. A couple of things. I just want to quote with reference to what a line I just said about the hearings today. So basically, he seems like it makes.
1:23:47 Seems like the Republicans were pitching grapefruits at the Democratic batters and the Democrats were somehow finding a way to sway and miss. Well, surprise, surprise, to quote the late Gober Pyle. OK, that's it's really critical that we see this role playing going on here because basically the Democrats are really.
1:24:14 although Republicans are CIA as well and were earlier, the Democrats are like the aircraft, the mothership of the CIA. And so it's very significant that they are the ones, given their demographic makeup of their reputation, which is based more on the past before they became 100% Wall Street, that they're swinging and missing at these grapefruits, right? It's role-playing. And the other thing I just wanted to, you said earlier,
1:24:44 that reminded me of, you know, when you're talking about the Operation Mockingbird-like interrogation techniques, it very strongly reminded me once again of, you know, LAPD's little helpers there on the RFK investigation, you know, the literally CIA Office of Public Safety, I'm sorry.
1:25:12 was interrogating the most important witnesses. And there's actually stunning video of that where you could see Office of Public Safety CIA member Hank Hernandez interrogating the most important witness, Sandra Serrano, basically manipulating her testimony.
1:25:38 Probably the most significant campaign of the 20th century in terms of what did not happen. It's the most censored, not only in MSM, but also on the controlled left. That's what I call, you know, overlapping shields type censorship. I'm going to post it in the bubble. Okay. But anyway. Okay. Let's see. Omega, go ahead. Colonel, my massive mouse had his hand up before me.
1:26:06 He's already went once, so we let people who haven't had a chance to talk. I'll come around to him. Go ahead. All right. I just wanted to touch on something that Alfred said about fighting back. This is the way that we have to fight back right now. We got to listen to what the colonel's telling us about things that we did not know about, never were taught. And it's all about acceptance and realizing that.
1:26:34 We were never taught the truth. That's the only way we can fight back right now. I agree 100% with that. Thank you for sharing that. Miles, go ahead. Thanks, Omega. I'll talk to you later for letting me go first. Colonel, I just want your opinion on what do you think about Lieutenant General John David Kane being the nominee for the Chairman of Joint...
1:27:06 chiefs of staff. And have you ever met Raising Cain? I have not met him. I've done a lot of research about him. I think for the same reason that many of the other appointees are important. I think what you're going to find the most important about him, for those of you who don't know, he did not come up through a normal active duty career.
1:27:36 He was a guard, an international guard guy. He was on call the day of 9-11. He has a very interesting background. He is a business entrepreneur. He looks at things completely different than a traditional. So again, let's go back to the brainwashing.
1:28:06 The only thing that penetrates that bubble is the surrounding skin, which is the military industrial complex. So the military is inside of the bubble and around the peripheral of that bubble is the military industrial complex. And they are the source of everything inside of that bubble from a equipment standpoint.
1:28:33 from a support standpoint, from subcontractors to, you know, if you get a contract with the military to build military housing, Brown and Root, this entire complex is around you. And so if you're an acquisition officer and you buy space systems,
1:28:57 out in Los Angeles and you come in contact with the TRWs and all of the different space contractors, they're going to offer you a job. You know that you're going, even if they don't ever say that, you know when you retire, you're going to go work for one of those companies. You are the guy that decides who gets the contract. Well, if you want to, even when no words are said,
1:29:24 If you want to go to work for Raytheon, then you give Raytheon the contract because you're going to want to go to work for them. So everybody's going to love you there. You don't ever have to say a word. So you can't divorce the people that grow up in the system. And if you grow up in the system and you're an F-35 pilot or you're a C-130 pilot.
1:29:52 You go to everything that C-130, which is Lockheed. If you are one of the tanker pilots or whatever, you go to everything Boeing because all of the updates, everything. So you know that you have a really good chance that you're going to work for Boeing when you retire. These conflicts are there and they're not good for us.
1:30:22 And as a country and as a result of that, if you get somebody like Kane who didn't go to the officers club every Friday night because he wasn't on active duty, he's not in any of their three star clicks. He's not in any of their two star clicks because he was a guard guy. It's actually brilliant from breaking that glass.
1:30:50 in allowing a completely different culture, which is why I think Hedgeseth is so critical in the SecDef position. Because again, as he said, kind of tongue in cheek in his hearing about, you know, about the generals working for the defense contractors. And he's like, I'm not a general. Nobody's going to want him after he's done at the SecDef because he didn't come up in the clique. He doesn't have the ability to
1:31:20 pay back and, hey, call your buddy that you went to West Point with. And he's now the Joint Chiefs of Staff. And you're now my vice president over here at Lockheed. Why don't you call him or go have dinner with him? Those people, he's not in any of those clips. And the same thing with General Kane. He's not in any of those clicks. So. So, Colonel, the reason I asked.
1:31:48 Because I'm reading right here, it said he served as an associate director for military affairs of the Central Intelligence Agency from 2021 to 2024. Yeah, he did a tour there. What does that mean? Yeah. Okay. All that means is that, and actually, I thought, again, you guys.
1:32:20 This whole thing to me is so brilliant. It's kind of amazing to me. Now, you guys have to go back and if you've not ever researched Operation Grey Lord, you have to do that. When you are going to take down something that is as complicated and complex as what has been built up in Washington, D.C., it...
1:32:51 Takes years to do that. It takes years of people being on the inside of a machine, even because, again, had somebody told me when I was still on active duty what was actually going on and asked me to be participate in the taking down of the organization of the compromised people.
1:33:20 Hell yeah, I would have done that. I'd have done that in a minute because I was on record. And I think that's kind of a very interesting looking back now. I was one of the people that filed the IG complaints. I was one of the people when I found out something was wrong, I tried to fix it. Those people stick out like a sore thumb, actually, when you're on duty. They stick out really big because you're not compromised. And everybody knows that.
1:33:49 That's why people came to me and asked me for solutions, because they knew I did the research and I knew what I was talking about. I can't tell you the number of my peers. No one ever called them at home. Nobody ever asked them to figure something out because they didn't do any extra work. They didn't take regulations home. They didn't take Title 10 home and have it memorized to know where the authorities for everything that we did come. I did.
1:34:15 Because it was never enough for me just to do my job. I wanted to know all of the aspects of the job that I did. And so as a result, you are asked, you notice things much more because you know what is behind the scenes. And I don't know, I've said it in text. I don't know if I've ever talked about it out loud. But when my boss called me and asked me to produce an order on Lindsey Graham so that he could go to the...
1:34:45 a hostile war theater, AOR, and I refused to do that, he knew that I wasn't going to do it because I'd worked for him before. But he had to ask me because I was the person in charge of doing it. He went and asked someone else to do it and they produced an illegal order.
1:35:14 And Lindsey Graham put on his uniform and went to the AOR on those orders. And they were illegal. He was there illegally. He was not allowed to be there. He was not allowed to be in his uniform there on these orders that they placed him on. So I filed an IG complaint because that's what you do. Again, my boss didn't like that at all.
1:35:43 And of course, he knew there was only like three people that knew that that even happened. And he knew that I was one of them. But there's nothing to do to me and I would not do it. When another boss of mine tried to interfere with his son going through officers training and to be a pilot and he was calling and influencing people, he was a two star general and he was trying to get colonels to do things they shouldn't be doing. And a lot of colonels.
1:36:11 react to the request of a two-star general differently than they would, you know, a fellow colonel. And one of them did something he shouldn't have done. And again, I had a fellow two-star general come and tell me because they knew I would do something about it. So that's just, and they know because your name's out there. So I think, I say all of that because inside of the system,
1:36:43 They know who all of these people are. There are some people who aren't overtly doing things like that. They're observing stuff. Now, the military liaison with the CIA during that period of time, been the ones that were coordinating all of the shit that was going on in Ukraine, militarily, like the military support, the satellite support.
1:37:13 He's the conduit. He's the belly button between the military and the CIA. So if he's a good guy, he has all of that information of what the hell is going on that will go along with the article that just came out, which I'll try to do something later on. There's a new New York Times article that basically is, quote unquote, exposing all the stuff we already know. But it is good to get it out that I think was published two days ago.
1:37:43 That I'm going to do kind of a review on. But he he would have known all of that. And if he knew it, then Trump would know it. So all of this to me is just like falling into place. Andy, go ahead. Hey, Colonel. Hey, Brigitte. Thanks for letting me up. Yeah, I wanted to just talk about.
1:38:09 Something you mentioned yesterday. So it was in, I think, at the end of the show yesterday. I just listened to it this morning. And it just, you know, you were talking about, you know, what's happening and like what happened in Brazil with Bolsonaro and then Romania with Kellen Drozdescu and now with Marie Le Pen in France and how all these kind of populist leaders are getting.
1:38:38 you know, getting canceled or getting in trouble. And yeah, I just want to, I thought that was related to, you know, what's happening to us here in Canada. So I forwarded, you know, now that I have a bit more of a political following, I forward your, your space from yesterday. But yeah, I want to just.
1:39:01 get your input, a bit more input, because what I see is happening is like in Canada, we basically have a uni party, which one leader, you know, is taking the conservative hat and then the other liberal and the other one even further to the left. But really, it's just like, what speed are you on to go to the globalist agenda? You know, if you go the liberal route,
1:39:30 You're fast tracking. If you go to the other conservative party, you're at a slower pace. But what I see happening, because the media here is like totally, you know, manufacturing everything. They're like directing everything that people think. And it's just incredible. And I see there's an effort against, you know, the party I'm running for is called the People's Party and Maxine Bernier, Max Bernier,
1:40:00 the leader he's been on you know he's got interviewed by the pillow guy he got interviewed by by alex jones by patrick but david and you know all as many people who would you know have an audience and and uh anyone who would um listen to him he's been on those those podcasts so but it's it's hard to penetrate into the the canadian listeners right but what they're doing is um taking those who are
1:40:29 sort of aware of you know stuff that you know what happened during the pandemic and and other issues globalist kind of issues they're they're feeding them with you know with other fear and stuff like that to say oh we can't go get this carny guy because uh you know he's terrible and so we have to all unite with the the the conservative party you know and and i i see it happening because even some of my volunteers are like questioning and and uh and i say just stay the course you know
1:41:00 with the People's Party. Maxime Bernier has always been consistent. So my question for you is, do you think it's the same kind of deal that's going on? That's what happened in France and what happened in Romania. It's happening here. They're attacking the populist leader, which is Max Bernier and the People's Party of Canada. Because I feel if he had even as...
1:41:27 a few seconds of exposure on mainstream media, people would, you know, start to flock to the People's Party. And I think they know that. So I don't know if you have any input on that. Well, you're talking degrees. Now, obviously, France and some of the other countries are, as far as NATO goes, much more significant for whether it's votes or whatever.
1:41:57 And so they've put into high gear the election interference. But we've definitely established beyond any reasonable doubt that since 1948, the CIA's installed has been interfering in every major election since that time. So the the new trick is arresting them. Right. It's not.
1:42:22 In mass, it's not that they didn't do things like that, but that's a pretty overt position to not even allow you to participate in the elections, because keep in mind, up until more recently, if you go back and you look at some of the shenanigans that they played, like the most obvious one that we've talked about at nauseam.
1:42:48 Chile, because there's such a large amount of documents written that we've had access to and how the election cycle before, they were very successful in manipulating people away from Allende. And they did it through the media, which is what you're talking to. The second time around, it didn't work as well.
1:43:16 And Allende not only got elected, he got confirmed through the Senate and took office. And then, of course, we know he got killed. Those are the elevations of the interference, physical purchasing of bribing politicians in order to not get him confirmed. And then once he's confirmed, you know, basically shutting down the entire ability for them to economically survive.
1:43:45 The stranglehold, and when they hold on a little bit past that, they'll kill you. So those are kind of like the echelons of ratcheting up these operations. The fact that they're starving them from airtime and things like that is kind of like the lower echelon of what they're obviously capable of. So they've gotten a new tactic, which is lawfare.
1:44:14 And that, like they tried with Trump to get him arrested multiple times, they're just deploying those same tactics over in Europe. So that's the way I see it. You can guarantee it's going to get interfered with. It's just a level of the amount of interference is directly proportional to what they see the importance of the country is.
1:44:38 They were definitely trying to intimidate Max as well during the pandemic. He was trying to go around. I think it was in 2022 or 21. Anyways, the last federal election. And he was jailed as well. He was like meeting with people outside and they had maybe, you know, 10 people instead of five or six, whatever was the maximum. And so he got jailed for that. Yeah.
1:45:07 All right, Seattle, then Illini, and then I'm going to have to run, guys. Seattle, go ahead. I mean, are you being targeted at all? What do you mean? Because I just don't understand how they're letting you talk so much. Well, I mean, she gets shadow banned bad. I mean, and normally the space is throttled nonstop. In fact, it's a rare thing for us to be able to hear from the audience. Sorry, I didn't mean to interject, however.
1:45:41 No, Bridget is kind of my IT person. We have had some of these spaces where you have to start them like four different times. We have had people manipulating the spaces so that no one in the audience, I simulcast on Rumble because for months on end, no one who was in the listener population could even hear me speak.
1:46:07 They would have to listen on Rumble and then interact with us as we took turns in the speakership. We had one session where I videoed people being taken out of our space. They were just being eliminated out of the space. So there's all kinds of different. OK, so I get it. I get it. You are being targeted. Yes, there there are all kinds of ways they do that.
1:46:34 they take away followers um when you watch the numbers um which we started doing only because i heard other people saying it was happening to them i never paid attention to it um you can look at the yeah it's the whole thing is kind of um a very interesting um way but also i found something and i'm going to share this with you guys um
1:47:00 I have talked with people who do this professionally, like actually make a living on it. I do not. And looking behind the scenes of how, and I, this is one of the reasons why I think this Serafin thing is so important and why I will not back down with this. I have had some people suggest to me, and again, it's just one of those things that you kind of roll your eyes and,
1:47:30 you dismiss until you have evidence. But I had had people, when I was at the Myrtle Beach GART, say to me that it looked like there was a concerted effort of people, I don't know who, they wouldn't tell me, that had suggested to people
1:48:01 that Operation Gladio wasn't all that we have discovered that it is. And basically, we're doing what Kyle admitted to doing to the woman that was discovering or was basically exposing 764. And what struck me the most about him saying that he was actively doing it, and I am not suggesting he did that. I don't think he even knew who I was, actually.
1:48:30 But him putting in writing that there are people that actively do that kind of got my attention because I have had it suggested to me that more than a few people do that very thing. Basically, anyway, that's one of the reasons why I took serious the fact that he was doing that to someone.
1:48:56 especially the material that she was trying to expose and especially the fact that I already knew it to be true. So it just kind of confirmed that that thing, that kind of stuff happens. And if you would have asked me that same question a year ago, I would have said, absolutely not. That's ridiculous. But now, not targeted in a physical way, but definitely in an informational operations perspective, I would have to say, yes, that is happening.
1:49:26 And I am sure it's the content. Eleanor, go ahead. One comment for Andy is, you know, he was mentioning, you know, the unit party in Canada. I'm not sure if he follows Sam Cooper or not. But, you know, they they do have a meeting right now between Trudeau and Sam Gar, a fentanyl importer from from.
1:49:56 China's United Front. And he was actually involved in a drive-by shooting a couple of years after he met with Justin Trudeau. So one would think that Trudeau's security probably would have known his background and everything he was doing there. Canada seems to have its own little Operation Gladio thing going on apparently with the Chinese fentanyl traffickers. Well, and again, we've discovered for
1:50:25 Going back to pre-World War II, and we've said this repeatedly, that Canada is a vehicle for getting, whether it was the prohibition alcohol or the opium, now the fentanyl, into the United States through a northern route. Canada is critical to this. Canada has a lot of the...
1:50:51 And the word's not franchise, but they basically have front mining companies that go around the world with the majority of the share owners as U.S. oligarchs. But they appear as a Canadian mining company that gets all of these concessions like the one we found in Haiti. So, yeah, Canada is very involved in all of this. Absolutely.
1:51:20 I think it's like we said at one point, the good cop, bad cop. So the U.S. military was like the bad cop and the Canadians came in. They were peacekeepers. They went to all of the U.N. things, but they worked together. Yeah, absolutely. I can't tell you the number of Canadian operations. Of course, they were everywhere throughout Africa as quote unquote peacekeepers.
1:51:48 were part of, not like they instigated, but they were involved in a lot of really awful things as far as suppressing the people and propping up in especially the French colonies, pre-colonial French colonies. Yeah, just horrific things. One last one, Omega Go, and then I've got to run. It seems like every country that's in the air quotes Commonwealth.
1:52:16 is playing a heavy role in all the fuckery that's going on. So you're not wrong. Obviously, when we did our initial delve into Operation Gladio and found out that it was the British Roundtable, the Fabian Society, and what they intended was to keep the British Empire in its original form of New Zealand, Australia, Canada, blah, blah, blah, all of the Commonwealth.
1:52:45 was going to remain in a pan-British empire structure where they were going to add a pan-America, kind of a unifying of North and South America minus Canada. And they were going to create the pan-Asia, pan-Europe, and those basically were going to be the seats at the roundtable. And we were going to go and, I mean, they were saying this in the late 1800s.
1:53:09 that they were going to set up one world government and that's the way it was going to be organized. So you're dead on right. And definitely not a surprise to any of us. Thank you. Yeah. So thanks again, everybody, for being here. Probably in the next few days, we do not have too much more of this book left. I do want to get done with the book. Then we're going to address the whole Argentina thing.
1:53:35 with some information pulled out of some files that we have that kind of speak to that whole thing. Because I think it's very important to go back and look at Argentina. We did cover it during our world tour early on in our spaces, but that's been so long ago. And now in light of this, I think it's going to be really important to bring that back up. Look at the history and what was going on in the tentacles that went throughout Latin America.
1:54:04 all originating from Argentina. The fact that the second P2 Lodge was opened there, the Masonic Lodge that ruled basically the entire Operation Gladio in Italy. Gelli, the guy that was the Grand Mason of the Italian P2 Lodge, traveled routinely. Best Friends was there at the, however you call it, the inauguration of the CIA-appointed dictator in Argentina.
1:54:33 Anyway, I think it's a good time now that that's back in the news to go back over that. So we will do that for probably a couple of days before we start our new book. But anyway, thanks, everybody, for being here. And I will see you tomorrow.

Entities here

Vietnam43CIA32Cambodia25United States25Norodom Sihanouk21Khmer Serei16Operation Gladio11Thailand111970 Cambodian coup d'état9Canada9Japan8Air America7Lon Nol7China7Richard Nixon7France7Joint Chiefs of Staff7Phnom Penh5Laos5Army Green Berets5Union Oil Company of California5Invasion of Cambodia4Rockefeller4John David Kane4Covert defoliation program in Cambodia4U.S. State Department4Newsweek3Victor Matsui3Lindsey Graham3Mitsubishi Oil Exploration Company3Chile3Pentagon Papers3Argentina3Maxime Bernier3People's Party of Canada3Gulf of Tonkin incident3Indonesia '65 coup3U.S. Navy3James Jesus Angleton3Office of Policy Coordination3

Claims made here

Seymour Hersh exposed 1970 Cambodian coup d'état book_quoted ▶ 4:58
“tell us more about the internal reasons for Cambodia's collapse in the 1970s, but both books either discount or ignore external factors to which I refer, above all of the intervention of U.S., Japanes…”
Army Green Berets targeted_for_regime_change Norodom Sihanouk book_quoted ▶ 5:28
“in 1970 had been for years a high priority of the U.S. Green Beret reconnaissance units operating inside of Cambodia since the late 1960s. Hearst reports in particular that U.S. intelligence officials…”
Union Oil Company of California financed_via Mitsubishi Oil Exploration Company book_quoted ▶ 5:58
“I say more about this later on in the chapter. With respect to what I say below about Union Oil, now called Unical's offshore concessions in Cambodia, Unical now has at least three petroleum concessio…”
Richard Nixon funded Lon Nol book_quoted ▶ 6:26
“Oil Exploration Company, also referred to in this chapter. Now, Mitsu was also one of those companies that date back to World War II that was involved in the slave labor of U.S. service people. By the…”
Lon Nol overthrew Norodom Sihanouk book_quoted ▶ 9:48
“Lon Null's coup of March 1970, which paved the way for the American and South Vietnamese invasion, was only the ultimate and most visible stage of a shift of power that had begun three years before. T…”
Norodom Sihanouk appointed Lon Nol book_quoted ▶ 11:47
“Shanunak shifted to be more aligned with the U.S., received Chester Bowles, B-O-W-L-E-S, in January 1968, and we covered him when we covered Cambodia in our world tour, and began increasingly to crack…”
U.S. Navy carried_out_attack Vietnam book_quoted ▶ 15:37
“And according to them, in an annual report in 1969, or excuse me, 68, the Navy's coastal survey ship, which included no less than seven chartered from commercial petroleum survey services, were comple…”
U.S. Navy carried_out_attack Vietnam book_quoted ▶ 16:57
“So here's a quote. The following magnetic studies were carried out during the fiscal year 1968. A complete low level aeromagnetic survey of South Vietnam, including all of the land surface and at leas…”
U.S. Navy carried_out_attack Thailand book_quoted ▶ 16:57
“So here's a quote. The following magnetic studies were carried out during the fiscal year 1968. A complete low level aeromagnetic survey of South Vietnam, including all of the land surface and at leas…”
U.S. Navy carried_out_attack China book_quoted ▶ 17:52
“any technical assistance related to offshore oil exploration. Strictly speaking, the assistance had not been provided to South Vietnam, but either as support of the fleet or basically they couched sup…”
U.S. Navy carried_out_attack Cambodia book_quoted ▶ 21:04
“profiles along the shelf at opportune times while in transit between major projects in the region. So in other words, they were doing all this shit and didn't tell anybody. Well, didn't tell all of th…”
U.S. Air Force carried_out_attack Cambodia book_quoted ▶ 22:56
“and reopen relationships with a hostile U.S. bureaucracy represented a historical process that had been considerably accelerated by U.S. covert operations. From early 1964, but with particular intensi…”
Thomas Pickering covered_up Covert defoliation program in Cambodia book_quoted ▶ 26:19
“basically influenced Shanonuk to talk publicly in July and August about accepting U.S. aid again and inviting the U.S. back in. After being questioned by the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee, Thomas…”
Air America carried_out_attack Thailand book_quoted ▶ 28:15
“And pilots were involved since Air America officials have admitted to extensive defoliation programs having been flown, you know, in every other country but this one during this one time. They flew th…”
Air America carried_out_attack Cambodia book_quoted ▶ 28:15
“And pilots were involved since Air America officials have admitted to extensive defoliation programs having been flown, you know, in every other country but this one during this one time. They flew th…”
Air America carried_out_attack China book_quoted ▶ 28:15
“And pilots were involved since Air America officials have admitted to extensive defoliation programs having been flown, you know, in every other country but this one during this one time. They flew th…”
Air America carried_out_attack Vietnam book_quoted ▶ 28:15
“And pilots were involved since Air America officials have admitted to extensive defoliation programs having been flown, you know, in every other country but this one during this one time. They flew th…”
Air America carried_out_attack Laos book_quoted ▶ 28:15
“And pilots were involved since Air America officials have admitted to extensive defoliation programs having been flown, you know, in every other country but this one during this one time. They flew th…”
Henry Kissinger ordered_assassination_of Norodom Sihanouk book_quoted ▶ 29:07
“Henry Kissinger and Nixon ordered bombing strikes against bases in Cambodia. In other words, secret strikes for the two months of the covert defoliation program were ordered by the advisor, who is cha…”
Richard Nixon ordered_assassination_of Norodom Sihanouk book_quoted ▶ 29:07
“Henry Kissinger and Nixon ordered bombing strikes against bases in Cambodia. In other words, secret strikes for the two months of the covert defoliation program were ordered by the advisor, who is cha…”
Son Ngoc Thanh headed Khmer Serei book_quoted ▶ 29:35
“President Nixon's covert operations against Cambodia in the first year of his presidency are part of a series dating back to that era when he was vice president in 1958 and 59. The CIA financed, equip…”
Victor Matsui member_of Khmer Serei book_quoted ▶ 30:01
“had been premier of Cambodia under the Japanese reign when they were invaded during World War II. To show CIA complicity in the uprising, Shananuk is said to have given as evidence the fact that a pol…”
Victor Matsui removed_from_power Pakistan book_quoted ▶ 31:26
“In 1966, he was expelled for the second time from Pakistan for renewed charges of subversion. Yeah, going around doing Operation Gladio shit all over the world, just like we've discovered repeatedly. …”
Army Green Berets trained Khmer Serei book_quoted ▶ 33:20
“which was referred to over there as the KKK, of whom an unflattering portrait is found in Robin Moore's book called The Green Berets. Trained by U.S. Special Forces, the Khmer Syri, and later the Thai…”
Special Operations Group front_for CIA host_asserted ▶ 33:48
“and operational teams to operate not only just in Cambodia, but they also used them in Vietnam against the North Vietnamese. The Saigon-based studies and operation groups called ASOG, in turn, reporte…”
Special Operations Group spied_on Vietnam host_asserted ▶ 33:48
“and operational teams to operate not only just in Cambodia, but they also used them in Vietnam against the North Vietnamese. The Saigon-based studies and operation groups called ASOG, in turn, reporte…”
CIA ordered_assassination_of Norodom Sihanouk documented ▶ 34:50
“Sinonuk's overthrow, the New York Times report revealed that the U.S. had used the Khmerist theory, an organization dedicated to the overthrow of the legitimate government of Cambodia on covert missio…”
CIA funded Khmer Serei documented ▶ 34:50
“Sinonuk's overthrow, the New York Times report revealed that the U.S. had used the Khmerist theory, an organization dedicated to the overthrow of the legitimate government of Cambodia on covert missio…”
John McCarthy Jr. member_of Khmer Serei documented ▶ 35:48
“said the clandestine operation in Cambodia was directed from South Vietnam by the CIA. The mission was known as Operation Cherry. It involved McCarthy working undercover as a member of the Khmer Seri.…”
CIA directed Operation Chaos documented ▶ 35:48
“said the clandestine operation in Cambodia was directed from South Vietnam by the CIA. The mission was known as Operation Cherry. It involved McCarthy working undercover as a member of the Khmer Seri.…”
CIA maintained Phnom Penh host_asserted ▶ 36:18
“1967, when Long Nol was briefly prime minister. But the indications are that the Khmer series retained their identity, their militant opposition to the prince, and their links to the U.S. CIA. In othe…”
Khmer Serei carried_out_attack Cambodia host_asserted ▶ 36:44
“even when diplomatic relations with Cambodia had been broken off. A man by the name of Wilford Burkett, B-U-R-C-H-E-T-T, has charged that more violent events surrounding the overthrow of the prince, l…”
Khmer Serei carried_out_attack Vietnam host_asserted ▶ 36:44
“even when diplomatic relations with Cambodia had been broken off. A man by the name of Wilford Burkett, B-U-R-C-H-E-T-T, has charged that more violent events surrounding the overthrow of the prince, l…”
Army Green Berets trained Khmer Serei host_asserted ▶ 37:14
“were all spearheaded by CIA-trained Khmer Syri with some U.S. embeds. In the weeks and months following the coup of March 18, 1970, it became abundantly clear that the most reliable cadre in the Cambo…”
CIA trained Khmer Serei host_asserted ▶ 37:14
“were all spearheaded by CIA-trained Khmer Syri with some U.S. embeds. In the weeks and months following the coup of March 18, 1970, it became abundantly clear that the most reliable cadre in the Cambo…”
Khmer Serei recruited Cambodia host_asserted ▶ 37:14
“were all spearheaded by CIA-trained Khmer Syri with some U.S. embeds. In the weeks and months following the coup of March 18, 1970, it became abundantly clear that the most reliable cadre in the Cambo…”
CIA funded 1970 Cambodian coup d'état host_asserted ▶ 39:33
“who was then the ambassador to Tokyo, and Song Sak, who was the Khmer Syri leader and alleged CIA agent, and Phnom Penh, and that they had a budget of $10 million and used CIA personnel for the coup. …”
CIA manipulated Japan host_asserted ▶ 40:01
“who belonged to a Japanese secret society that had been manipulated by the CIA. And Song Nak Thang himself owes much of his influence in his three years in Japan during World War II. As noted above, t…”
CIA installed Suharto host_asserted ▶ 41:26
“that General Suharto's Indonesia was also involved in some of this fronting for Japan. Now, remember, Sukarno was the good guy. Suharto is the guy that the CIA installed after the coup in Indonesia so…”
Vietnam supplied_arms_to Lon Nol host_asserted ▶ 42:23
“It also helps explain Indonesia's prompt offer to send arms to the newly installed CIA officer. Unquote. Psychological warfare experts in Indonesia arrived in Phnom Penh within days of the coup. Like …”
CIA installed Lon Nol host_asserted ▶ 42:50
“who they pretended to know nothing about, or the fact that he was installed by the CIA, may have some leanings they didn't necessarily agree with. So he was going to be groomed, which they knew exactl…”
Air America supplied_arms_to Vietnam documented ▶ 43:19
“foreign involvement reemphasized the central coordinating role of U.S. intelligence, especially paramilitary factions of the CIA, and that they used these front companies like Civil Air Transport and …”
Anthony Poshepny worked_with Khmer Serei host_asserted ▶ 43:45
“Tony Poe, their legendary ground operative who spearheaded the guerrilla operations against Tibet and in Laos and South China from 1958 to 1970, has been identified as also working with the Khmer Syri…”
CIA linked_to Indonesia '65 coup documented ▶ 45:15
“and all of the other areas participated in the planning of the coup. And it's instructive for it is a striking fact that successful military coups against Sukarno in 1965, like the unsuccessful milita…”
CIA linked_to 1958 Indonesian Military Uprising documented ▶ 45:15
“and all of the other areas participated in the planning of the coup. And it's instructive for it is a striking fact that successful military coups against Sukarno in 1965, like the unsuccessful milita…”
CIA linked_to 1964 Laos Coup host_asserted ▶ 45:44
“The power of the U.S. and Japanese oil interests with the new Suharto regime is likewise a matter of public record. The Long Null Coup of 1970, like the coups of 64 in Saigon and 64 in Laos, would hav…”
CIA linked_to 1970 Cambodian coup d'état host_asserted ▶ 45:44
“The power of the U.S. and Japanese oil interests with the new Suharto regime is likewise a matter of public record. The Long Null Coup of 1970, like the coups of 64 in Saigon and 64 in Laos, would hav…”
CIA linked_to 1964 Saigon Coup host_asserted ▶ 45:44
“The power of the U.S. and Japanese oil interests with the new Suharto regime is likewise a matter of public record. The Long Null Coup of 1970, like the coups of 64 in Saigon and 64 in Laos, would hav…”
Air America supplied_arms_to Vietnam documented ▶ 46:13
“also came first with the initiation of operations against North Vietnam in February 64 with bombing raids with Thai and Air America pilots in Laos. In both cases, these provocations, although inadequa…”
Allen Dulles supported Vietnam documented ▶ 46:41
“The Pentagon Papers indicated that the Hawks had the support of Director McComb, but kept other key administration in the dark. McNamara in particular claimed he was ignorant, which I find ridiculous.…”
Allen Dulles owned_stock_in Union Oil Company of California documented ▶ 47:40
“The only significant change in the role from 64 seems to have been the CIA director. In 64, McCone held $1 million worth of stock in Standard Oil of California, one of the two largest oil companies th…”
Robert Shaplen exposed Invasion of Cambodia documented ▶ 50:33
“But long before April 30th, the proposition had been authoritatively and repeatedly refuted in the U.S. press. Robert Shaplin, S-H-A-P-L-E-N, an informed journalist who had contacts inside the CIA, sa…”
Joint Chiefs of Staff endorsed Invasion of Cambodia documented ▶ 51:32
“and corroborated columnist Jack Anderson's report that the Joint Chiefs of Staff had endorsed all of the fake intel. So, almost done. The new information does not explain the error of Army intelligenc…”
Rockefeller financed_via Pinkerton National Detective Agency host_asserted ▶ 1:11:05
“The CIA, if you went back to the 30s, where Sullivan and Cromwell was an actual law firm, and you had like Hill and Knowlton, the PR firm, and you had Pinkerton's, which was private intel. And then yo…”
Rockefeller financed_via Sullivan & Cromwell host_asserted ▶ 1:11:05
“The CIA, if you went back to the 30s, where Sullivan and Cromwell was an actual law firm, and you had like Hill and Knowlton, the PR firm, and you had Pinkerton's, which was private intel. And then yo…”
Rockefeller financed_via Hill and Knowlton host_asserted ▶ 1:11:05
“The CIA, if you went back to the 30s, where Sullivan and Cromwell was an actual law firm, and you had like Hill and Knowlton, the PR firm, and you had Pinkerton's, which was private intel. And then yo…”
CIA recruited Otto Skorzeny host_asserted ▶ 1:12:26
“Like the Otto Skorzenys, like the Yves Guérin, all of those people that led the individual Gladio programs are employed by these intelligence agencies. And so if I had to draw on a diagram, I would ha…”
Otto Skorzeny headed Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:12:26
“Like the Otto Skorzenys, like the Yves Guérin, all of those people that led the individual Gladio programs are employed by these intelligence agencies. And so if I had to draw on a diagram, I would ha…”
Yves Guérin-Sérac headed Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:12:26
“Like the Otto Skorzenys, like the Yves Guérin, all of those people that led the individual Gladio programs are employed by these intelligence agencies. And so if I had to draw on a diagram, I would ha…”
CIA recruited Yves Guérin-Sérac host_asserted ▶ 1:12:26
“Like the Otto Skorzenys, like the Yves Guérin, all of those people that led the individual Gladio programs are employed by these intelligence agencies. And so if I had to draw on a diagram, I would ha…”
James Jesus Angleton spied_on Lee Harvey Oswald documented ▶ 1:18:43
“I'm not sure. You probably didn't see the JFK files testimony today. But if you're familiar with Jefferson Morley, who's one of the big JFK researchers, it looks like he kind of came out of the hearin…”
James Jesus Angleton covered_up Lee Harvey Oswald book_quoted ▶ 1:20:05
“I mean, Oliver Stone was there and like, you know, the Republicans. It was kind of funny, like the people providing testimony were all basically liberal Democrats. And the Republicans basically just h…”
James Jesus Angleton covered_up Lee Harvey Oswald documented ▶ 1:21:28
“They kind of basically said, yeah, Angleton lied. And yeah, we kind of know that there was, you know, false testimony about Oswald because he wasn't supposed to be able to speak Spanish. And they were…”
Hank Hernandez spied_on Sandra Serrano host_asserted ▶ 1:25:12
“was interrogating the most important witnesses. And there's actually stunning video of that where you could see Office of Public Safety CIA member Hank Hernandez interrogating the most important witne…”
John David Kane appointed Joint Chiefs of Staff documented ▶ 1:26:34
“We were never taught the truth. That's the only way we can fight back right now. I agree 100% with that. Thank you for sharing that. Miles, go ahead. Thanks, Omega. I'll talk to you later for letting …”
John David Kane member_of CIA documented ▶ 1:31:48
“Because I'm reading right here, it said he served as an associate director for military affairs of the Central Intelligence Agency from 2021 to 2024. Yeah, he did a tour there. What does that mean? Ye…”
Sam Cooper trafficked China caller_asserted ▶ 1:49:56
“China's United Front. And he was actually involved in a drive-by shooting a couple of years after he met with Justin Trudeau. So one would think that Trudeau's security probably would have known his b…”
Canada trafficked China host_asserted ▶ 1:50:25
“Going back to pre-World War II, and we've said this repeatedly, that Canada is a vehicle for getting, whether it was the prohibition alcohol or the opium, now the fentanyl, into the United States thro…”
Canada member_of Commonwealth Fund host_asserted ▶ 1:51:48
“were part of, not like they instigated, but they were involved in a lot of really awful things as far as suppressing the people and propping up in especially the French colonies, pre-colonial French c…”
New Zealand member_of Commonwealth Fund host_asserted ▶ 1:52:16
“is playing a heavy role in all the fuckery that's going on. So you're not wrong. Obviously, when we did our initial delve into Operation Gladio and found out that it was the British Roundtable, the Fa…”
Fabian Society founded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:52:16
“is playing a heavy role in all the fuckery that's going on. So you're not wrong. Obviously, when we did our initial delve into Operation Gladio and found out that it was the British Roundtable, the Fa…”
Australia member_of Commonwealth Fund host_asserted ▶ 1:52:16
“is playing a heavy role in all the fuckery that's going on. So you're not wrong. Obviously, when we did our initial delve into Operation Gladio and found out that it was the British Roundtable, the Fa…”
British Roundtable founded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:52:16
“is playing a heavy role in all the fuckery that's going on. So you're not wrong. Obviously, when we did our initial delve into Operation Gladio and found out that it was the British Roundtable, the Fa…”
Licio Gelli headed P2 Masonic Lodge host_asserted ▶ 1:54:04
“all originating from Argentina. The fact that the second P2 Lodge was opened there, the Masonic Lodge that ruled basically the entire Operation Gladio in Italy. Gelli, the guy that was the Grand Mason…”
P2 Masonic Lodge headed Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:54:04
“all originating from Argentina. The fact that the second P2 Lodge was opened there, the Masonic Lodge that ruled basically the entire Operation Gladio in Italy. Gelli, the guy that was the Grand Mason…”
Credits

Built from the work of the podcasters whose episodes this archive indexes:

Colonel Towner-Watkins X Rumble
War_Hamster Brady X Rumble