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The Colonels Corner President’s Secret Wars chapter 9, continued

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0:00 Hello, everybody. I'm getting Rumble set up as we speak. It looks like they're messing with our space again. I see people disappearing again. SR-71, I tried sending you the co-host again. Let me try it again. There's Bridget. Let me throw her one. Throw it back to SR-71.
0:54 Did you get it, Bridget? I sent it to you. There you go. All right. All right. Yeah, this is. Oh, my gosh. So crazy. So crazy. So I'm going to go ahead and finish our chapter nine. And then I've got a homework project for everybody that we're going to spend our remaining time working on the homework project.
1:34 Hopefully you guys will enjoy that because it's going to take you a little behind the scenes. So anyway, let's go ahead and get started. And I'm just going to finish chapter nine. So wherever that lands us in time wise, then we're going to do our homework project. Guys didn't know you're coming to work, right? All right. So.
2:04 We start off with where we left off with the CIA basically aiding, training the Tibetan people to fight against China. And there was a National Volunteer Defense Army, referred to as NVDA, that provided a good chunk of the resistance.
2:36 to the Han army. And the NVDA fighters were mostly drawn from two areas, one called Kham, K-H-A-M, and the other one Amdo, A-M-D-O. So this was basically the, they're going to be used to
3:08 Focus on an area in central Tibet that was under the control of the Dalai Lama, even though at this point the Dalai Lama was kind of hanging out in India. So obviously he's an important symbol. And I don't know if you guys know the story. They tell a little bit of it here. Not really all that relevant for the.
3:38 storyline, but basically he was discovered at two and a half years old in his village by supposedly the people that search out who's going to be the next Dalai Lama. And this was like in 1939, it said.
4:05 that the new Dalai Lama in 1939 had to be ransomed from the Chinese Muslim warlord called Ma Pufang. I'm going to spell that M-A, separate word, P-U-F-A-N-G. That was the same man who had been the intended recipient of aid in one of the CIA's earliest paramilitary efforts into China. So here you have the CIA.
4:34 is basically funding someone who is... Ma'am, I hate to interrupt you, but it looks like the rumble is not up yet. It's still doing the intro. All right. And I just wanted to tell you before you got, you know, very far along. Yep, that's fine. Yeah, I had hit it. Evidently, it didn't start it. There we go. All right. So the...
5:07 CIA, even before Tibet, had been funding Muslims to attack China, too. And this Ma Fu Feng guy is the Chinese Muslim that the CIA had been working with and training them to be terrorists as well to attack China, too. So this particular guy that the CIA was working with basically kidnaps the Dalai Lama.
5:37 In 1939. You just can't make this shit up. In the developing struggle, a guy by the name of Tenzin Gyatso was one of the Lamas who tried not to take sides. He worked with the Chinese to the extent that was necessary, but at least three times refused to call out the Tibetan army in support of mainland China. In India, he had forced concessions.
6:10 And on the other hand, the Dalai Lama had denounced the resistance and advised Tibetans not to become involved. He wanted them to remain neutral, not to be CIA assets and not to attack Mao either. So he also had allowed the dismissal of his own cabinet in favor of a group that was acceptable to mainland China.
6:38 The NVDA leadership knew that the Dalai Lama had to be enlisted if there was to be an effective national resistance. And by early 1959, many of the Lamas also believed that Tenzin Gyatso was a virtual prisoner in mainland China. Many Tibetans determined to save him. In late 1958, the NVDA began an offensive into central Tibet.
7:08 and the partisans began to make direct attacks against mainland China's forces. By December, mainland China post within 25 miles of Lhasa were raided by the NVDA. In late January and February of 1959, mainland China's garrisons that was only 30 miles from Lhasa
7:35 was overran by the CIA-trained Tibetans. For the first time, there was an NVDA presence very close to the capital. The Chinese eventually thought that they could take the Dalai Lama hostage. The Tibetan leader was invited to what was billed to be a dramatic presentation at the compound of mainland China's Tibetan military area command, headed by
8:04 a General Tan Hoonsan. Senior Tibetan advisors to the Dalai Lama, some of whom had secretly supported the NVDA, interpreted this as a bid to capture the Dalai Lama. They urged him not to go. The Dalai Lama did not attend, but where he was staying in this particular palace
8:30 He got surrounded on March 10, 1959, by a crowd of 30,000 who demonstrated against the Chinese and shouted that their religious leader must be protected. One Chinese collaborator who appeared in the street was stoned to death. Tension mounted with mass demonstrations throughout the next few days. The mainland China garrison of about 40,000 troops were observed strengthening the fortifications around the city.
8:59 It would later be written that by one particular observer, quote, I felt as if I was standing between two volcanoes, each likely to erupt at any minute, unquote. On March 15th, some PLA troops appeared outside the Dalai Lama's house and his guards had to be restrained from firing on him. On the 17th, the Tibetan leader
9:26 Sat in his cabinet, two mortar shells exploded in a garden nearby. That Tuesday, the decision was hastily made for the Dalai Lama to flee again. The Dalai Lama abandoned his stand against the confrontation between Tibetans and Chinese. That night, three groups, the Dalai Lama, his immediate family, senior advisors escaped.
9:56 a guy by the name of Tenzin Gyatsu, was disguised as a common soldier. The group carried nothing with them in order to avoid attracting attention. In the subsequent days, between 8,000 and 13,000 citizens left the area, including 500 of the 7,000 monks in the nearby monastery. This exodus received powerful stimulation on March 20th.
10:24 when the mainland Chinese General Tan ordered open hostilities. Only then did the Chinese command realize the Dalai Lama was gone. French explorer by the name of Mikel Piesel described these events as one of the strangest and ill-conceived coups of recent times. Under its top leadership, the NVDA offensive drove to within miles of the capital.
10:53 Precisely timed to place a protective force around the Dalai Lama just as the Dalai Lama fled. Units of the NVDA partisans formed a rear guard behind the Dalai Lama's party throughout his trek to the Indian border. They also created a decoy to confuse the Chinese. On November 1st, 1958, Gordon Gray had sent a note to the National Security Council.
11:23 Executive Secretary James Lay. It read, quote, if as a result of the new social experiment with communist Chinese, there should be some sort of revolt. Is our policy clear as to what course of action we will follow? Unquote. Now, isn't that an interesting note? If as a result of the new social experiment in communist China.
11:53 Did anybody know that we were experimenting on communist China? I didn't. In fact, Washington had anticipated only limited potential in the Tibetan rebellion, as indeed from any operation against the mainland China. This was made clear in a secret survey of possibilities for an uprising in China that Eisenhower conceived in the summer of 1959 from Assistant Secretary of State
12:22 of Far East by the name of J. Graham Parsons. Regarding Tibet, the survey predicted that, and this is a quote, if the Tibetans are able to maintain their resistance movement in the face of large-scale Chinese communist suppression efforts, other border area minorities might be emboldened to carry out distant inactivities. However, the Chinese communists probably have the capacity of preventing prolonged rebellion.
12:51 except in the most isolated areas and of containing it, unquote. So that's what this is. This is a constant like death by a thousand cuts of them going around the border of China, looking for a way in for them to reinsert Chiang Kai-shek back into China. At the same time, peasants uprising in central China were also deemed unlikely.
13:18 Further, the survey judged that the nationalists greatly exaggerated their capability to intervene upon the mainland. And the nationalists, they mean Chiang Kai-shek. Although the State Department believed that by no means suicidal, the raids, as far as Chiang Kai-shek was concerned, was going to continue. In the meantime, despite the small chance of success,
13:47 The 5412 group considered in secret deliberations its answer to the policy question posed by Gordon Gray. Memoranda that remained classified from Alan Dulles to President Eisenhower dated January 22nd and March 3rd, 1959, concerned to bet. These possibly included a request for formal approval of this project. On March 23rd, there was further letter.
14:16 From Alan Dulles, while the president's staff secretary reported from the CIA and State Department intelligence report that, quote, the Tibetan uprisings apparently have resulted in a considerable loss of prestige for the communist China in India, unquote. India's opinion was crucial since Nehru had turned aside the Dalai Lama's request for political asylum back in 1956.
14:44 In July 58, the Chinese had also protested in a diplomatic note to New Delhi that Kuala Lumpur was a center of the resistance. But by then, Nehru had chosen sides and the Chinese charges were rejected. In the Indian parliament, debates ignited about the Dalai Lama's journey. The prime minister went out of his way several times to defend the Tibetans.
15:10 One exchange, which occurred in Parliament debate on April 2, 1959, is especially revealing. After Nehru's statement regarding Kuala Lumpur, Member Nap Pei asked, quote, What is the Home Ministry doing about it? It seems to be absolutely ineffective, unquote. The Prime Minister replied,
15:35 The Home Ministry or the External Affairs Ministry are not at all worried about the situation. Another member asked, they allow the spies to conduct espionage? And the Prime Minister said, absolutely, yes. In another debate, the Prime Minister explained that India's first news of the events in Lhasa was a message on March 10th from the Consul General, which had arrived the next day. But New Delhi...
16:05 journal newspaper reported in its issue that was distributed on March 2nd before anything had happened there that there would be a coup and that the Dalai Lama would flee. So let me just state that again. In a newspaper in India, a full week and one day before the actual coup that the CIA was working on,
16:36 for the forces to actually confront the Chinese, it's published in an Indian paper that it's going to happen. American Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker kept Washington apprised of the developments, but the best information came from the CIA because they're making it. Deputy Director Charles Cabal, Cabal, K-A-B-E-L-L.
17:09 and Desmond Fitzgerald, the Far East Division chief, were almost daily on the phone with Gordon Gray during this period. The CIA was so well-informed because it had furnished an American radio operator who traveled with the Dalai Lama, the agent was able to set up repeated airdrops of supplies for the resistance and furnish daily reports to the CIA headquarters.
17:37 There may have been other CIA agents in the party as well. Although the agency's quote-unquote denied areas specialist, Stephen Meade, a paramilitary expert, Anthony Pasfini, have been credited with entering Tibet to bring out many of the resistant recruits. And it is believed that the mission to rescue the Dalai Lama was a very unique
18:08 and had been conceived ahead of time. On March 1st, just as the Dalai Lama's party was entering India, Eisenhower in Washington was told, we have informed embassy in New Delhi that we think the U.S. should take no action with respect to the Tibetan refugees, which would diminish the effect of the revolt that appears to be happening.
18:35 A message from the Tibetans received on April 2nd confirmed success and contained an important plea. You must help us as soon as possible and send us weapons for 30,000 men by airplane. That was their request. It is likely that that message sparked additional action in Washington. The NSC, the National Security Council, which had not discussed Tibet since June 20th, 1957, suddenly met on the subject in March.
19:04 twice in April and again in June of 59. The 13-page classified CIA report, a letter from Allen Dulles to the president, a cable reporting the Dalai Lama's views were sent and reviewed in front of the National Security Council meeting on April 23rd. The DCI's letter concerned the Dalai Lama's resolution to continue to resist China. Meanwhile, on April 21st, in the face of strong offensive
19:34 by mainland China, Field General Gampo Tashi issued orders for the resistance to abandon its headquarters, which it had defended to permit the escape of the Dalai Lama. Tibetan sources maintain that Eisenhower's administration made an important decision in May 1959. The outcome was an expansion of the program and a determination to begin training Tibetans in the continental United States.
20:02 which, of course, we've talked about because it was done in Colorado. Five groups, totally more than 500 men, were to be given instructions and then sent back to their native regions. And because it was so mountainous there and cold, the only place, or the most likely place, I should say, of like temperatures, altitude, and all that other stuff was at a place called Camp Hale, H-A-L-E, in Colorado, near the town of Leadville.
20:33 About 100 miles southwest of Denver, the Tibetans were flown into Peterson Field, six miles east of Colorado Springs, and moved by bus with blacked-out windows to the base. It was situated at an altitude of over 10,000 feet. Camp Hell had been used as a World War II base to train mountain troops for service in Alaska and Italy. It also was home to the 99th Ski Battalion.
21:09 which furnished some personnel the OSS sent to Norway. Most of the base had been dismantled later after the war by German prisoners, but what was left was used by the army for winter maneuvers until it was formally closed in 1956. Camp Hale seemed the ideal location for a secret out-of-the-way CIA facility to train terrorists.
21:40 But they never do anything in the United States. So to discourage curiosity among American citizens, because you're not allowed to know anything that your government is doing. A cover story was put in the local news talking about atomic tests were going to be done, though they were not explosions. So don't ever anybody look for explosions.
22:08 That was the excuse used to basically reopen the base. The telephone and utility companies were asked to give a day's notice before sending any linemen or service poles onto the base. Finally, the military guards and recruits themselves were given orders to shoot to kill any unauthorized person that they encountered on the grounds, like you and me. While the secret training program proceeded, the Dalai Lama took his cause to the UN, where it had been...
22:38 had not been discussed since 1950, which is kind of interesting because if you go back in old maps, which I always do, when we were looking at this, when we first found out about the secret CIA base in Colorado, the old maps that we found had, just like Ukraine was part of Russia in the past, most of it, some of it was part of Poland. Tibet was part of China.
23:09 In many of the old maps, it just was an autonomous area of mainland China. Okay, so Ireland offered a resolution that condemned the Chinese for genocide. Let that sit there for just a second. They're accusing mainland China of genocide while the CIA is the one arming the Tibetans to attack the Chinese.
23:43 Because the Chinese was trying to work with Tibet. And again, Mao's a bad guy. But I do think it's interesting how all of this stuff gets perceived. Because obviously you have to enter a resolution in the UN to verify the condemnation of the genocide by people that are conducting.
24:12 the training for the terrorists inside of Tibet. Despite its support for the Tibet against the Chinese, the U.S. did not want to draw any attention to itself in that area. They did not want to have a debate in the UN on the subject. Secretary of State Harder, H-E-R-T-E-R, told Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, who was the UN ambassador at the time,
24:44 The rate at which the diplomatic initiative gained momentum surprised even the State Department. Harder feared the resolution would fail to pass and that defeat would be a serious setback. He opposed a resolution recognizing Tibet's independence or sovereignty, however, because he felt that was going too far. Got to get that happy middle ground. Secretary Harder told Lodge he had declared
25:14 to a British diplomat that all we wanted to do was to have this thing come in as a mild resolution. American interests, nothing like genocide or anything, just a mild one. American interests were not identical to those of the Tibetans. British support for the UN resolution was also lukewarm, expressing doubts regarding Tibet status as an independent nation, because it had never been an independent nation.
25:45 Overtures were made to the brother of the Dalai Lama, then in New York, representing the Tibetans at the UN resolution meeting. October 21st, 1959, the UN General Assembly passed a resolution expressing concern that human rights were being violated in Tibet. The vote was 45 to 9, with 26 abstaining. Among them was the British.
26:14 The Soviet bloc voted solidly against the resolution. There was not a word about independence or sovereignty among any of them. Again, this was never about helping Tibet. It was always about trying to get Chiang Kai-shek back into China. Inside Tibet, the fighting continued without pause. In 1959, according to documents captured later from mainland China, the number of Tibetans killed was
26:44 87,000 people for absolutely nothing. 87,000. The Chinese deployed 100,000 troops to one of the areas that was to create a powerful pacification effort that ultimately required two and a half years to effect. Towards the end of 59, for the first time, two to 300 Soviet advisors
27:19 were actively working in Tibet. Dwight Eisenhower made a state visit to India in late 1959, but deemed it inexpedient to meet with the Dalai Lama, who was living in India at the time. What is he going to tell him? I just murdered 87,000 of your citizens and not interested in you actually being considered an independent country because I really just want to piss off the Chinese. Yeah, no wonder he didn't meet with them.
27:49 The following year, the U.S. also discouraged a visa request from the Dalai Lama to come to the United States. However, in India, Ike did accept certain gifts that were bestowed upon him through the CIA channels by the NVDA, the resistance commander, Gompo Tashi, along with a knife, a charm box, and articles of a Tibetan cloth.
28:19 came a letter from Tashi summarized. Sorry about that. That's my cousin. Came a letter that summarized the origins of the revolt and ending on this note. This is a direct quote. We Tibetans have determined to fight to the last against the Chinese communists with the full weight of modern warfare that is no alternative left to us except to fight.
28:49 We see no other power other than the United States, which is capable of giving us help in every respect to free Tibet from the domination of Red China. The situation has become very serious, like a patient that's about to die. Under the circumstances as stated above, with a heavy heart, we appeal to your excellency to impart necessary instructions about the best possible course for us to follow. Unquote.
29:16 The gifts were acknowledged orally, but because Gampotashi had not used quote-unquote channels considered by the embassy to give him official status, unquote, no other reply was necessary. Dwight Eisenhower wanted to continue his plausible deniability. Despite the refusal to associate with the Tibetans openly, secret plans continued. Before the NSD committee on February 4th, 1960,
29:48 The president met to discuss Tibet with a group including Gordon Gray, Secretary Harder, Alan Dulles, Cabell, and Desmond Fitzgerald. Two weeks later, there was another discussion with the 5412 group. In May and June of 1960, mass defections and mutinies among the PLA troops were reported. There were dip resistance in southern Tibet.
30:16 In one battle, the PLA claimed to have killed 800 of the resistant forces. Just then, another event affecting the intelligence world brought the U.S. air support for the Tibetans to a complete halt. On May 1, 1960, a CIA U-2 reconnaissance plane was shot down inside of the Soviet Union. Its pilot, Francis Gary Powers, turned in by Russian farmers to the Soviet authorities.
30:47 the collapse of a summit conference in Russia and in Paris with the Russians and caused President Eisenhower to issue orders for an immediate suspension of all intrusion into their airspace, which included a stand down of the C-130 flights into Tibet. Now, what I found most interesting about this is we always assume that the U-2 was just doing normal reconnaissance over.
31:19 Russia, when in fact it is very likely, since the CIA had their own U-2 program, that the U-2s were being used to support the CIA missions in Tibet, which technically was inside mainland China because it was considered part of China. So we were doing.
31:47 paramilitary operations inside of China. And we know for a fact, based on what we had already read, that U-2s were part of that. So I find that just startling, actually. The secret war in Tibet was passed on from Eisenhower to JFK. It was up to Kennedy to decide what to do with the resistance. Ike's ban on overflights continued through the remainder of his term.
32:17 and the resistance commanders made an increasingly desperate plea for supplies. When JFK took the oath of office on January 20th, 1961, the CIA had already prepared proposals for what to do in Tibet. Not like they were setting them up or anything. Eisenhower's suspension of overflights left the CIA with stores in Okinawa, Taiwan, Thailand, and Laos full of weapons. One estimate is that they had
32:47 equipped 14,000 soldiers in their paramilitary fight. Almost all of the active male population was still fighting in the Himalayas. Supplying the resistance without C-130s seemed an impossible task, but the CIA attacked it with some efficiency thanks to Desmond Fitzgerald, who had reported on the matter.
33:15 In the summer of 1960, an international jurist commission established by the UN released a conclusion that genocide had been attempted in Tibet, lending momentum to the CIA's proposal for that fall. On September 15, 1960, the 512 group meeting was held immediately prior to the convening of the Security Council, so it would be convenient for the SECDEF gates to attend for the Pentagon. According to a brief record,
33:45 It was a result of the discussion, the DCI, the director of CIA, said he would reorientate his thinking to some extent and would come back with an alternative proposal. About two months later, Charles Cabell briefed the 512 group on Tibet and Cuba. The evidence suggests that Tibet matter was specifically handed over to the Kennedy transition team in November of 1960.
34:13 Several weeks after the election, though, Eisenhower himself did not sit down with the president-elect until December 6th in reference to that meeting. Ike specifically recalls that JFK had already been briefed a number of times by Alan Dulles on international matters. Oh, hold on. Sorry about that. My computer like to like go black. So the Tibet effort was being run through the embassy in India.
34:47 The JFK's man in India was a Harvard economist by the name of John Kenneth Galbraith, G-A-L-B-R-A-I-T-H. Before leaving his post on March 27, 1961, Galbraith was briefed on the CIA operations in India by Richard Bissell, B-I-S-S-E-L-L. There was an element of irony to this meeting.
35:14 of two economists, one perhaps foremost in American Keynesian economics. The other man, who had long resisted Keynesian arguments, had ended up administering Keynesian-style foreign and military aid, first for the Marshall Plan, then for the CIA. Bissell showed Galbraith the list of projects that were ongoing, which completely distressed the ambassador.
35:40 Galbraith determined to stop some of the spooky activities that he didn't like, one of them being Tibet, whose partisan fighters he calls deeply unhygienic tribesmen. In other words, they were dirty. One of Galbraith's first orders in the country team in India was to make a full investigation of all CIA operations. He recalls the CIA station chief who was named Harry.
36:11 made no special effort to defend the operations that were ongoing. As for himself, the economist wrote, quote, I was not troubled by an open mind. I was convinced that most of the projects proposed would be useless for their own anti-communist purposes and were capable, when known, of doing us great damage, unquote. The ambassador carried his view back to Washington in May of 1961, where he found the administration subdued,
36:40 by other CIA failures. Galbraith argued his position energetically with the president, Robert Kennedy and McGeorge Bundy, the new NSD advisor. He then put his arguments in a memorandum he showed to Alan Dulles, Bissell, and other CIA officials. Galbraith told them that he had gone directly to the president and that the Kennedy was sympathetic. Ambassador Galbraith was not wholly successful, however.
37:09 he could not get the Tibet operation completely canceled. The partisans had achieved the status of a U.S. ally and had to be supported. When the CIA did end its network inside of India, the operation was merely reorganized to work from Nepal, because, you know, we're not ever going to completely end a successful
37:39 successful using their criteria, not ours, operation. So while the Indian intelligence picked up some of the remaining Tibetans for a special border activity later on in 61 and on into 62 because they're trained paramilitaries, so why not use them? The resistance rapidly relocated its main camp to a tiny area of Mustang.
38:12 a high mountain stronghold about 150 miles northwest of the Nepal capital, Kathmandu, where the soldiers of fortune began arriving. Everybody wants to call while I'm on the show. Galbraith goes on to say that I was especially disturbed by the moving of this CIA operation to Nepal.
38:49 Galbraith believes that later in conjunction with Robert Kennedy, he succeeded in cutting the connection with Nepal and Tibet. But that didn't come about right away. So it says December 1961 demonstrated beyond a shadow of a doubt that it was still in progress. In the early morning on December 7th, a convoy of Tibetans from Camp Hale.
39:17 were delayed in reaching Peterson Field by deep snow and icy road conditions. Instead of getting away in their C-124 at night, the Tibetans arrived after dawn, and they had only been flown in and out at night because they didn't want anybody knowing they were even in the country. To preserve the secrecy of the operation, Army soldiers held 47 American citizens at gunpoint.
39:44 in the name of national security and then told them it would be a federal offense if they talked about it. The story was in the Colorado Springs Gazette the next day. Somebody talked about it and was kept out of bigger newspapers like the New York Times only by means of Defense Secretary McNamara calling the New York Times editor. Now, foods like the one at Peterson Field had shut down.
40:13 shut down other covert operations, the Indonesia fiasco being one case in point. In its way, the Peterson incident was even more serious in that the CIA was prescribed by law from operating inside the United States, and there was no authority for any preventative detention of any citizens at gunpoint to protect the secrecy of an illegal CIA operation inside of the United States.
40:42 It was at about the same time that the soldiers of fortune achieved one of their greatest successes in the field. A small party sent to disrupt traffic in one of the areas for a mainland Chinese convoy was attacked. Among the corpses, they found the commander of the Chinese western region and his entire staff.
41:11 The bags of documents included reports from the 1959 uprising that had occurred with the Dalai Lama, materials bearing on the Chinese-Soviet disconnect, and a file with, it was labeled, Bulletins of Activities, which was a secret journal providing guidance to mainland Chinese political commissioners.
41:42 that covered the period of January to August 1961. The political journal was actually translated and released to American scholars by the State Department in August of 1963. This windfall is the reason Ray Klein records that Tibet resulted in a bonanza of valuable intelligence. In any case, the pattern of Tibet's
42:09 changed completely after 1960 with the end of direct airdrops. The NVDA had to reestablish itself at that more remote base called Mustang. But it was so remote that only raids not sustained operations were possible. And Gampo Tashi was replaced by a guy by the name of Baba Yeshi, Y-E-S-H-I, who...
42:38 was not nearly as good of a commander. He was out of step with the people that the CIA had trained. We'll just leave it there. There was a communication center with two special antennas for the resistance. And the other end of the reception was in India. Joint meetings among the NVDA resistance, the CIA and Indian.
43:09 Intelligence representatives were held weekly. Complaints against Baba Yesi eventually resulted in his replacement by a nephew of the late Gampo Tashi. He was by this time the sole survivor of the original cadre that the CIA had recruited back in the middle 1950s. By then, the camp at Mustang had attained a look of a permanent base. There was a three-story command center.
43:38 25 outbuildings, there were staff sections for supply, transport, intelligence, munitions, blah, blah, blah. It was a far cry from what it looked like a few years earlier. The Tibetans maintained their presence at Mustang into the 1970s. The mounting occasional raids that were generally successful, but not in liberating Tibet just to piss off the Chinese. Mao...
44:09 and into the charade when the king of Nepal visited him in Peking in November 1973. The next year, Nepal, with the information gleaned by Baba Yeshe and prior arrangements with mainland China to patrol that area, it put 10,000 royal troops up against Mustang, including their most fierce fighters.
44:37 One of them escaped with the archives from the resistance fighters and an escort, only to be killed in an ambush later. Seven other Tibetan leaders who surrendered at Mustang sat in jail in Kathmandu until pardoned by the king in 1981. That was the end of the rebellion. From the beginning, it had been clear to Washington that Tibet would never be more than a large-scale harassment of mainland China.
45:06 To achieve this effect, the CIA had promised liberation to the Tibetans who were caught up in their hopes and dreams, only to have tens of thousands of them murdered. Tibet was also an experience for the CIA paramilitary experts who had learned the language and customs of the country, became emotionally attached to its struggle, only to have to close down the operation.
45:32 they saw a much darker side to the CIA's intelligence bonanza. For the Tibetans, over 100,000 of them now became refugees from their own country because they were considered insurrectionists. There was just one mitigating factor. Their defeat took many years so they could adjust gradually to this huge trauma. In Cuba, the CIA's next military disaster trauma.
46:03 would be in a matter of 72 hours of hell, as opposed to strung out over multiple years. And so that's the clue that chapter 10 is going to take us through Joseph Prado's research into the Bay of Pigs disaster. And his version of it,
46:32 Has a couple of unique twists to it. So I'm not going to go through all of it because we've been through the Cuba fiasco several times in several books. So I'm just going to kind of try to highlight the nuances that he brings to the conversation. So that's the end of the chapter. And I want to go through.
47:03 some things that I have found. Now, sorry guys, for those of you that are on Rumble, I have to move my computer closer to me so I can actually open the tabs that I have opened on here. So forgive me for doing that. First of all, I'll open it up if anybody wants to comment on this subject.
47:34 We're not doing open mics right now because I want to go over a couple of pieces of information for you guys, because I'm going to ask for your help over the next 24 hours with the homework assignment. So does anybody have anything about the material that we just covered? SR-71, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel, and thank everyone for attending. I was just looking at Galbraith.
48:06 And that guy is all over the place, especially there in China, Nepal, India. I'm still trying to figure out, given his background, how he wound up in that position. In what way? Well, if you take a look at his background, according to his background, he was more economic policy and other things that were going on in his background. And yet all of a sudden he shows up in these places.
48:41 Did you notice that he's from Berkeley? Yes, I did notice Harvard. Yes, ma'am. Yeah. So I think obviously, again, without being able to see all of his underlying connections, he obviously connected with people. And again, they remember that they use.
49:13 the PR people, the, they're looking for eggheads. They're looking for people that are going to fall in line and do their new world order bullshit. And a lot of times the people that are in economics are the perfect people to do that. Also,
49:45 He was involved in the Office of Price Administration. And so for those of you who don't know, that's kind of the that was one of the tenets that Roosevelt then tried to in his new deal. He basically.
50:02 because of having gone through the war, wanted to institutionalize in the New Deal many of the facets of a wartime economy. And one of those was the Office of Price Administration, because it was basically setting prices like in a controlled economy. When you start talking about a wartime economy. Huh?
50:30 Sorry, Colonel, I didn't mean to interrupt. That makes sense when when you start talking about a wartime economy. Yeah, because because he's basically a fascist. Yeah. So they're all in on that. And also it says here that Galbraith had invited Paul Nitz and that Nitz guy is everywhere. He's in everything and none of it good.
51:03 to serve as one of the officers of the strategic bombing survey that was initiated by OSS. And remember, that was the bombing apparatus that many people feel was used to protect any German industry that had U.S. connections. So that's...
51:35 Also very interesting. Yeah, he has a very interesting background. But anyway, so next, who else had something? Renee, go ahead. Hey, Colonel, can you hear me? Okay, great. Thanks. I was curious if you ever came across, you know how Anthony Sutton shared.
52:08 with his books and information of corporations and individuals, et cetera, so forth, who funded the Bolshevik revolution. Did you ever come across either a similar group or other groups or a book regarding funding Mao's China? Yes and no. So I have two books here.
52:38 And I don't actually have them in the house. They're out in my cottage. But I will try to find them. They deal with a lot of the background on the forming of the China lobby. And that does go into the history of people that were involved in that.
53:08 I'll just leave it there. So and then there's another one that is for that reason, because I was you're you're thinking along the right lines. I was very interested in that, too, because I think it's interesting that you have all of the same. But here's what I do know. Both with Shanghai, which at the time was an international at the end of World War Two was an international.
53:37 During the Boxer Wars, where the British had defeated the Chinese and kept pumping opium from India into China, the first one, and I may have this backwards, but they won. One of their concessions for winning the war was taking control of Hong Kong. Then they also took control of Shanghai.
54:00 And Shanghai is where several of the people after World War II had been hanging out during World War II. So they basically didn't have to fight in their respective countries. And then because of who they were hanging out there with, were later selected to be installed as leaders in different countries that we then wanted to basically monopolize. So you have a lot of British.
54:28 people like Sassoon. And he has some really interesting ties, but very strong connections. They come about from a different way. And then the other guy whose name I don't remember, who was originally from Baghdad, but had connections back to financing from London, all of which end up in China. And so that...
54:57 It looks to me, just from a 30,000-foot look at this point, that China has the exact same footprint as the Bolsheviks do with who was funding what. So that's a great observation. But I'm not there yet. I'm still working on that. That's why I haven't even done a session on China, because it is very complicated. Okay, great.
55:27 That there's the possibility that the infiltration of Asia was kind of like a double whammy, you know, with Mao and then the CIA, Shanghai shack, etc. It was kind of like a double whammy from that side of that continent. Well, let's go back and figure out what the overall end state was. The overall end state was to break Russia in half.
55:53 Half of the part west of the Urals was going to go to Europe under the Pan-Europe concept. And the other half, which was on the other side of the Ural Mountains, was going to go to Asia. And so, yes, is the answer to your question. In order to make that happen, you basically have to have control over both of those entities in order to be able to rearrange them. And that was their long-term goal.
56:22 There are just a few people that got in the way. Okay, great. Thank you so much for all you do. Sure, sure. All along, go ahead. Yeah, Colonel, regarding to John Kenneth Galbraith, I would urge people to keep an open mind on this character, especially when it comes to JFK and Vietnam policy. He becomes a kind of...
56:56 As SR71 points out, he seems to be in a lot of different areas, and JFK was kind of using him as a sort of, in some ways, a means of gaining actual oversight over what some of the CIA folks were doing as JFK began to increasingly feel that they were making their own policy, especially in Vietnam.
57:24 The other thing we have to remember about, you know, the OSS coming out of World War II, there actually is, you know, they're not all in one camp as far as I understand it. There seems to have been significant division inside the OSS about, especially like in Eastern Europe, about like some of them being like, you know, automatically like...
57:53 anti-soviet and wanting to start the cold war even during world war ii quite literally you know as far as some of their policies and another group of oss that was you know just the opposite of that so i think like we need to be careful like about you know over generalizing this period because there was like there were there were parts of the older new deal democrats who were who were very different from the what we later
58:23 be called like the CIA hardcore Riga group, anti-Soviet in the State Department, and almost the 100% opposite of today's Democrats who are, you know, 100% CIA, you know, pushing NATO ever further eastward, etc. And I think that the other guy you mentioned here regarding Galbraith.
58:52 When is, oh man, who was the other guy you mentioned? You just mentioned him in regard to when you're talking about Galbraith. Oh yeah, Nitsi. Paul Nitsi, as I understand it right now, he is like, in some ways, the 180 opposite of Galbraith. In other words, he was like, for example, in the Cuban Missile Crisis,
59:22 The loudest JFK had to get with some of those folks, and they were literally, you know, trying to instigate World War III during the Cuban Missile Crisis and at other times as well, was when Paul Nizzi, he wanted to convince JFK that should NATO troops be fired upon by Soviet or Warsaw Pact forces.
59:51 that they could respond without, that the NATO forces in Europe could respond without getting back to JFK. And that was the loudest confrontation of the entire Cuban missile crisis with the EXCOMM group there. Nitsi is definitely a part of the CIA autopilot.
1:00:20 essence jfk was trying to rein in in my in my opinion right uh and galbraith i i would say to the extent that you're going to be you know you are going to be at that high level in my opinion he is almost like the opposite of nitsy but you know we can evaluate my assessment on that is based on you know mostly of the vietnam the way that jfk uses galbraith in vietnam and by the way his son uh
1:00:48 is an economist at University of Texas. He's a pretty well-known guy. And he has done a lot of the research as well into the JFK assassination. And he has written a lot of very good articles combating the sort of left gatekeepers like Noam Chomsky, who pretends to be coming from the left, but is actually doing the dirty work of CIA, knowingly or not, when you compare Noam Chomsky to the actual historians.
1:01:17 who have written on the critical 1960 to 65 years that critically published since 1997, because that's when the more than six million new documents came out on Vietnam policy in those years, which is before that. All right. I want to get back to this. So does anybody else have anything else to say about the part that we just covered? Zen, I thought I saw your hand up. Did you have something?
1:01:51 I'm not sure. I got in here late. I'm not sure exactly what you were covering, but I had an idea. Did you talk about the Marshall Plan at all?
1:02:20 Mao and create a fault line along the edge of Tibet in order to aggravate a border situation there. And in the process, approximately 87,000 Tibetans end up dead as a result of it. And another hundred thousand of them are refugees in India. And then basically we get a change in administration and they don't want to pursue this anymore.
1:02:48 And they kind of just move on. We've also gone over the fact that much of what we have learned about what happened in the Korean War was not exactly what happened in the Korean War. And much of what we learned happened in Vietnam in the immediate aftermath of World War II wasn't exactly what we thought it was either. And that Taiwan's entire history has been a lie as far as the West is concerned, the U.S. specifically.
1:03:17 And so just kind of going around the border of the whole premise of this series, this particular book, is that the president, using the National Security Council, goes off and does covert paramilitary war basically in our name that we never know anything about until decades later. I just had a question about the book. Are you going to have it on Audible?
1:03:48 I don't provide the books. There is an Audible version of it. Most of these books are also on archive.org if you prefer to read but don't want to buy the book. I just bought it on Amazon. But most of the books that I do have both an audio version of them as well as a hard copy.
1:04:17 I tend not to do any of the ones that are out of print. I do have a few of those, and I do use material from them, but I don't normally do them because a lot of people like to buy the books and go along or read ahead or whatever. So I usually just use the ones that are out of print for reference material. Yeah, I just can't read books anymore, sit there and hold them. Ever since I've gotten Audible.
1:04:45 And I didn't know if you had a list of these books on your page or something. I don't, but I am working on it because I have now 82 of them that all relate to Operation Gladio paramilitary CIA operations that most of us know nothing about. Most of the books don't actually contain the title Operation Gladio, but many of them.
1:05:15 are actually, like, for example, I have Covert Padre. That's one of them. Twilight of the Shadow Government. This one, President's Secret Wars. So they name them all of these weird-ass names instead of just calling them Operation Gladio so we would be able to know that that's exactly what they're talking about. Another one is Drugs, Oil, and War, which, you know, to a large extent.
1:05:42 Super imperialism. That's a new one that I just got. But basically, all of them are talking about the CIA covert operations. OK, thank you. Sure. OK, so I want to you guys get a pencil. There is an organization called the Battelle Memorial.
1:06:14 Institute. OK, so this morning I looked up this company and I came across it when I was I was going to do the show tomorrow on Alphas on the Christian anti-communist crusade since we just finished the World Anti-Communist League, which is all part of Operation Gladio. And as I was preparing for that, I come across this name, Battelle.
1:06:44 Memorial Institute. And I'm like, what the hell is that? Again, just freaking blown away. So the founder back in the 1920s was Gordon Battelle. He studied metallology at Yale. And also it says in 1923, he died.
1:07:14 and left $1.5 million to create this Battelle Memorial Institute for the purpose of education, discoveries, and inventions. In 29, Battelle opened for business in Columbus, Ohio. So they create right off the campus of Ohio State. What did you need, Bridget? Oh, nothing. I was just going to tell him that archive.org does have an audible function. It is a little robot voice.
1:07:45 That was primitive. Go ahead. I'm sorry. I didn't mean that. That's okay. They do. And I use it in a pinch. But it's a pain in the ass. Because it sounds like a robot reading to you. And all I want to do is smash it. But I have had to use that. Thank you for doing that, Bridget. That's a great point. Okay. So I'm going to go ahead and read through the rest of this. The private. The largest private. Listen to this. The largest.
1:08:14 private nonprofit research and development organization in the world. The largest private nonprofit research and development organization in the world. Has anybody ever heard of it? Patel. Its vision is to be a major force in science and technology discovery and translation of knowledge into application.
1:08:40 create significant societal and economic impacts. Not necessarily good, just big impacts. Government and commercial customers seek out Patel because of its reputation in providing engineering, scientific management, logistical, and analytical support. Patel also has a substantial management role at the following national laboratories. For the Department of Energy,
1:09:09 Brookhaven National Lab, Idaho National Lab, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Los Alamos National Lab, National Renewable Energy Lab, Oak Ridge National Lab, Pacific Northwest National Lab. It manages National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasure Center for Homeland Security. These national laboratories deliver
1:09:38 and drive scientific discovery. Battelle's government offerings span focus five areas. See if this rings a bell. National security, homeland security, public safety, energy, environment, and health. And let me remind you guys, public safety is not what you and I think. Public safety is what they called
1:10:08 All of the paramilitary national police forces that we set up around the world, like the Vak in Iran and the force in Chile that murdered over 50,000 people. They don't mean public safety like you and I mean public safety. So it goes on to talk about in national security for decades, Battelle had been the source of mission ready solutions to protect people, secure the homeland. Well, they suck at that.
1:10:38 and save lives. The latest advances in science and technology translate into products and services that make the world safer on the ground, in the air, at sea, and around digital frontiers. Aerospace system solutions include avionics, modernization, in-flight aircraft, de-icing, and hold on just one second because I just remembered I had
1:11:06 did a screenshot. And Bridget, I'm going to send you this screenshot because I want you to post this because y'all are going, your mind's going to be blown here in just a minute. This is one of their national security projects. So let me bring this down so I can send it to her. This is freaking crazy.
1:11:36 I'll tell you what it is once you get it posted. Tell me when it's posted. All right. So they do missile defense systems. The other areas of focus are threat assessment, detection, identification, as well as mission support services, medical surveillance, and diagnostics and chemical demilitarization.
1:12:03 Battelle enables robust cybersecurity through advanced R&D by creating security solutions that combine hardware and software, identify vulnerabilities, reverse engineer, cyber forensic, blah, blah, blah. They do intelligence analytics, supply chain assurances, and keeps clone and counterfeit electronic components out of our supply chain. It's there, and I also put it in the Megatron, and I'm going to try and post it in comments underneath.
1:12:34 Okay. Rumble. I don't see it in the Megatron. Anyway, y'all look at that picture and tell me if you can guess what it is. I know. I know. What is it? The gun. It looks it looks to me like the gun that the one of those ghost guns. It's actually a directed energy weapon. I got you got to be kidding me.
1:13:10 I am not kidding you. It is a directed energy weapon. Oh my God. And this company manufactures it. So again, I go back to what the fuck is going on and why don't we know who this company is? So let me tell you just in the few hours that I had this morning before I went on babysitting duty, I found out this company is behind the labs in Ukraine.
1:13:40 This company is behind the lab in Georgia. This company is behind, they actually are the ones that run these labs. This company is into everything. They are like a multi, multi, like with extra zeros, billions of dollars every year goes to this company. People who think Elon is the big defense contractor have never seen this guy. This guy is involved in
1:14:11 So many other departments besides defense to include defense. And in diabolical, crazy shit, too. So it says Homeland Security and Public Safety safeguarding assets like nuclear power plants, Department of Defense buildings, airports, mass transit. They obviously don't work in New York and natural disasters. They don't work in California either.
1:14:41 Oh, and they're in charge of terrorist threats too. So what the hell do we have somebody from the CIA running around talking about terror threats when these guys are on the job? Oh, and man-made disasters too. They specialize in that. That's just freaking weird. So they also have clients in transportation system, government and military facilities, dams and levees, chemical facilities to enhance and protect critical infrastructure.
1:15:12 To help the Homeland Security respond to and recover quickly from acts of terrorism, national disaster, and other emergencies, Battelle provides capabilities in forensic, genomic,
1:15:25 crime investigations and disease outbreak monitoring, then why the fuck do we not know what was going on with the train wreck? And why did we not know what was going on with COVID if billions upon hundreds of billions of dollars of ours is going to this country, this company to do exactly that? So what I'm telling you is this company has the technology to do everything our government sucks at, according to our government.
1:15:53 But really is really good at it. They're just hiding the shit from us. So what I want you guys to do is I want you guys to, for those of you who have time, I want you to go through and yeah, right here. Here's the nomenclature beneath that gun. The drone defender device is a directed energy unmanned aircraft.
1:16:22 system countermeasure. It quickly disrupts control of a drone, neutralizing it so no remote action, including detonation, can occur, minimizing drone damage for risk and public safety. So, all of those fucking drones flying around everywhere, we have the technology to stop every single one of them and did not. Okay?
1:16:50 Thank God we got that gun, though. Fuck. I've been having bad dreams about that shit. Drones chasing after you, watching videos of the Ukrainian and Russian soldiers trying to surrender to one, and it goes in and blows them up anyway. Well, we have the technology to defend against them. That's good to know for soldiers. Yeah, but they're not giving them to the soldiers. Bridget, go ahead.
1:17:20 Quick question, and this was just, this is actually from the Rumble chat. Gola Fayette wanted to know, is that John Prado's book, the one you were mentioning earlier? I don't know. Oh, okay. I don't have him here. Okay, well, if you can text it to me, I told him I'll, just later. Oh, John Prado's is the book we're reading. Okay, that's what she wanted to know. Yeah, yeah, President's Secret Wars, that's the book we're reading, and yes, that's his book.
1:17:49 Thank you. SR71. Thank you, Colonel. When you posted that earlier today, I just did a quick search on the CEO of Battelle Memorial Institute. The current CEO is Louis von Thayer. T-H-A-E-R. And just looking at his career, he was at AT&T Laboratories.
1:18:21 He worked for Lucent. He worked for General Dynamics. Yeah. He worked for Lidos in the national security sector. Yeah. He served as a chief executive officer for DynCorp. And he was on the Defense Science Board in the National Defense Industrial Association. Yeah. This guy is, where does anybody find the amount of time to do that?
1:18:50 Military industrial complex baby. Oh, definitely. Yeah. So in in continuing down, just kind of reviewing what this company does, agribusiness from precision farming methods to complex environmental projects. Battelle delivers agribusiness solutions for new products while maintaining safety and sustainability of our global.
1:19:21 food system. Expert scientists perform testing and analysis, not of dangerous products, by the way, to develop new products, not safe ones, just new ones, to provide regulatory and risk assessment. Innovation areas include bioformulation. Can you spell GMO? Biotechnology. Conventional formulation.
1:19:50 physical chemistry studies, plant and animal metabolism, quality assurance, and residue studies. In the oil and gas sector, they do environmental solutions for unconventional oil and gas operations, sensors, equipment, deep water siting, monitoring, carbon management solutions, and advanced material for infrastructure integrity.
1:20:19 Data analysis, coatings, materials, sensors, subsurface resource management. Now, I would think that if they have all of this, and of course, I know the answer to this because NASA has already proven that they can use it, that they can penetrate the ground up to 100 feet and find a huge lake under the ice surface 100 feet down in Greenland. But somehow we can't find human smuggling tunnels along the border.
1:20:48 even though they have the technology to do it. Under health, they develop medical devices, preclinical research, hospital services in all areas. Hospital services include laboratory support and science, medical device development from design to evaluation to commercialization. Preclinical research is conducted in world-class facilities like BioLabs 3 and 4. I added that part.
1:21:19 Industry solutions. Battelle accelerates development timelines for industry from end-to-end development to tweak into product and packaging. Solutions for industry include development of advanced materials, food and beverage risk assessment. Isn't that weird that they do food and beverage risk assessment?
1:21:43 If you wouldn't fucking put poison in our food, there really wouldn't be a reason to have a risk assessment to it. Packaging and processing, product formulation analysis, regulatory support for tobacco products. Oh, that's sweet. Manufacturing, Battelle has a trademarked REBS, R-E-B-S.
1:22:12 rapid enumerated bio-identification system of non-destructively detecting and identifying microbial contamination in the air, in raw material, in processed fluids, or in finished products. Well, that's weird. Then why do we have to wear a mask?
1:22:35 In the early years, Battelle made advances in metal and material sciences and landed its first federal contract in 1939 to supply tank armor leading into World War II. Battelle's reputation in metal technology led to fabricating uranium, at the time an almost unknown metal for the Manhattan Project.
1:23:04 Innovations have included contributions to the Xerox copy machine. So this is a fascinating story in and of itself. The guy that created Xerox copy machine basically went to several different well-known places with his invention. But Battelle was the only one that would actually fund it and basically created the copy machine. They also are.
1:23:34 recognized as the creator of cruise control on our cars, the combat disc, and the UPC codes on products. They invented that whole system of barcodes. Why do we not know about this company? I'll tell you why. Other technologies developed and launched by Patel include, and this is a laundry list, so get ready. The development of vacs.
1:24:04 and therapeutic for infectious disease threats. They improve neonatal respiratory treatments. They do hyper elastic materials to deliver superior performance for crash barriers. We already talked about the drone defender. LS10 technology to use in airport security checkpoints around the globe.
1:24:33 to screen liquids and identify potential security threats. So they have had the technology, just so that you guys know, to look at all liquids and know whether or not they're explosive, but they don't bother using them. They just are making you minute.
1:24:52 They miniaturize all of those bottles for absolutely no reason because they have the technology to not make you do that. You could take, you know, an entire gallon of shit on there and all they have to do is scan it with this machine and it'll tell you whether there's explosives in it. They also were responsible for runway de-icing fluid to reduce environmental burden. Polyol technology that helps reduce our reliance on petroleum by enabling bio-based.
1:25:22 polyurethane foam for, of course, that's like cancer causing, but whatever. Drug delivery technology that allows people with dexterity limitations to self-inject themselves with therapeutics. Yay. A method to improve direct coal liquidification utilizing biomass mass derived solvent that will change the way jet fuel is produced. Bio-based
1:25:52 toner that is easier to remove during recycling from copier machines. EM Alert, a secure, comprehensive, and intuitive software tool that enables food manufacturers to rapidly analyze and understand food tampering vulnerabilities. Lastly, NeuroLife, a neural bypass technology brain computer interface that enables paralyzed patients to gain conscious
1:26:22 control of fingers, hands, and wrist. So that's just, that's not even, that's a drop in the bucket. That's like their most significant ones, but by no means an exhaustive list of what they've been doing. So I find the list, with what we've all been going through,
1:26:50 And the freedoms that have been taken away from us, extremely troubling from the perspective that they have the technology not to take our freedoms, but for some reason are choosing to take our freedoms anyway. So I have looked at the board of directors. I've looked at their website.
1:27:15 you know, kind of surface the executive leadership as SR 71 was talking about their board of directors. I've got that information. What I need help doing is I need searches and you're going to have to do them on the index. I already figured that out of looking for keywords that we now all know to match up with Patel, which is B as in Bravo, A-T-T-E-L-L-E.
1:27:44 Some of the words that I would search on is that name and CIA or that name and lawsuits or because they do have a few lawsuits of basically trying to persecute a few whistleblowers that worked in their Washington state lab.
1:28:08 And those are the kind of things that I need looked at. There's a whole bunch of information. So if you don't have like a brave browser, there's a lot of stuff on them in foreign websites. Like I found one in Russian that I had to translate in order to read. And it had a lot of really interesting.
1:28:33 on them that I didn't find in any other website. So it talks about some of the, like this one is on a Russian wiki brief.org. It lists where all of their headquarters are. They have obviously their headquarters in Columbus, Ohio, but they have Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland.
1:29:03 They have West Jefferson in Ohio. Seattle is where one of their labs are. Arlington, they have a big place in Massachusetts. They have a big place in Charlottesville, Virginia, which I found very interesting. Baltimore, Boulder, and guess where else? Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey, with their anti-drone gun.
1:29:34 Some of these have like all of the different labs that they have contracts for, like the Department of Energy's National Labs, which we went over the names of most of those. But guys, like I said, they're big in bed with the National Science Foundation, which I know the CIA provides funding for them. They're big in bed with them. That's a big funding mechanism for them.
1:30:04 They work directly with Eli Lilly. There's just so much here. But what I would ask everyone to do is if you have time and you want to participate, go through and look for anything. Just tag me on X and I'm going to start. I just need links to pull the information in.
1:30:32 If it's like a big long thing, if you wouldn't mind just screenshotting what it is that you find that's particularly important. But if it's on a page that's like a mile long, please don't just give me the link to the page because I'm not going to have enough time to be able to read through every single page or link. But if you can provide me with a screenshot of what it is that you find particularly interesting, I would love for you guys to help.
1:30:58 with this because i'd like to pull this together to be able to present this on alpha show tomorrow night because this is a big freaking deal um while everybody is talking about metabiota and all of these other organizations this is kind of the you know how um where is cousin it in here
1:31:20 She's always saying, yeah, there she is. She's always saying, what else are they doing? Or why are they over here? Because something else over there is happening. I do believe that all of the stuff that is out there in print focusing on some of the, like the metabiotic presence in some of these labs is kind of a front for this monstrosity that is really the hand behind all of it.
1:31:50 Anyway, it's big. It's big, big. So. Colonel? Yeah. I'm in medical. I know Battelle because I'm in medical. We seek out unmet patient needs and we engage with them to help them build out, scale out in the markets. Battelle has something called, we'll see it in the fall of 2025.
1:32:19 organ on a chip. They're going to be able to have a miniature little lung to test all these vaccines. And obviously all of them. And they have quite the list. The problem with Battelle, because when I started digging into them, they kind of popped up through Eli Lilly and other companies we work with. And I'm a researcher. I have to know why.
1:32:48 Digging deep into this, they're so tied up with the Internet of Things, 5G networks, AI. You bring in all the biotech into that. It's a terrifying thing because Obama, when he was in office, he tied security, military security, to our health care. So health care is a security risk.
1:33:15 That's tied into WHO and WF and blah, blah, blah. But they're tying all this together where we still have our Constitution, but we don't have the laws to protect ourselves. Trump has to unwind this mess in four years. It is a mess. This has been going on for quite a while. And Battelle, some of the other stuff they're doing in, I call it the virus roulette game. It's terrifying what they're doing.
1:33:45 And they're looking how to manage animals in terms of vaccines and their propensity to jump from animals to human. Like, for example, Moderna just had gotten in the summer $176 million contract for the vaccine for bird flu. But bird flu didn't happen. It didn't spread. Or there was a vaccine hesitancy, is what they call it. We're not going to get their new vaccines.
1:34:15 And the vaccines, as we move over, in a flu vaccine, COVID-19 is going to be in there or the next iteration as it mutates and changes. But here's the reality. Vaccines don't work. By the time you get it, your virus is mutating. And most of these are not serious illnesses. It's the shape of your human body, the obesity, all the different health issues. But food is poison. As you say, Colonel, it is poison.
1:34:44 Do you know that our food manufacturers make food for Europe that are clean, but they sell us the one with all the chemicals? Why? I haven't gotten a good answer on that. But I know Battelle from the medical side and dug into them. And when I saw the labs, I tracked them to Ukraine. They're in Ukraine. They're in Georgia. Yeah, they're in a lot of places. They're in a lot of places. Matter of fact, Russia is making a point not to hit them.
1:35:14 when they're fighting against Ukraine, because they know what that's going to be. They know what those labs are. And guess what? There are major pharmaceutical companies. Yeah, I think they've actually taken out some of those labs. There are explosive devices that suck the stuff in as opposed to blow it out. So I do believe that there has been some shaping going on over there. Bridget, go ahead. Well, I just want to land here on one statement.
1:35:44 My biggest fear is bioterrorism. That is my biggest fear. Right. Bridget, go ahead. Over on the Rumble side, I want to give a shout out to Elle Wood C, because she said, or he, I don't know, said, additionally, another employer in the chemical construction supply, W.R. Grace, by the way, also had Battelle as an account.
1:36:12 And I looked it up, and yes, they are under the National Energy Technology Laboratory. And who is WR Grace? WR Grace is the biological, from what I understand, they, I mean, they're nuclear. WR Grace is the company. It's chemicals, chemicals. Bridget, WR Grace. Hold on just a second. WR Grace is the company that comes up in every single one of our.
1:36:42 research project and being a front for the CIA. The CIA embeds themselves in W.R. Grace. W.R. Grace, the son of the original founder, ends up in many of the couped areas, especially in the Middle East, because that's one of their regions of expertise. They have found out that they are so up to their eyeballs in Operation Gladio, it's not even funny.
1:37:12 W.R. Grace is basically a, well, they do a whole bunch of other things. They function as a cutout for the CIA. Guru, go ahead. Exactly. Guru? Yeah, good afternoon, guys. Been a little while, Colonel and Trump and Bridge. Thanks for giving me a mic. Yesterday, I tried about 15 times, Colonel, to get into your space, and it just kept toughing me, man. I had no chance.
1:37:41 Anyway, I've got in to sit and listen and just, yeah, got some very, very vital information once again. I think, Colonel, you're so on spot, man, with all this stuff. Yeah, W.R. Grace, that's interesting, isn't it? And the other one, Mattel, that you were talking about. Yeah, I got a bit of something to go and look at there too, actually.
1:38:02 But, yeah, look, I just wanted to say happy new year, guys. I'm about to go and have a surf, actually. It's a pretty nice day over here. There's a few little waves, so I'm going to go and take a bit of time out for myself and get in God's frequency. But, yeah, all the best for the new year, guys. Let's go get it. We know it's going to get a little bit crazy, and, yeah, we can expect absolutely anything after what we've just seen. So, yeah.
1:38:26 God's peace be with everyone. And, yeah, Godspeed. We get our way through this, guys, and get out the other side. Thanks again, Colonel. Just incredible information. Thank you. Thank you, Guru. And God bless you. A happy new year to you, too. I really, really enjoyed being on your show.
1:38:44 Yeah, no, thanks for coming on. It was great. It went really well. It was, yeah, we had a lot of views on it, Colonel. So, yeah, hopefully, although I know you're highly censored, but, yeah, hopefully that's getting a few more people in. But anyway, it's, yeah, it was a pleasure to have you on there, mate. Thank you very much. Okay, guys, I'm going to go and enjoy a bit of God's nature that's left here that the cabal haven't ruined on us yet. Okay. See you later. See you. All right. So.
1:39:14 That's the homework. You guys find me anything that you can that basically associates Battelle with the CIA, with the State Department. I found a website that connected them to USAID and the National Endowment for Democracy. All of those keywords, put those all in your search criteria and send me whatever you find.
1:39:41 Obviously, we will have some duplicates, but we don't want to miss anything. So anyway, it's a crazy story. And the numbers, I'm telling you, this is just it's crazy. And supposedly it's a private nonprofit charitable foundation that's making on average.
1:40:08 around, depending on whose numbers, because I went on the, not CNBC, but one of those market things. But there's several different accountings because of it being private, but they estimate their earnings to be around $10 billion a year. So if they're earning $10 billion a year and they're a nonprofit,
1:40:39 private charitable foundation, where's that money going? So this would be the perfect way to launder money, to have DARPA funding go to a quote unquote private nonprofit charitable foundation so that the profit, because they spin off companies just like the Xerox.
1:41:05 The copy thing. So they paid for that to be developed and then they basically spin it off as a private or a public sell it. So they're again, they're banking tons and tons of money here. What are they doing with all that money? Where is all that money going? Those are the kind of things that we need to find out. And I know if anybody can, we can. So let's work on this together.
1:41:35 And I'll try to pull it all together tomorrow for Alpha Show. Well, Bridget, what happened to you again? Okay. Anybody else got anything? Yeah. Battelle has won the DARPA award to develop injectable bidirectional brain computer interface called Neuralink, Neuralife.
1:42:12 I'm stunned. W.R. Grace is a CIA cutout. I did not know that. We have covered that. You need to tune in more. Do a search on. I will. I will. That is stunning. Do a search on W.R. Grace and the CIA. But you have to do it on Yandex.
1:42:43 You can't do it. Yeah, you can't do it on the normal because it's not going to show you. I want to say that the sun. Yeah, I just did it. OK, this is hilarious. All right. Do W.R. Grace in quotations on brave and then do CIA. You come up with like nothing. It says nothing found here. You do that exact same search on Yandex.
1:43:10 And it's got all kinds of crap here. Let's see. Let me find W.R. Grace. CIA Ebola secret serum emerged from a Soviet bio lab, blah, blah, blah. CIA linked W.R. Grace Corporation was funding a biotech startup funded by CIA linked W.R. Grace. The company was called Cetus.
1:43:40 C-E-T-U-S. But where we found it originally was in the, oh yeah, here's another one. This one cracked me up. This one has them linked to ITT, which we know is the precursor to AT&T and the W.R. Grace guys.
1:44:12 Yeah, that's a whole nother rabbit hole that I don't want to get into right now. U.S. prevention in Peru. U.S. companies like W.R. Grace and U.S. banks like Wells Fargo was down there basically during the time when we couped Peru. Let's see. 1954, it has the CIA aircraft in.
1:44:46 Porto San Jose, chartered by the American corporation WR Great. They're in bed with each other. And this goes on for pages after pages after pages. We first came across this over in the Middle East, like I said. Let's see. Oh, here. After release by John McCloy, who was, you know, John McCloy.
1:45:13 Warhamster and I are going to talk about him because you can do a whole show on him. He was part of the CFR Ford Foundation. He was over in Germany in post-World War II as quote-unquote like the governor guy that was letting all the Nazis get out of jail, setting up the whole bullshit Nuenberg stuff. It says Otto Ambrose was transferred through Operation Paperclip to become an advisor to W.R. Grace.
1:45:43 W.R. Grace was hiring a bunch of the Nazis post-World War II. Yeah. McCoy was also in the Warren Commission, of course. Sorry to interrupt. Yeah. There's just mountains and mountains of W.R. Grace material and the CIA. The story giver. Oh, hi, Colonel. I tuned in just because I enjoy listening to you and a lot of information you share.
1:46:16 I'm in California. I'm outside of L.A. I'm very close to the Pacific Palisades fires. And, you know, as I'm sure you've heard, there's a lot of us who are seeing that things don't add up. And we're trying to figure out many things about this fire. And so listening to you today, right now, so one of the things...
1:46:44 That's in a lot of people's minds is the idea of smart cities. Right. And I have never heard of Battelle until today, until I heard you. And I go to the website and I've seen and I want to share this with you. I'll attach the link that Battelle has a whole strategy on smart cities. Yes, they do. And I want to.
1:47:13 To know more from your perspective, because one of the things that don't add up here that a lot of us neighbors, I don't know if you are familiar, but. I live out there. Yeah, I live. I was stationed at Los Angeles Air Force Base. I was down at the base housing down there. I'm very familiar with the Palisade area. OK, so today.
1:47:39 We have the National Guard doing checkpoints in places like Santa Monica. Nothing, never seen before. And the excuse is, or the idea is that they're protecting us from looters. And we're all wondering if the, why can't the LAPD can do that? You know, so it feels like something very aggressive.
1:48:05 And something like way bigger is going on. And so a lot of us think about, you know, corporate corporations that are buying land and are interested in develop, you know, building development. But this feels, just being here, it just feels way bigger. And I feel like I had to listen to you today. So who wants to tell her what the checkpoints are all about? Anybody?
1:48:37 Where'd Bridget go? Sorry, I was multitasking. Yes, they are bringing in, I guess. I mean, these are all Gladio setups. The Phoenix program. Yeah. So I've been screaming, jumping up and down, that they have implemented the Phoenix program in the United States several decades ago in the post 9-11. I mean, to me, that's why we did.
1:49:08 Why we had 9-11 was so they could slowly implement the Phoenix program. So having military checkpoints and controlling the access in and out of different locations, these quote unquote emergencies are going to keep happening and they're going to keep implementing elements of the Phoenix program. And if you're not familiar with the Phoenix program, you need to get really familiar with it because basically Homeland Security is the Phoenix program.
1:49:38 FEMA is the Phoenix program. They have the same fusion centers that were set up over in Vietnam to control people. They're doing the same forced migration into this area. And then they're going to create all the chaos. And they're going to use that as the excuse on why they have to have these checkpoints. They are setting up the Phoenix program in the United States. They've been doing it for decades. I'm in Western North Carolina. We're going through it right now. Right.
1:50:08 We're going through it right now because FEMA came in and blocked so many people bringing real solutions. And we had miners come from West Virginia to connect Chimney Rock back out in Lake Lure so they could go to a grocery store or get their medications. And they came in and made the road workable to drive on. FEMA spent $150,000 putting a gate up with three soldiers. Yep.
1:50:36 We have it all over Western North Carolina. The media hasn't covered what's happened here. This is the worst natural disaster in the United States. 22 counties. We have roads that are missing. And nobody really knows what's going on here.
1:50:52 I was in a space early and somebody asked me about it and I told him. And one guy goes, that's not true. I was in Asheville. Nothing's going on. I'm like, really? 22 counties are destroyed. We have rare earth minerals. They want our land. Roy Cooper, I did not see this for two months because we couldn't even get information out. We couldn't even use our, even going on a car radio, we couldn't get information. That's how cut off we were.
1:51:18 And we're just now really getting resources. And we've had to beg FEMA to keep people in hotels and extend their vouchers. And they would only give us 48 hours. They kept us in such high-stress mode, raising money. These people don't have anywhere to go. It's over 5,000 people. They're kids, single moms, seniors. It has been insane here. And we're trying to get information. And I finally went, oh, my God, this is planned.
1:51:48 This was freaking planned. And when I could step out of the emotion of it, I just got sick on my stomach. And I went, oh, my God. Plus, we have lithium and cobalt and a whole other things here, too, Colonel. Yeah, I know. Doug Imhoff is involved with his luffer. Yeah. Black frogs. Yeah. I've been screaming, it's the Phoenix program.
1:52:11 It is. We're going through it right now. And it's the most unsettling thing because you keep going. How could it not be managed? Do you know we didn't get a dime from the NC State government until the new governor took office? And Roy Cooper goes, why do you want to build back? We're not going to let you build back. Right. We're going to make them green spaces. We're going to do this. We're going to do that. Western North Carolina is home to people who've been here five, six generations.
1:52:40 This is home people. These are hardworking folk people. They have no power, but they want this land. They want to control it. And they're not going to be able to build back. I mean, it's insane everything they've put in place so nobody could get anything done. I finally got over 1,000 people on X, and somebody said, you have to create a PR crisis for someone who's running for office. I said, that's Tom Tillis.
1:53:09 He'll be running for office at the midterms. We went out loudly and threw his handle up everywhere. And as of last night, we were able to commit to keep over 5,000 people in a hotel, in the hotels, until after Trump is in office. Trump came here, set up a GoFundMe. That helped. But we haven't had... They put in...
1:53:33 Think about it. We had 100,000 homes destroyed in 22 counties. Do you know how many temporary home units we've gotten from the government? 93 since September. Right. They're living in tents. Yeah. It's insane. And we can't figure out why is the government not just doing the basics?
1:53:53 I mean, because we've never dealt with a crisis like this before. And then I stood back from all the noise because I like to find solutions. And I went, oh, my God, this was freaking planned. Well, when you say we haven't ever dealt with this crisis, that's not true. Well, locally, when it's in your backyard. I grew up in Charleston, South Carolina. When you have a hurricane, you board up and leave. It's not hard. But here.
1:54:19 We had no idea what we were going to get. We had over 40 trillion gallons of water with these heavy rainstorms before, during, and after. Mountains are rocks and trees. They all came down. All the hardwoods came down because their root system is high-lying. It's like timber. But I kept going, there's something not right here. Do you know what FEMA is doing?
1:54:49 oh you can't build back you know we'll buy somebody will buy it and all of a sudden here comes the land grabs
1:54:55 The land grabs are huge right now, and people are desperate because they're having to make a mortgage payment. We tried to get a waiver where we didn't have to do property taxes. Nope, you've got to pay property taxes. So people are living in a tent on their land with no house, making a mortgage payment, paying property taxes. They're selling it, and they're getting lowball pricing. And if FEMA comes in and says you have a 50% disaster in your home, FEMA will go, oh, we can't do that.
1:55:24 A neighbor of mine, they came in her home, and she said, ah, it's about 20% because we figured out all the pricing stuff. He goes, no, it's at 50%. She goes, I don't need that much money. What she didn't know was when she went to talk to FEMA, which, by the way, they're three hours away in Charlotte, so they're not really close by, and people lost their cars as well. So then they said, oh, it's at 50%. Then, yeah, we can't help you. So they set them up for failure.
1:55:52 And this is devious and this is planned. This is so planned. Yeah. So Colonel, we're living in it right now. I'm mad and I'm a, I'm a big mouth Southern bell. So I will not be quiet anymore. Yep. All right, guys, we're at six o'clock. I got a lot of homework to do. So do you send me what you got. I will look at everything that you put in the purple pill and then whatever else just tag me in on X.
1:56:22 And we're going to get something put together, hopefully in time for Alpha's show. If I can't get it done in time for Alpha's show, I'll do my own and just present everything that we find. So anyway, thanks, everyone, for being here. Thank you, Colonel. Thank you so much. Thank you so much, Colonel. Sure. Thank you guys for being here. Excuse me, just a second, Colonel.
1:56:51 I just wanted to pop in. The lady in North Carolina and the lady that's in California, I'm so sorry for what you're going through. And you are being heard. We do see it. And we're all trying to help.
1:57:11 So please don't think that you are alone. You're not. I have to tell you, X has been awesome. Because the only way we can get things out is to educate. And Matt moved here. He's an X professional photographer. So he's been out filming, doing everything and pushing it up on X. And I'm helping push out across. But I got to tell you, so many people on X knew about this and they came here to help.
1:57:38 And I am so grateful. You know, I'm speaking on behalf of a lot of people. But my mom's side of the family has been here for six generations. And they own farms. The farms are destroyed. There's so much toxicity in the soil now. It's going to take generations to fix this problem if they can hold on. And we're doing everything we can to help them. But we also got to be practical. They got to be safe. They have to be safe.
1:58:05 Stay strong. We will. We have our moments, but at the end of the day, we're Americans and we stand up. Send our love to everybody there. We are holding for you and we are trying to help. Thank you so much. Colonel, thank you so much for doing this. I've just been so involved getting stuff done because I'm like the first born person. Everybody looks at me and I go do.
1:58:34 I'm looking forward to going through all your, what do you call them when you see them later? The recordings. Thank you. I'm sorry, I've been up since four o'clock. Recordings, because what you're teaching us is our future. And we have to understand. Well, actually, I hope I'm teaching you the past so we can prevent it from being our future.
1:58:59 No, I agree with that 100%. But I also know it takes time. That's what I've learned as I've gotten older. It takes more time than you think. But if people don't understand what our history is and what these people are capable of, they will do like what you initially did. You've been here for a long time, but you don't see it when it's right in front of you because you don't have it in your heart that people can be this evil.
1:59:26 And it is never your first impression that, son of a bitch, they're doing it to me this time. And I want people to understand that needs to be your knee jerk reaction to all of it, that they're doing it to us this time. They're not doing it in Peru. They're not doing it in Brazil. They're not doing it in Vietnam. They're doing it here. And it needs to stop. I agree. And I think we have the right president in place and hopefully his people get through.
1:59:55 But it's the starting point. The battle is really starting to begin is what I believe. Right. Where we have to stand up and be heard. And, you know, even I was shocked one day when Elon was in Pennsylvania raising, getting people to vote and blah, blah, blah. And a mother asked him, what should your children, my child's going to be going to college, what should they do? And he goes, physics and history.
2:00:21 And she was really surprised. She goes, history? If you don't understand history, then how are they going to improve? How will they improve? And that really caught me off guard. And I was not a history buff in high school because all you got to do is memorize dates of wars and stuff, not why they happened or who it happened. None of that. And I relate that way. But now I'm like a huge history buff.
2:00:48 And but also I'm seeing it in the world today. And you're right, Colonel. I didn't think people could be this evil. Even our government could be this evil because they're Americans. And that is that's a sad part. I've got to run. But I appreciate. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I've got some stuff on the stove. And anyway.
2:01:13 Thank you all for being here. I appreciate it. We will be back tomorrow at four o'clock for our next chapter. And I will be on the Alpha Warriors show tomorrow night at 930. Hope to see you guys in both places. Thank you very much for being here.

Entities here

CIA35China26Tibet25Dalai Lama25Battelle25India20John Kenneth Galbraith15John F. Kennedy13Gray and Company12United States12Dwight D. Eisenhower10Nepal Volunteer Defense Army8Allen Dulles8Soviet Union7Federal Emergency Management Agency6Mustang6Nepal6Gampo Tashi6Vietnam6United Nations6Paul Nitze5United Kingdom5Phoenix Program4Shanghai4Operation Gladio4Gordon Gray4National Security Council4Ukraine4Washington, D.C.4Camp Hale4Jawaharlal Nehru3Richard M. Bissell Jr.3Charles Cabell3Robert F. Kennedy3North Atlantic Treaty Organization3Chiang Kai-shek3Desmond Fitzgerald3New Deal35412 Group3Peterson Field3

Claims made here

CIA trained Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 2:04
“We start off with where we left off with the CIA basically aiding, training the Tibetan people to fight against China. And there was a National Volunteer Defense Army, referred to as NVDA, that provid…”
Dalai Lama member_of Tibet documented ▶ 3:08
“Focus on an area in central Tibet that was under the control of the Dalai Lama, even though at this point the Dalai Lama was kind of hanging out in India. So obviously he's an important symbol. And I …”
Ma Bufang ordered_assassination_of Dalai Lama host_asserted ▶ 4:05
“that the new Dalai Lama in 1939 had to be ransomed from the Chinese Muslim warlord called Ma Pufang. I'm going to spell that M-A, separate word, P-U-F-A-N-G. That was the same man who had been the int…”
CIA funded Ma Bufang host_asserted ▶ 4:34
“is basically funding someone who is... Ma'am, I hate to interrupt you, but it looks like the rumble is not up yet. It's still doing the intro. All right. And I just wanted to tell you before you got, …”
Ma Bufang ordered_assassination_of Dalai Lama host_asserted ▶ 5:07
“CIA, even before Tibet, had been funding Muslims to attack China, too. And this Ma Fu Feng guy is the Chinese Muslim that the CIA had been working with and training them to be terrorists as well to at…”
CIA funded Ma Bufang host_asserted ▶ 5:07
“CIA, even before Tibet, had been funding Muslims to attack China, too. And this Ma Fu Feng guy is the Chinese Muslim that the CIA had been working with and training them to be terrorists as well to at…”
CIA trained Ma Bufang host_asserted ▶ 5:07
“CIA, even before Tibet, had been funding Muslims to attack China, too. And this Ma Fu Feng guy is the Chinese Muslim that the CIA had been working with and training them to be terrorists as well to at…”
Nepal Volunteer Defense Army carried_out_attack China documented ▶ 7:08
“and the partisans began to make direct attacks against mainland China's forces. By December, mainland China post within 25 miles of Lhasa were raided by the NVDA. In late January and February of 1959,…”
Nepal Volunteer Defense Army carried_out_attack Lhasa documented ▶ 7:08
“and the partisans began to make direct attacks against mainland China's forces. By December, mainland China post within 25 miles of Lhasa were raided by the NVDA. In late January and February of 1959,…”
Dalai Lama removed_from_power Tibet documented ▶ 9:26
“Sat in his cabinet, two mortar shells exploded in a garden nearby. That Tuesday, the decision was hastily made for the Dalai Lama to flee again. The Dalai Lama abandoned his stand against the confront…”
James Lay member_of National Security Council documented ▶ 10:53
“Precisely timed to place a protective force around the Dalai Lama just as the Dalai Lama fled. Units of the NVDA partisans formed a rear guard behind the Dalai Lama's party throughout his trek to the …”
Gordon Gray member_of National Security Council documented ▶ 10:53
“Precisely timed to place a protective force around the Dalai Lama just as the Dalai Lama fled. Units of the NVDA partisans formed a rear guard behind the Dalai Lama's party throughout his trek to the …”
J. Graham Parsons member_of United States documented ▶ 12:22
“of Far East by the name of J. Graham Parsons. Regarding Tibet, the survey predicted that, and this is a quote, if the Tibetans are able to maintain their resistance movement in the face of large-scale…”
Allen Dulles headed CIA documented ▶ 13:47
“The 5412 group considered in secret deliberations its answer to the policy question posed by Gordon Gray. Memoranda that remained classified from Alan Dulles to President Eisenhower dated January 22nd…”
Jawaharlal Nehru member_of India documented ▶ 14:16
“From Alan Dulles, while the president's staff secretary reported from the CIA and State Department intelligence report that, quote, the Tibetan uprisings apparently have resulted in a considerable los…”
Ellsworth Bunker member_of United States documented ▶ 16:36
“for the forces to actually confront the Chinese, it's published in an Indian paper that it's going to happen. American Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker kept Washington apprised of the developments, but the…”
Charles Cabell member_of CIA documented ▶ 16:36
“for the forces to actually confront the Chinese, it's published in an Indian paper that it's going to happen. American Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker kept Washington apprised of the developments, but the…”
Desmond Fitzgerald member_of CIA documented ▶ 17:09
“and Desmond Fitzgerald, the Far East Division chief, were almost daily on the phone with Gordon Gray during this period. The CIA was so well-informed because it had furnished an American radio operato…”
CIA supplied_arms_to Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 17:09
“and Desmond Fitzgerald, the Far East Division chief, were almost daily on the phone with Gordon Gray during this period. The CIA was so well-informed because it had furnished an American radio operato…”
Stephen Meade member_of CIA documented ▶ 17:37
“There may have been other CIA agents in the party as well. Although the agency's quote-unquote denied areas specialist, Stephen Meade, a paramilitary expert, Anthony Pasfini, have been credited with e…”
Anthony Pasfini member_of CIA documented ▶ 17:37
“There may have been other CIA agents in the party as well. Although the agency's quote-unquote denied areas specialist, Stephen Meade, a paramilitary expert, Anthony Pasfini, have been credited with e…”
Dalai Lama member_of India documented ▶ 18:08
“and had been conceived ahead of time. On March 1st, just as the Dalai Lama's party was entering India, Eisenhower in Washington was told, we have informed embassy in New Delhi that we think the U.S. s…”
CIA supplied_arms_to Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 18:35
“A message from the Tibetans received on April 2nd confirmed success and contained an important plea. You must help us as soon as possible and send us weapons for 30,000 men by airplane. That was their…”
CIA trained Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 19:34
“by mainland China, Field General Gampo Tashi issued orders for the resistance to abandon its headquarters, which it had defended to permit the escape of the Dalai Lama. Tibetan sources maintain that E…”
CIA trained Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 20:02
“which, of course, we've talked about because it was done in Colorado. Five groups, totally more than 500 men, were to be given instructions and then sent back to their native regions. And because it w…”
Camp Hale member_of Colorado documented ▶ 20:02
“which, of course, we've talked about because it was done in Colorado. Five groups, totally more than 500 men, were to be given instructions and then sent back to their native regions. And because it w…”
Allen Dulles member_of United States documented ▶ 24:12
“the training for the terrorists inside of Tibet. Despite its support for the Tibet against the Chinese, the U.S. did not want to draw any attention to itself in that area. They did not want to have a …”
John P. Cabot Lodge member_of United Nations documented ▶ 24:12
“the training for the terrorists inside of Tibet. Despite its support for the Tibet against the Chinese, the U.S. did not want to draw any attention to itself in that area. They did not want to have a …”
United Nations exposed China documented ▶ 25:45
“Overtures were made to the brother of the Dalai Lama, then in New York, representing the Tibetans at the UN resolution meeting. October 21st, 1959, the UN General Assembly passed a resolution expressi…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower member_of United States documented ▶ 27:19
“were actively working in Tibet. Dwight Eisenhower made a state visit to India in late 1959, but deemed it inexpedient to meet with the Dalai Lama, who was living in India at the time. What is he going…”
Gampo Tashi headed Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 27:49
“The following year, the U.S. also discouraged a visa request from the Dalai Lama to come to the United States. However, in India, Ike did accept certain gifts that were bestowed upon him through the C…”
Gordon Gray member_of 5412 Group documented ▶ 29:48
“The president met to discuss Tibet with a group including Gordon Gray, Secretary Harder, Alan Dulles, Cabell, and Desmond Fitzgerald. Two weeks later, there was another discussion with the 5412 group.…”
Allen Dulles member_of 5412 Group documented ▶ 29:48
“The president met to discuss Tibet with a group including Gordon Gray, Secretary Harder, Alan Dulles, Cabell, and Desmond Fitzgerald. Two weeks later, there was another discussion with the 5412 group.…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower member_of 5412 Group documented ▶ 29:48
“The president met to discuss Tibet with a group including Gordon Gray, Secretary Harder, Alan Dulles, Cabell, and Desmond Fitzgerald. Two weeks later, there was another discussion with the 5412 group.…”
Desmond Fitzgerald member_of 5412 Group documented ▶ 29:48
“The president met to discuss Tibet with a group including Gordon Gray, Secretary Harder, Alan Dulles, Cabell, and Desmond Fitzgerald. Two weeks later, there was another discussion with the 5412 group.…”
Charles Cabell member_of 5412 Group documented ▶ 29:48
“The president met to discuss Tibet with a group including Gordon Gray, Secretary Harder, Alan Dulles, Cabell, and Desmond Fitzgerald. Two weeks later, there was another discussion with the 5412 group.…”
Gary Powers member_of CIA documented ▶ 30:16
“In one battle, the PLA claimed to have killed 800 of the resistant forces. Just then, another event affecting the intelligence world brought the U.S. air support for the Tibetans to a complete halt. O…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower removed_from_power CIA documented ▶ 30:47
“the collapse of a summit conference in Russia and in Paris with the Russians and caused President Eisenhower to issue orders for an immediate suspension of all intrusion into their airspace, which inc…”
CIA spied_on China host_asserted ▶ 31:19
“Russia, when in fact it is very likely, since the CIA had their own U-2 program, that the U-2s were being used to support the CIA missions in Tibet, which technically was inside mainland China because…”
John F. Kennedy succeeded Dwight D. Eisenhower documented ▶ 31:47
“paramilitary operations inside of China. And we know for a fact, based on what we had already read, that U-2s were part of that. So I find that just startling, actually. The secret war in Tibet was pa…”
CIA supplied_arms_to Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 32:17
“and the resistance commanders made an increasingly desperate plea for supplies. When JFK took the oath of office on January 20th, 1961, the CIA had already prepared proposals for what to do in Tibet. …”
John F. Kennedy member_of United States documented ▶ 32:17
“and the resistance commanders made an increasingly desperate plea for supplies. When JFK took the oath of office on January 20th, 1961, the CIA had already prepared proposals for what to do in Tibet. …”
CIA funded Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 32:17
“and the resistance commanders made an increasingly desperate plea for supplies. When JFK took the oath of office on January 20th, 1961, the CIA had already prepared proposals for what to do in Tibet. …”
CIA funded Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 32:47
“equipped 14,000 soldiers in their paramilitary fight. Almost all of the active male population was still fighting in the Himalayas. Supplying the resistance without C-130s seemed an impossible task, b…”
CIA trained Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 32:47
“equipped 14,000 soldiers in their paramilitary fight. Almost all of the active male population was still fighting in the Himalayas. Supplying the resistance without C-130s seemed an impossible task, b…”
CIA supplied_arms_to Nepal Volunteer Defense Army documented ▶ 32:47
“equipped 14,000 soldiers in their paramilitary fight. Almost all of the active male population was still fighting in the Himalayas. Supplying the resistance without C-130s seemed an impossible task, b…”
Desmond Fitzgerald member_of CIA documented ▶ 32:47
“equipped 14,000 soldiers in their paramilitary fight. Almost all of the active male population was still fighting in the Himalayas. Supplying the resistance without C-130s seemed an impossible task, b…”
Desmond Fitzgerald member_of 5412 Group documented ▶ 33:15
“In the summer of 1960, an international jurist commission established by the UN released a conclusion that genocide had been attempted in Tibet, lending momentum to the CIA's proposal for that fall. O…”
United Nations exposed China documented ▶ 33:15
“In the summer of 1960, an international jurist commission established by the UN released a conclusion that genocide had been attempted in Tibet, lending momentum to the CIA's proposal for that fall. O…”
John F. Kennedy member_of 5412 Group documented ▶ 33:45
“It was a result of the discussion, the DCI, the director of CIA, said he would reorientate his thinking to some extent and would come back with an alternative proposal. About two months later, Charles…”
Charles Cabell member_of CIA documented ▶ 33:45
“It was a result of the discussion, the DCI, the director of CIA, said he would reorientate his thinking to some extent and would come back with an alternative proposal. About two months later, Charles…”
Charles Cabell member_of 5412 Group documented ▶ 33:45
“It was a result of the discussion, the DCI, the director of CIA, said he would reorientate his thinking to some extent and would come back with an alternative proposal. About two months later, Charles…”
Allen Dulles member_of CIA documented ▶ 34:13
“Several weeks after the election, though, Eisenhower himself did not sit down with the president-elect until December 6th in reference to that meeting. Ike specifically recalls that JFK had already be…”
Richard M. Bissell Jr. briefed John Kenneth Galbraith documented ▶ 34:47
“The JFK's man in India was a Harvard economist by the name of John Kenneth Galbraith, G-A-L-B-R-A-I-T-H. Before leaving his post on March 27, 1961, Galbraith was briefed on the CIA operations in India…”
John Kenneth Galbraith ordered_assassination_of Tibet book_quoted ▶ 35:40
“Galbraith determined to stop some of the spooky activities that he didn't like, one of them being Tibet, whose partisan fighters he calls deeply unhygienic tribesmen. In other words, they were dirty. …”
John Kenneth Galbraith showed_to Allen Dulles book_quoted ▶ 36:40
“by other CIA failures. Galbraith argued his position energetically with the president, Robert Kennedy and McGeorge Bundy, the new NSD advisor. He then put his arguments in a memorandum he showed to Al…”
John Kenneth Galbraith argued_with John F. Kennedy book_quoted ▶ 36:40
“by other CIA failures. Galbraith argued his position energetically with the president, Robert Kennedy and McGeorge Bundy, the new NSD advisor. He then put his arguments in a memorandum he showed to Al…”
CIA reorganized Tibet book_quoted ▶ 37:09
“he could not get the Tibet operation completely canceled. The partisans had achieved the status of a U.S. ally and had to be supported. When the CIA did end its network inside of India, the operation …”
Tibet relocated_to Mustang book_quoted ▶ 37:39
“successful using their criteria, not ours, operation. So while the Indian intelligence picked up some of the remaining Tibetans for a special border activity later on in 61 and on into 62 because they…”
India picked_up Tibet book_quoted ▶ 37:39
“successful using their criteria, not ours, operation. So while the Indian intelligence picked up some of the remaining Tibetans for a special border activity later on in 61 and on into 62 because they…”
John Kenneth Galbraith succeeded_in_cutting_connection_with Nepal book_quoted ▶ 38:49
“Galbraith believes that later in conjunction with Robert Kennedy, he succeeded in cutting the connection with Nepal and Tibet. But that didn't come about right away. So it says December 1961 demonstra…”
Robert F. Kennedy called The New York Times documented ▶ 39:44
“in the name of national security and then told them it would be a federal offense if they talked about it. The story was in the Colorado Springs Gazette the next day. Somebody talked about it and was …”
Tibet killed China book_quoted ▶ 40:42
“It was at about the same time that the soldiers of fortune achieved one of their greatest successes in the field. A small party sent to disrupt traffic in one of the areas for a mainland Chinese convo…”
Tibet attacked China book_quoted ▶ 40:42
“It was at about the same time that the soldiers of fortune achieved one of their greatest successes in the field. A small party sent to disrupt traffic in one of the areas for a mainland Chinese convo…”
Ray Cline records Tibet book_quoted ▶ 41:42
“that covered the period of January to August 1961. The political journal was actually translated and released to American scholars by the State Department in August of 1963. This windfall is the reaso…”
Baba Yeshi replaced Gampo Tashi book_quoted ▶ 42:09
“changed completely after 1960 with the end of direct airdrops. The NVDA had to reestablish itself at that more remote base called Mustang. But it was so remote that only raids not sustained operations…”
Nepal put_troops_against Mustang book_quoted ▶ 44:09
“and into the charade when the king of Nepal visited him in Peking in November 1973. The next year, Nepal, with the information gleaned by Baba Yeshe and prior arrangements with mainland China to patro…”
King of Nepal pardoned Tibet documented ▶ 44:37
“One of them escaped with the archives from the resistance fighters and an escort, only to be killed in an ambush later. Seven other Tibetan leaders who surrendered at Mustang sat in jail in Kathmandu …”
CIA promised_liberation_to Tibet book_quoted ▶ 45:06
“To achieve this effect, the CIA had promised liberation to the Tibetans who were caught up in their hopes and dreams, only to have tens of thousands of them murdered. Tibet was also an experience for …”
John Kenneth Galbraith invited Paul Nitze host_asserted ▶ 51:03
“to serve as one of the officers of the strategic bombing survey that was initiated by OSS. And remember, that was the bombing apparatus that many people feel was used to protect any German industry th…”
Paul Nitze wanted_to_convince John F. Kennedy host_asserted ▶ 59:22
“The loudest JFK had to get with some of those folks, and they were literally, you know, trying to instigate World War III during the Cuban Missile Crisis and at other times as well, was when Paul Nizz…”
Gordon Battelle founded Battelle documented ▶ 1:06:44
“Memorial Institute. And I'm like, what the hell is that? Again, just freaking blown away. So the founder back in the 1920s was Gordon Battelle. He studied metallology at Yale. And also it says in 1923…”
Battelle manages U.S. Department of Energy documented ▶ 1:08:40
“create significant societal and economic impacts. Not necessarily good, just big impacts. Government and commercial customers seek out Patel because of its reputation in providing engineering, scienti…”
Battelle manages U.S. Department of Homeland Security documented ▶ 1:09:09
“Brookhaven National Lab, Idaho National Lab, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Los Alamos National Lab, National Renewable Energy Lab, Oak Ridge National Lab, Pacific Northwest National Lab. It manages…”
Battelle funded Chile host_asserted ▶ 1:10:08
“All of the paramilitary national police forces that we set up around the world, like the Vak in Iran and the force in Chile that murdered over 50,000 people. They don't mean public safety like you and…”
Battelle funded Ukraine host_asserted ▶ 1:13:10
“I am not kidding you. It is a directed energy weapon. Oh my God. And this company manufactures it. So again, I go back to what the fuck is going on and why don't we know who this company is? So let me…”
Battelle funded Georgia host_asserted ▶ 1:13:40
“This company is behind the lab in Georgia. This company is behind, they actually are the ones that run these labs. This company is into everything. They are like a multi, multi, like with extra zeros,…”
Louis von Thayer headed Battelle documented ▶ 1:17:49
“Thank you. SR71. Thank you, Colonel. When you posted that earlier today, I just did a quick search on the CEO of Battelle Memorial Institute. The current CEO is Louis von Thayer. T-H-A-E-R. And just l…”
Louis von Thayer member_of National Defense Industrial Association documented ▶ 1:18:21
“He worked for Lucent. He worked for General Dynamics. Yeah. He worked for Lidos in the national security sector. Yeah. He served as a chief executive officer for DynCorp. And he was on the Defense Sci…”
Louis von Thayer member_of Defense Science Board documented ▶ 1:18:21
“He worked for Lucent. He worked for General Dynamics. Yeah. He worked for Lidos in the national security sector. Yeah. He served as a chief executive officer for DynCorp. And he was on the Defense Sci…”
Louis von Thayer headed DynCorp documented ▶ 1:18:21
“He worked for Lucent. He worked for General Dynamics. Yeah. He worked for Lidos in the national security sector. Yeah. He served as a chief executive officer for DynCorp. And he was on the Defense Sci…”
Battelle funded Manhattan Project documented ▶ 1:22:35
“In the early years, Battelle made advances in metal and material sciences and landed its first federal contract in 1939 to supply tank armor leading into World War II. Battelle's reputation in metal t…”
Gray and Company member_of Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:36:42
“research project and being a front for the CIA. The CIA embeds themselves in W.R. Grace. W.R. Grace, the son of the original founder, ends up in many of the couped areas, especially in the Middle East…”
Battelle funded DARPA host_asserted ▶ 1:40:39
“private charitable foundation, where's that money going? So this would be the perfect way to launder money, to have DARPA funding go to a quote unquote private nonprofit charitable foundation so that …”
Gray and Company funded Cetus host_asserted ▶ 1:43:10
“And it's got all kinds of crap here. Let's see. Let me find W.R. Grace. CIA Ebola secret serum emerged from a Soviet bio lab, blah, blah, blah. CIA linked W.R. Grace Corporation was funding a biotech …”
United States overthrew Peru host_asserted ▶ 1:44:12
“Yeah, that's a whole nother rabbit hole that I don't want to get into right now. U.S. prevention in Peru. U.S. companies like W.R. Grace and U.S. banks like Wells Fargo was down there basically during…”
Gray and Company supplied_arms_to Peru host_asserted ▶ 1:44:46
“Porto San Jose, chartered by the American corporation WR Great. They're in bed with each other. And this goes on for pages after pages after pages. We first came across this over in the Middle East, l…”
Gray and Company recruited Otto Ambrose host_asserted ▶ 1:45:13
“Warhamster and I are going to talk about him because you can do a whole show on him. He was part of the CFR Ford Foundation. He was over in Germany in post-World War II as quote-unquote like the gover…”
John J. McCloy member_of Ford Foundation host_asserted ▶ 1:45:13
“Warhamster and I are going to talk about him because you can do a whole show on him. He was part of the CFR Ford Foundation. He was over in Germany in post-World War II as quote-unquote like the gover…”
John J. McCloy covered_up Nuremberg trials host_asserted ▶ 1:45:13
“Warhamster and I are going to talk about him because you can do a whole show on him. He was part of the CFR Ford Foundation. He was over in Germany in post-World War II as quote-unquote like the gover…”
Operation Paperclip recruited Otto Ambrose host_asserted ▶ 1:45:13
“Warhamster and I are going to talk about him because you can do a whole show on him. He was part of the CFR Ford Foundation. He was over in Germany in post-World War II as quote-unquote like the gover…”
John J. McCloy member_of Warren Commission host_asserted ▶ 1:45:43
“W.R. Grace was hiring a bunch of the Nazis post-World War II. Yeah. McCoy was also in the Warren Commission, of course. Sorry to interrupt. Yeah. There's just mountains and mountains of W.R. Grace mat…”
United States carried_out_attack Phoenix Program caller_asserted ▶ 1:48:37
“Where'd Bridget go? Sorry, I was multitasking. Yes, they are bringing in, I guess. I mean, these are all Gladio setups. The Phoenix program. Yeah. So I've been screaming, jumping up and down, that the…”
U.S. Department of Homeland Security front_for Phoenix Program caller_asserted ▶ 1:49:08
“Why we had 9-11 was so they could slowly implement the Phoenix program. So having military checkpoints and controlling the access in and out of different locations, these quote unquote emergencies are…”
Federal Emergency Management Agency front_for Phoenix Program caller_asserted ▶ 1:49:38
“FEMA is the Phoenix program. They have the same fusion centers that were set up over in Vietnam to control people. They're doing the same forced migration into this area. And then they're going to cre…”