The Shadow State 64 The Diplomats
1:28:37 · recorded 2026-02-27 · ▶ watch on Rumble
Transcript
0:16
joining us for another session of Operation Gladio meets Secret Societies with Warhamster Brady. How are you today, Brady? I'm doing better than I've been in months. No pain. Yay! No more excuses for missed shows either. Sorry, guys. It's been a rough few months, but it's good to be back in the saddle and looking forward. If we're lucky, if we go at a good pace today, we can finish scrolling key today. Okay, let's get started.
0:44
All right. Well, just for those who have not been following and for those who have, what we've really been looking at is, you know, started from the Operation Gladio lens, started looking into the corporate side, and then we sort of leaked over into secret societies. And our premise, our thesis going into this, are these secret societies just, you know, typical fraternal organizations? Or is there something much more nefarious going on? And as we've gone through Skull and Bones and then Skull and Key, we found time after time.
1:13
These very well connected people go to the same grooming schools go to Yale Get tapped on the shoulder and all sudden find all these miraculous doors open for them in all the different corridors of power Whether it be diplomacy Intelligence the military Business you name it the university system It's the skull and bones and scrolling people scrolling key people always end up in these certain positions the gatekeepers What have you?
1:41
And they're always there to make the decisions of all these major impacts of what's basically become, you know, the post-World War II rules-based order nonstop march towards the one globalist government. These guys have been a part of it every step of the way. Fair enough? Yes. Groland Key started out, you know, basically it was supposed to be more of an academic society. And as we've shown over the decades, they've become every bit as nefarious as skull and bones.
2:11
I'm going to share my screen now. I think he hit the wrong button. He dumped himself out of the stream. So, there he is. I've got to get that button. I've got to get that Leave Studio button someplace away from the share screen. I know. I agree. It happens to me all the time. I'm so sorry. A little whiplash. All right. Here's a screen to share.
2:46
All right. We were last left you off in the 1940s. And the last Kroll and Key alumni we did was the infamous Cord Meyer IV, class of 1943. And he was one of our arch villains of all time. Yes. Most of the guys we're going to go through today are not anywhere near as exciting, but they really do enforce the pattern that we've seen and introduce a couple of new ones. So I'm going to go relatively quickly. The first notable alumni we'll get to is a George Roy Hill of 1943.
3:17
He's kind of not our normal scrolling key guy. This guy was a filmmaker. Born in Minneapolis, goes to something called the Blake School, which is a private school in Minnesota, I believe. Then goes to Yale, World War II. He's in the U.S. Marine Corps and was a transport pilot in the South Pacific. He also got called back up in the Korean War, got recalled, and became a night fighter pilot. So this guy's got some military decorations.
3:49
But what he's known for was an Academy Award winning film director. And a couple of them that just jumped out at me was he directed The Sting and also Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid, both of which starred Paul Newman and Robert Redford. Interesting. Yeah, he also did a couple of the really interesting ones. If I could just go through his litany, it's interesting. He did The World of Henry Orient, 1964, Hawaii in 1966.
4:18
Thoroughly Modern Millie, 1967. Here's the big one, Slaughterhouse-Five, 1972. Slaughterhouse-Five is a really important, when you start getting into all the different dystopian authors of the 50s and 60s, that's one of the must-read ones. The Great Waldo Pepper Slapshot, the hockey movie. The World According to Garp, and finished with a funny form in 1988. But that's nothing to do, I just thought the guy's worth pointing out. Fair enough.
4:51
Yes. I didn't get a whole lot of meaning behind it. Different movies he was in, there's no theme. He's just a good director. But it does show their need to control culture and to have influence in the cultural war of which the intelligence agencies with their actual agents assigned in Hollywood are very careful to
5:21
Yeah, and we saw that a lot with a couple of the grooming boarding schools when we went through their list of alumni. There's like a dozen or two actors and actresses that we'd heard of, and I don't really know actors and actresses, so that's saying a lot. Yes. All right, moving on from George Roy Hill. This guy by the name of Frederick B. Dent, and he's listed here as a U.S. Trade Representative, class of 1944. Why do we care about Freddie Dent? Born in 1922 in Cape May, New Jersey.
5:55
Raised in Greenwich, Connecticut. Went to high school at St. Paul's School, right down the road from me. A lot of St. Paul's. Dent plays football at Yale and was an ROTC officer. World War II, he joins the Navy in 1943, and he was a captain of a subchaser. Now, we've seen a couple of subchasers before, haven't we? Yes. So that's interesting, the submarine.
6:27
or the sub-chasers at least, were drawing from Skrull and Key. He ended up seeing action in the South Pacific where he ferried troops to beachheads, including Okinawa. So this guy was right in the middle of that. So kudos to him. He leaves the Navy and goes back to join the family business, which is textiles. They've got a bunch of mills in South Carolina. And he would spin off of one of their divisions and called it Mayfair Mills, which he would be the president of.
7:03
from 1958 to 72 and again from 77 to 88 so that's his background in business he becomes the president of the american textile manufacturers institute pretty much every industry has some kind of a you know organization like that associations yeah and their purpose of course is lobbying well what i've noticed is they have the structure after the supposedly anti-monopoly
7:38
that all of these trade associations were created and the associated labor relations to include unions so that they could continue to put their people in all of these positions to basically still have a captured monopoly because they control the trade associations, they control labor, and then of course they...
8:04
control the corporation and so it just perpetuated um that monopoly just in a desegregated way yeah that's exactly right i use the term cartels as opposed to monopoly for a reason because cartels can go both vertical and horizontal and they they basically exist for the same purpose but a cartel is a group in any given industry that unites their interests common interests to create these associations they put their people in congress
8:33
They get the bills, the protective bills they want, which create barriers to entry, which eliminates competition. This is how the cartel system in America works. And that's illustrated today in the trucking industry because it is the very trade associations that allowed to happen. They were perpetuating the driver shortages and all of that stuff. We're seeing this play out today. Yeah, very much so. And you're right to mention the unions.
9:03
And, of course, we know what that means. And that will come up again today. So keep that in front of your mind. It's a model. Have you ever heard of the Business Council? Yes. This is another one of those groups. But this is a lobbyist group that combines leaders from all the different industries. And it is a prestigious invite-only association of CEOs from the world's most influential corporations. Frederick Dent becomes a part of that leadership of it, too.
9:34
Usually they have about 100 to 200 members. Their meetings, tell me if you've heard this before, they are private and off the record. They meet several times a year. Kind of like the CFR? Similar, but all for business. Yep. But of course, you know, so these are international businesses and perhaps they've got some sugar interests down in Central America. Maybe. Think that influences foreign policy? Yeah.
10:04
The business council is supposed to serve as a nonpartisan forum for business leaders to discuss economic policy, leadership, and global issues. It was founded in 1933 as a business advisory council when FDR came in, and they were giving advice to FDR and Congress on how to write things like the acts that created the Securities Exchange Commission, the Banking Act, Social Security. These guys had a voice in all of that. The business council would become independent.
10:38
in 1961 under jfk and separated from the commerce department i went to the membership nobody current's very exciting but some recent ones guys like jeff bezos satchin and ella who's the microsoft chair and ceo albert buria pfizer was on it recently dario amadai who is the ceo of anthropic one of the ai dominant players and of course cristiano amon the current ceo of qualcomm
11:08
which is in my former backyard of San Diego. But that's the business council that Frederick Dent is a part of. And he makes him a pretty influential guy, right? Well, if you look at the current membership, whether it's Target, Best Buy, Amazon, Nike, they're all of the people that implemented DEI and all of the woke agenda. They are the ones that embrace climate change. So you can see the agenda behind this entity. Yeah, without a doubt. Without a doubt.
11:40
So the break he took from his textile plant was because Nixon appointed him the Secretary of Commerce from 1973 to 75. And he would then become Ford's trade representative from 75 to 77. Well, what's going on in that point in the 70s that a Secretary of Commerce and a trade representative would care about? We got the 73 oil crisis. You got inflation, stagflation. 70s are a mess economically. And he gets to be part of trying to solve that.
12:17
He was a real big advocate for, air quotes, free trade, and wanted to end most of the protectionist tariffs. When these guys talk about free trade, what they're talking about is trade deals that carve out special benefits for the connected few, and everyone else doesn't get the free ride. That's what free trade is. We've talked about that with NAFTA. We've talked about that with the PPIP and the other Asian trade deals that Trump nixed.
12:47
in his first term this is one of those free trade guys as libertarian i like the concept of free trade but not air quotes free trade there's a difference between the two that's like the difference between a tariff and a protective tariff okay um last thing you know about dent is he was a huge defender of nixon during watergate and nothing ever linked him to anything malignant
13:15
A line I was saying, David Kennedy at Continental Bank would have preceded him as Secretary of Commerce. And that's important to our story about Continental Bank and all of its shenanigans. It's tied to a lot of Operation Gladio stuff. That Secretary of Commerce position is pretty darn important. Very, very important. All right, let's move on to our next exciting guy. John Lindsay. Spells his name right. There we go.
13:51
Class of 1944. Are you familiar with the name? It seems vaguely familiar, but I don't know why. He was a big mayor of New York City in the 70s, late 60s, early 70s. And as we'll see, he'll go down as one of the worst mayors in American history. I bring this up because we've had, what, three, now four different scrolling key alumni have been mayor of New York. Seems like it's an important position. You'd think. All right.
14:25
Hang on a second. So John Lindsay looks like a politician, doesn't he? He does. Born in 1921, of course, in New York City. So his father is a successful lawyer and investment banker. Where do you think he went to high school? St. Paul. He went to high school first and then St. Paul's. He went to both. We're right down the road. All right, World War II. And this is interesting. These are the last generation of people that were...
15:01
Coming out of college right during World War II. And they all joined the military. And then would go their separate ways. This is going to be the last couple of those. But they're important. So he's a Navy gunnery officer. Earned battle stars through action in the invasion of Sicily. Oh, that's interesting. Yes, it is. He also had some landings in the Asian Pacific Theater. But I thought you'd enjoy the Sicily. Comes back home, goes to Yale Law.
15:37
He meets his future wife, Marianne Harrison, in 1946 at the wedding of Nancy Walker Bush, who is George H.W.'s sister. What's that? I said, oh, good gosh. That's George H.W.'s sister, Skull and Bones. And they met because, well, he was an usher and she was a bridesmaid. So we are talking about blue blood families here.
16:03
And Marianne Harrison is a distant relative of William Henry Harrison and Benjamin Harrison. Good grief. Yeah. So connected. John Lindsay goes to work in 1949 in the private sector for a law firm known as Webster and Sheffield. They were pretty much of a white shoe law firm, but they only were in existence from 1934 to 91. The rural alumni from there.
16:37
It was a guy by the name of Michael McCasey, who was, of course, the U.S. Attorney General from 2007 to 2009 under Obama. And, of course, a woman by the name of Helene Kaplan, who we've run into because she's the chairman of the Carnegie Corporation in New York. That's his law firm. Not quite as prestigious as some of the other ones we've gone to. So we get to 1951. He's, what, 29 years old, right? 30 years old. And he becomes one of the founders.
17:11
Of the Youth for Eisenhower Club. Oh, great. And in 1952, he becomes the president of the New York Young Republican Club. Very interesting. Mm-hmm. So you know who's rubbing elbows with people like, you know, the Teddy Roosevelt wing of the Roosevelt's? The Dulles brothers. They were all involved in that. Mm-hmm. These are the people that would grow into become neocons, or most of them. Yes.
17:44
He would join the Department of Justice in 1955 as an assistant to the Attorney General Herbert Brownwell. The executive assistant. That's one of the gatekeepers. Yes. And he worked mostly on civil liberty cases and the Civil Rights Act of 1957. So although he didn't always do Republican stuff, you're starting to see his progressive tendencies are coming out. Right. 1958 with Roosevelt's backing.
18:13
He wins a Republican primary and is elected to Congress. His district is called the 17th District. It's known as the Silk Stocking District of New York, Upper East Side. Still pretty conservative. While in Congress, he establishes a pretty liberal voting record. He's the supporter of, oh, let's see, federalizing education, Medicare, housing and urban development, and, of course, the National Foundation of Arts and Humanities. All of these are failed programs.
18:45
that have been a giant money suck doing things the federal government was never supposed to do. He's the lone Republican dissenter to devote to extending power of the Postmaster General to impound obscene mail. I thought that was interesting. That is. He's one of two dissenters to allow the federal interception of mail from communist countries. This is right on the tail of McCarthyism.
19:19
Yeah, because we know that the CIA was all involved in reading all of that mail. Yeah. Okay, fast forward to 1965. He wins the mayor race of New York mayor as a Republican. And he had the support of what is called the Liberal Party of New York. And that becomes important. One of the guys he beat in that mayor race was none other than Skull and Bones alumni William Buckley Jr. Oh, wow. So either way, we were getting the same.
19:52
Well, yeah, but he's cozying up with the neocons and now he's running against them. I think that's controlled opposition. I'm not sure that it's even a... You're going to get what you get regardless. Yeah, there is some of that. The false choice. Yeah. Okay, so he walks into the mayor's job and inherits a mess. New York City is a mess. And right there going on immediately is the Transport Workers Union strike, which was a big deal.
20:22
He's got bridges being shut down. He goes to the state, lobbies, tell me if this is familiar, lobbies for a municipal income tax and higher water rates and a commuter tax to pay for his programs, right? Right. What New York has done is they've been decentralizing their schools, and this leads to a big conflict with the United Federation of Teachers. Sound familiar? Yes. Teachers go on strike for seven months. It becomes a huge tension between the teachers.
20:54
Parents, it led to a lot of tension between blacks and Jews in New York City. Lindsay, of course, sides with the union. This is a Republican, mind you. Yes. New York quality of life is going to hell. Sanitation strike gives you mounds of garbage. The police are engaged in a slowdown because of their union. Firefighters are threatening a strike. Strikers shut down drawbridges and sewer treatment plants. Pretty much all auto travel in Manhattan stopped. That's what this guy walks into.
21:28
and he's not really dealing with it very well. He gets named to a National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders called the Kerner Commission. Remember, there's been a lot of riots in New York that's happening all over the country, Detroit, you name it. This guy's one of the people that gets, LBJ puts together a commission in 67 after the riots in Newark and Detroit. So what Lindsey would do is he'd go downtown to where these impoverished communities are, in his case, Harlem, and to go visit.
22:04
see what's going on on the ground. Of course, he'd always alert the press before he did that, so he made it a publicity tour. Right. The Kerner Report, which came out two years later, had Lindsay's fingerprints all over it. And the quote was, we are moving toward two societies, one black and one white, separate and unequal. So this is right there, right in the tail of the civil rights movement. You know, people thought the summer of love was bad in 2020 and 2021.
22:38
60s and 70s says hold my beer. The violence in the streets was every bit as bad and probably worse back then. Of course, LBJ completely ignores the reports and the recommendations, so they spent two years doing nothing. About a month later, riots break out in over 100 cities after they shot MLK. Lindsay took advantage of that for publicity, but he went straight into Harlem and he basically told all the blacks there, hey, I regret King's death and I'm working against poverty.
23:10
and New York City did not see riots after the MLK shooting, and Lindsey's given some credit for that. 69, you get a huge blizzard called the blizzard of 1969, and Lindsey gets criticized for giving favored treatment to Manhattan. There's accusations of bribery for public officials to clean snow. About a week later, Queens is still unplowed, and citizens are crying out about favoritism for the rich. Lindsey goes down there to visit, and he gets heckled. That's when he could walk around the snow.
23:42
and this became known as the Lindsay Blizzard, a perfect example of a mayor who's indifferent to the middle class and poor. It was one of his defining moments. Kind of sound familiar? Yeah. He was running for re-election in 1969, and there's a big backlash against him. He ended up losing the Republican primary to a state senator named Marcio, who was backed by Buckley. The Democrat candidate that year was a guy by the name of Mario Procaccino.
24:18
And Lindsey would run on the Liberal Party. He's a Liberal Party candidate, New York Liberal Party. Percocino is the guy who is describing Lindsey, coined the term limousine liberal. This guy is the original limousine liberal is John Lindsey. He would win that election with 42% of the vote. He had the backing of the blacks and Puerto Ricans and the rich areas of Manhattan and, of course, the upper middle class suburbs, which is almost all Jewish.
24:52
That became the Democrat base in New York. 1970, they have something called the Hard Hat Riot. 200 construction workers mobilized by the AFL-CIO attacked about 1,000 high school and college students who were protesting the Kent State shootings, Cambodia and Vietnam. So picture this. The mafia-run AFL-CIO mobilizes a bunch of construction workers to go beat the hell out of a bunch of high school and college students who are protesting. This is 1970.
25:23
And AFL-CIO was not just mafia run. The CIA had infiltrated it completely. And so they don't like it when people are protesting their wars? Correct. Okay, that makes perfect sense. The police, tell me if this sounds familiar, stood by and did absolutely nothing. Because they were infiltrated as well. The police union, yes. There were over 70 serious injuries. Lindsay would actually go on to criticize the police the next day.
25:54
The police labor leaders would accuse Lindsay of undermining the confidence of the public of police. Several thousand construction workers and longshoremen would protest Lindsay, calling him the Red Mayor and a commie rat. 1970, the New York Times prints Frank Serpico's claims of widespread police corruption in New York City. The Knapp Commission is formed. And by this time, the cops don't even want Lindsay attending their funerals.
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He had been considered as a VP possibility for the Republicans in 1968. Southern conservatives wouldn't have him, so that's how Speer Ragnew got the nod. 1971, Lindsey and his wife cut ties with the Republican Party and registered as Democrats. 72, he launched a brief bid for the presidential nomination. He did okay in the early primaries, but New York's problems were just an anchor around his neck, and he's getting accused of neglecting New York City to run for president.
27:03
A lot of other people have ticked off because he's supporting all these low-income housing projects. And he'd end up leaving office, the mayor's office, in 1973. Became a commentator and a regular guest on ABC's Good Morning America. Of course he did. Tried to run for Senate in 1980, but finished third in the primary. He would die in 2000 at the age of 79. Complications from pneumonia and Parkinson's. But his legacy is interesting. 1972 Gallup poll.
27:38
60% of New York City said he had done poorly, and 9% said he did good. That's pretty damning. Yeah, it's about the worst approval rating I've ever seen. In 1978, the New York Times called Lindsay an exile in his own city. He was that hated. In a 1993 survey by the University of Illinois at Chicago, they ranked Lindsay as the 16th worst American big city mayor from the years 1820 to 1993. Wow.
28:10
So he is one of the all-time worst mayors, ladies and gentlemen, John Lindsay, scrolling key. But he did his job for the people that he actually works for. Yeah, and we saw all those New York mayors, one after the other, connected. All right, let's go to the 1950s. Our first gentleman, this guy by the name of Thomas Ostrom Enders, class of 1953. Now, these guys all graduated Yale after World War II.
28:45
So they didn't just jump into the war or the military. A lot of these guys, what you're going to see is they jump straight into diplomacy, career diplomats. And that's a brand new phenomena. These career diplomats, they work their way up the ranks. They spend 20 or 30 years and eventually they get their ambassadorships. I'm going to touch on that for a second. I'm going to go off screen for one second. Well, we know that prior.
29:15
to this timeframe that most of the ambassadors were career. A lot of them came from the CIA. William Polly's a good example of that. And all of them had that type of experience. And post-World War II, you're not going to find the predominant military slash big family
29:44
uh affiliations it's going to go basically to a more um it's still corrupt because you have the foreign service which supposedly is supposed to be the farm team for ambassadors but what you often time find is the ambassadors are appointed for political reasons and then you have the cia people pretending to be foreign service that
30:12
eventually make it up to ambassadorship and then generally are an ambassador where there's going to be a coup. It's exactly right. You see these people show up right before and during the big regime change and major shifts in geopolitics. They've got to have their trusted people in there. We haven't talked too much about the occult side of these secret societies. I'm not an expert on the occult and neither are you.
30:40
There's some suggestion, of course, that all of these have some kind of occult symbolism, ritual, and stuff like that, and that may be one of the many ways that they keep people from straying off the farm. I don't know, so I'm not going to comment on the occult side, but it's definitely something to consider. Well, even if they're not specifically occult, every trappings of secret societies is cultish.
31:07
And regardless of where it stems from, you can certainly see the similarities of the satanic death cult, because that's what these people do. They go around and they're responsible for killing millions of people. And so you can't, like, disassociate the two. It's always in the background of all of these stories. Agreed. Well, let's jump into Mr. Enders. Why does he come up on our radar? He's fun.
31:40
He's described as an American diplomat, born in 1931 in Hartford, Connecticut. His father was Ostrom Enders, and he was the president of the Hartford National Bank. His uncle was John Franklin Ender, who won the 1954 Nobel Laureate in Physiology for Medicine. We talked about him because Uncle John was also a member of Skrull and Key, and we covered him a few months back.
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Uncle John is known as the father of modern vaccines. This guy's uncle. That's him, okay? Yep. We already went over his uncle and went through this stuff, but that's the guy. That's his nephew. Thomas Enders, of course, goes to Phillips Exeter Academy to get groomed. Goes to Yale, becomes Skrull and Key. He won a couple of awards. He won the Alpheus Henry Snow Prize and the Warren Memorial High Scholarship Prize.
32:43
So he's top of his class. Gets out of Yale and gets a Master of Arts from the University of Paris in 1955. And another Master of Arts from Harvard in 1957. So he's definitely being groomed. Oh, without a doubt. Comes from the right kind of family. Went to the right kind of school. Got all the right grades. So in 1958, at the age of 27, he joins the U.S. Foreign Service.
33:17
As an intelligence research specialist of all things. So basically he's CIA. Yeah. U.S. Foreign Service is part of the U.S. State Department. CIA is part of the State Department. This is going to be the civilian version of the CIA. Yeah. 1960 to 63, he becomes a visa officer and economic officer in Stockholm. Why is that important? Sweden.
33:47
Not just Sweden, but the visa officer part determines who gets to come and go to the United States. It's probably an important position. Given all the stuff that we've talked about Sweden being involved in with the Wallenbergs and all of that, it's very, very important. Yeah, and Sweden is going to come up a ton when we get into the foundations. So everybody keep Sweden in the front of your mind.
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1963, he's a supervisory economist at the Bureau of European Affairs. 66, he's a special assistant in the Office of the Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs. Political Affairs is basically the first leg of the Gladio operation. It's the political warfare branch. 1968, he becomes the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Monetary Affairs.
34:54
Here's what gets fun. 1969, he becomes the deputy chief of station, I'm sorry, chief of mission in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. It's a country that we tore apart. Yeah, we'll get to that later. We'll talk about that today. 71 to 73, he's the deputy chief of mission in Phnom Penh. Phnom Penh, that's Cambodia. And what were we doing then in Cambodia? Oh, I don't know. Running any drugs?
35:25
We dropped more bombs in Cambodia than we did during the entire World War II. Yep. That would have been the Ho Chi Minh Trail. And he's there as the deputy chief of mission. He survived a car bomb where two others were killed. Holy crap. Because they all knew that the U.S. was behind all of it. We sent in a special operations team into Cambodia to blow up an airport dressed up as Chinese people.
35:58
Yeah, this is all black ops. None of this has been revealed to Congress at the time. This is black ops, totally off the books. Yes. And that's where they're setting up their drug smuggling. Yeah. So he's there. 1973 to 1976, he's the Assistant Undersecretary of State for Economic and Business Affairs. He is appointed by none other than Rockefeller stooge Henry Kissinger. That's crazy. His job.
36:31
is to corral allies into a common approach to the energy crisis what's going on this is when opec is flexing its muscle the international energy administration iea it was supposed to be a counterweight to opec and he's trying to push all the allies to join with this that's his job congress passes the energy policy and conservation act of 1975 here we have that magic word conservation again
37:00
When they start pushing quote unquote renewable and energy, alternative energy resources. Hmm. You got this guy, undersecretary, who is appointed by a Rockefeller stooge who's going to push the same Rockefeller initiatives on all this green garbage. This is where it happened and how. He's there creating the policy. We discover oil in Alaska. There's a big issue with the pipeline. Should it run through Canada or should it run through the ship?
37:32
Enders is the guy who routed it through ships, so we didn't get the Canadian pipeline back then. And this would set the stage. He gets attacked big time. So this is basically, he wanted Canada to develop the Alberta tar sands, but he wanted the Alaska, the trans-Alaska pipeline system to have its own route. And after doing all that, from 1976 to 79, he gets appointed the U.S. ambassador to Canada.
38:01
But I want to point something out. He's been working in the State Department for the last, oh, I don't know, 15, 20 years. We've gone from a Democrat to a Republican. Now we're back to a Democrat. And the rest of the whole diplomatic corps, their jobs don't change. Correct. Maybe a few ambassadors do. But this guy has been working under a Republican administration for Republican endeavors. And, you know, he stays on in 1976 when Carter gets there. And he appoints him to be the ambassador. Actually, he was.
38:30
Ford would have appointed him, but Carter kept him on for another three years. Yeah. It just shows you that our foreign policy is not dictated by who's in the White House. No. It's these career diplomats that have more power than the president. Yep. So Enders is running around making public speeches to the Canadian people, which is kind of unusual decorum. And he gets attacked for it, for interfering in Canadian internal affairs. He sets the stage for the Canadian-U.S. Free Trade Agreement.
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predecessor to NAFTA. Of course, him and his wife both speak fluent French, so they get along pretty well there. He's running around Canada, hosting parties, pushing quote-unquote, well, here it is, free trade, which is basically reciprocal reduction in trade barriers. GATT would come along later and bring in Japan and the EU, and this is where we lost all of our manufacturing jobs in America. Thank you, Mr. Anders. He proposed to reduce nuisance tariffs on raw materials.
39:35
All of this revolves around NAFTA. Newsome tariffs. That works too. Anything interesting in the chat? No, just keep going. Yeah, Jerome, I thought of Ender's Game as well. I actually enjoyed that movie. Never read the book, so. Okay, what's Ender's do next? 81, he becomes the Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs. That's basically Latin America.
40:10
Anything going on in 81? Oh, just a little bit. You know, we're getting ready to kick off the Iran-Contra. Exactly. Enders was pissed off at the New York Times and the Washington Post because they reported on what's called the El Mazote Massacre in El Salvador. Enders said that didn't happen. They reported over 800 civilians were killed. Enders says, no, it was just a battle between guerrillas and the army. No sign of civilian massacre. And by the way, there's only 300 people who even live in Mazote.
40:46
So that was a big scandal. Yeah, that's not true. That was the CIA's death squad. Yeah, yeah. How many people were actually killed for that? Probably thousands, we found out later. Yeah. Enders was out there claiming publicly there were only 300 people and they were just guerrillas fighting the army. Well, and by guerrillas, he means the indigenous people of El Salvador that didn't want to be controlled by the CIA. That's the label they like to put on them.
41:19
So for doing that wonderful job in 1983, he gets appointed to be the U.S. ambassador to Spain. That's kind of an important one because Spain is debating whether to stay in NATO. And they're also trying to, they're debating whether they want to enter into what's called the European Community, which was the predecessor of the European Union. He'd been forced, Enders had been forced out of IA Affairs.
41:53
by hardliners like Cillian, Judge Clark, William Casey, and Ed Meese. So the neocons have moved in harder, pushing harder than this guy. He was considered too soft. But he gets to Spain. He's trying to renew the mutual defense treaty with Spain. We had air and naval bases there. Spain's got a socialist party. Who gave us the air and naval bases there? Otto Skorzeny. Go ahead. I thought you might mention that.
42:24
Spain's got a rising social party known as the PSOE. They're opposed to NATO. Their prime minister, Gonzalez, he proposed a national referendum so the people would vote whether we should join NATO or not, and nobody knew the outcome. It was close. The NATO referendum would then pass. Enders was deeply involved in this. Now, these hardliners back home started requesting Enders' loyalty, and even Nancy Reagan got involved in it and actually gets him replaced as the U.S. ambassador to Spain.
42:55
But they got their NATO vote. He did his job. And after that, Enders was kind of persona non grata after Nancy Reagan personally stuck her nose and got him removed. He would basically create the Enders Endowment and this fund that funds graduate programs for graduate students to travel to Canada. And that's where his loyalty questions came in. Apparently he's a little bit too much of a Canadiaphobe.
43:24
Anders would pass away in 1996 at the age of 64, and that was the end of Mr. Anders. And keep in mind, the Canadian relationship is very important because there's a Canadian mafia up there. That's where the Bromfonds are from. There's a lot of trafficking that goes on between Canada and the United States. And I find that interesting that he set up.
43:53
a program that basically perpetuates the dialogue between it. Yeah, he's an interesting guy. But he's a really good example of all the right connections and just spent his entire time in the State Department. Yeah. All right, let's get to our next one. Philip Heyman. Well, we've talked about him before. You want to do the next one I want? Make sure. Yeah, here he is. Class of 1954. Born in 1932 in Pittsburgh, PA.
44:26
His father owned an insurance agency. He's a graduate of Pittsburgh private school named the Shadyside Academy. They should all be called the Shadyside Academy, right? You should. He goes to Yale, gets tapped, scrolling key. And once again, we have another recipient of a Fulbright grant. Oh, yippee. So we're going to indoctrinate him early.
44:55
Yeah, and we do that by sending him to Sorbonne in Paris to study from 1954 to 55. Spends two years in the Air Force's Office of Special Investigations, where his job was to review security clearances. Kind of important gatekeeper position. Yeah. Comes back, then goes to Harvard Law, and walks into a clerkship for Supreme Court Justice John Harlan during the 1960-61 term.
45:29
Harlan wrote a couple of opinions at that point in time that I'm very much in agreement with. He was involved with my favorite case, which is, of course, Reynolds v. Sims. But this guy clerked for him. So not just anybody gets to clerk for a Supreme Court justice. So that's a big deal. 1961, he goes straight to work for the Solicitor General Archibald Cox. Solicitor General, if everyone remembers, that's the person who argues on behalf of the administration in front of the Supreme Court. So fresh out of law school.
46:03
This guy is arguing in front of the Supreme Court. He argued six cases on his own at a very young age. 1965, he leaves the Solicitor General's office and he becomes a deputy in the Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs for the State Department. What's that mean to you, Colonel? Well, they're in charge of the physical security around the world of all embassies. They take care of the cons.
46:35
consulates all over the world, the actual physical security. The only, he has literally no experience at doing this, zero. You can't even consider, depending on what he actually did at OSI, so for people who don't know, NCIS, OSI is the equivalent of that for the Air Force, where they send out people undercover to do basically
47:02
I wouldn't call them covert operations, but they do do that. They will come to your base pretending to be a staff sergeant in a particular squadron to basically infiltrate that squadron if there's allegations of wrongdoing there. So they are kind of the covert investigative arm of the Air Force. And so I find it striking that this guy is going to come in as the deputy.
47:30
for something that significant at the state department with literally no experience yeah that struck me too such a young age too in fact he was there for a year at consular affairs before he became the acting administrator again with no experience which tells me a lot especially during that period of time because in the 1960s if you look around the world there's lots of nefarious
48:00
regime change operations going on. And this would be a critical role because if you're going to overthrow governments in foreign countries like we did in Brazil in the 60s, that job becomes really significant because of the blowback. Like we had an ambassador that was kidnapped actually during this time. It may have been a little earlier.
48:30
But yeah, that's a huge role. Indeed. And again, how old is he? Not very. It's 1965. I said he was born what year? 1932. So he's 33 years old. That's crazy. With no experience. See, he issued a reprimand to the head of a passport office for asking U.S. embassies in Paris and Moscow to report on the activities of a Harvard history professor.
49:00
anti-nuclear activist H. Stuart Hughes. The Bureau would then learn that the FBI had been making surveillance requests for two decades without the FBI director's knowledge. Look, that's the sinkhole. And Heyman's part of uncovering that. This is the beginning of the pushback against government surveillance, but it's been going on for two decades, and this is 1965, 1966. So basically going back to World War II and basically the onset of the CIA.
49:33
They've been spying on the American people. Yep. In 1967, he becomes the executive assistant to Undersecretary of State Nicholas Katzenbach. He pushed for review of the denial of security clearance of John Patton Davies. Davies was an old China hand whose clearance was revoked previously, I think by JFK. I'm sorry, by John Foster Dulles revoked him for 14 years during the McCarthy period.
50:06
And Heyman comes in there and gets this guy's clearance finally reinstated after 14 years. Now, John Foster Dulles and Alan Dulles are no longer in their positions at the time. He then goes to Harvard Law as a visiting professor to teach in 1969, one of the very few faculty who had non-academic experience. He would become faculty at the Harvard Kennedy School, which is where our good buddy Jake Sullivan is now teaching, and is a colleague.
50:41
At the Harvard Law of a gentleman by the name of Archibald Cox. Huh. Archibald Cox then gets, shortly thereafter, is confirmed special counsel for Watergate. Heyman is one of the few faculty members he asks to join him. Of course. So one of the big issues that Heyman had to face was the three U.S. attorneys who prosecuted the Watergate burglars. The Senate.
51:16
They were mad at Cox because he didn't get them to brief him before his own Senate hearings of confirmation. So there's a little bit of a problem with territoriality of the U.S. attorneys. They were worried that their criminal cases were going to get compromised if John Dean testifies in front of the Senate. So Archibald Cox made Heyman make the argument in court that you can't have John.
51:44
Dean, testify in front of the Senate because you're going to mess up our criminal cases. But it was half-hearted. Heyman got to take the loss. And he wanted to make sure to emphasize, we're not trying to hide anything from the public. They absolutely were trying to keep that image from appearing. And, of course, that did happen when Nixon fires Cox in the Saturday Night Massacre. Heyman was supportive of Cox but stayed on the investigation under Jaworski, who was his replacement, Jaworski. And that's pretty much Heyman.
52:18
He was right there during all the Watergate stuff. He kind of came into the background once all the Deep Throat stuff started coming out. The rest of his career is not very remarkable. He died of a stroke in 2021 at the age of 89. Interesting. Yeah, his early career was fun, huh? Yeah. But he ends up, here's a guy who's been involved in consular affairs, OSI, and yet we find him as part of the Watergate investigative special counsel.
52:52
Did you click on his son? No, I don't have it handy. Go ahead. So his son is Stephen Heyman, who becomes an assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Massachusetts. I find this very interesting. Heyman is infamous for his role in U.S. v. Swartz, a federal criminal case directly led to the suicide of
53:23
And I can probably put that in air quotes. Suicide of activist Aaron Swartz. Heyman also was the lead prosecutor in the investigation of TJX hack, which directly led to the suicide of the ethical hacker Jonathan James. That's weird. A lot of suicides. Yeah. Very, very weird. Okay. We can go on. Okay. We got a Warren Zimmerman.
53:57
This picture of him speaking at the Library of Congress in 2002 later on. Mr. Zimmerman is class of 1956. Born in 1935 in Philadelphia, PA. Goes to Yale, gets tapped on the shoulder for scrolling key. Don't have anything on his high school, sorry. Didn't bother looking it up either. After Yale, he gets what's called a, wait for it, Fulbright Scholarship. So for those of you who have not followed this whole series,
54:28
That's basically another CIA grooming tool. Go ahead. Yeah, without a doubt. In fact, that might even be more of a State Department grooming tool. But as we've pointed out a million times. They're symbiotic. Yeah. There is not a dividing line between State and CIA. Correct. We just live in separate rooms in the same house. So he studies at King's College of Cambridge with a focus on European history and related fields. 1958.
55:02
He becomes a Carnegie Teaching Fellow at Yale in history. Of course. He does a brief attempt at journalism, and then in 1961, at the age of 26, he joins the U.S. Foreign Service. Mr. Zimmerman is inspired by JFK. Ask not what your country can do for you, but ask what you can do for your country. And he volunteers for the Foreign Service. He immediately, in 1962-64, he is the consular and political officer.
55:35
At the U.S. Embassy in Caracas, Venezuela. What was going on in Venezuela during that time? Go ahead. Go for it. I was being sarcastic. It was basically being ran by the CIA. It was part of Operation Condor set up, even though it was never included officially as part of Operation Condor. You had USAID, Office of Public Safety, the CIA, drugs.
56:05
money laundering. That's where Jeb Bush's first job was in banking. He was at a money laundering bank helping his dad out. It is infested just like all of the rest of the Latin American countries that the USAID Office of Public Safety and Office of Transition Initiatives destroyed. That's what was going on in Caracas at the time.
56:33
And he's the consular and political officer. Probably doesn't know anything that's going on, though, right? Which is basically a front for being a CIA, but go ahead. 1964 and 65, he receives Serbo-Croatian language training at the Foreign Service Institute. So he learns how to speak Serbian and Croatian. 1965 through 69, he is the press and political officer at the U.S. Embassy in, once again, Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Didn't we just see that a little bit ago?
57:08
Yes, we did. Lots is going on in Yugoslavia right now. Okay. And we're going to get to that. He becomes an analyst in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research. His focus is on policy in Africa, Latin America, and Eastern Europe. And what time is this? This is 68 to 70. Okay. Right after the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968.
57:41
So he's pretty much on state's desk for this stuff. So that research, that intelligence and research division is the specific belly button from the CIA into the state department. They put CIA officers in that. That's the one Eleanor Dulles was in when her brother was the secretary of state and Alan Dulles was the CIA director. She headed that office.
58:10
So, no coincidence that we've got one of our Skrull and Key alumni sitting there? Correct. He gets a job in 1970 through 73 as the speechwriter for Secretary of State William Rogers and his successor, none other than Rockefeller stooge Henry Kissinger. 1970 to 73, Kissinger is busy going over to China in secret to opening up China for the Rockefellers and everything that would happen for the next 50 years. This guy's writing the speeches.
58:44
Which means he has firsthand knowledge of everything. And he's basically got an intelligence background. Uh-huh. And a scrolling key background. Yes. 1973 through 75, he becomes the Deputy Counselor for Political Military Affairs at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. Another CIA post. Mm-hmm. Gets reposted back to Moscow in 1981 as a political officer.
59:16
Until 1986, he becomes the head of the U.S. Delegation of Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe in Vienna and got promoted to the rank of ambassador. In 1989, he is named the U.S. Ambassador to Yugoslavia. That timing is very interesting because right then is the rise of Slobodan Milosevic. Ethnic tensions are rising and the entire Yugoslavian Federation is collapsing while he is the ambassador.
59:50
Well, I would argue the CIA is collapsing it. Well, let's find out. So there's a guy named Robert Tucker who's involved in putting together what's called the Lisbon Agreement that would have brought peace. And Zimmerman is single-handedly given credit for scuttling that agreement and keeping peace from happening in Yugoslavia. Correct. That deal would have been signed to split the country into what's called a canton system like they do in Switzerland, where you have ethnic power sharing on all levels.
1:00:19
Devolution of central government to local ethnic communities. It's a form of republicanism that could have worked. Zimmerman shot it down. He went and met with a Bosnian president, a governor in Malaysia. Izet Vigovic. God, that's a tough one. Izet Vigovic would withdraw his signature from the Lisbon Agreement after meeting with Zimmerman, and war breaks out three weeks later. The entire Bosnian-Serbian war could have been stopped, but this guy made it happen.
1:00:51
That's a true statement. That happened right across the Adriatic Sea while I was stationed in Italy. You could have run into Zimmerman, huh? Yeah. British advisor Alfred Sherman would write in 1997 describing Zimmerman and U.S. involvement as lying and cheating, fomenting war in which civilians are the main casualty in which ancient hatreds feed upon themselves. Yeah, I would argue that the ancient...
1:01:23
hatreds are aggravated on purpose to break nation states apart that's certainly why you draw artificial borders and force people with ancient hatreds to have to live among each other we did that throughout the middle east we did that throughout europe correct there's a journalist back then by the name of samantha power oh yeah same samantha power she wrote that zimmerman's career was marked
1:01:52
by frustration with the resistance of the Bush administration to intervene. Zimmerman would then support military interventionism in Bosnia and Serbia. And we bombed the hell out of it. Yeah, he was later critical for not doing it soon enough. Yeah, we can't kill enough people. And now everyone's homeless, and of course his job in 1992-94, he becomes the coordinator for refugee affairs.
1:02:23
Which basically means all of the people that we used in theater to instigate all of that stuff is going to be ferreted out of there and resettled in the United States. That's basically what that means. We're going to bring all of the people that work with the CIA into the United States so that they're not a casualty of the new governments that we're going to install. That's the reward for being CIA operatives.
1:02:52
Very much so. And this guy took the job of making sure to coordinate the refugee affairs. He oversaw the war and he oversaw the relocation of the people that caused the war into the United States. Pretty good guy, huh? These are under two separate presidents, just to show you the continuity of operations. Yeah. In fact, he would then resign from the State Department in 94 because Clinton was reluctant to intervene. So he was pissed off at two different reasons.
1:03:24
For not being hawkish enough. We were better war mongers, wouldn't you say? Yeah. He'd go on to teach at John Hopkins in Columbia until 2000, and he wrote a couple of books. One of them, he writes, is called Origins of Catastrophe, Yugoslavia and Its Destroyers. America's Last Ambassador Tells What Happened and Why. And I would highly recommend you read this or give it a shot on a book review with CanCon and Ash, because I think you're going to find, just like your most recent book,
1:03:55
A lot of what he says is absolute hogwash. Yes. The other book cracks me up. It's called First Great Triumph, How Five Americans Made Their Country a World Power. The five Americans he lists are Teddy Roosevelt. Oh, good God. Our first progressive president. Henry Cabot Lodge, the Boston Brahmins. We know all about the Cabots and the Lodges. John Hay.
1:04:25
Related to John, the namesake for John A. Whitney, one of our heroes. Elihu Root, who we've talked about many times. And a gentleman we haven't talked about much by the name of Admiral Alfred T. Mahan. He basically gets the title of being America's first globalist. Mahan was studying big battleships and stuff. We named a bunch of ships after him later on. He wanted America to become an empire at the turn of the 19th century. Sorry, turn of the 20th.
1:04:58
That's Admiral Mahan, and it's one of the five people. This guy, Zimmerman, the war hawk, wrote a book about these five people, said they're the ones that made America a great power, despite the fact that they didn't follow the Constitution in any way, shape, or form. Yeah, Mahan is talked a lot about at War College as being like this big hero in Navy lore.
1:05:28
looking back on him, knowing what I know now, he basically was the exact opposite of Smedley Butler. He was, you know, part and parcel of that Teddy Roosevelt kind of take whatever you want mentality. Yeah, and we've talked about that time period of the 1890s when the U.S. first flexed their muscles with the Monroe Doctrine over the incident over Venezuela, or actually
1:06:00
Cuba, Puerto Rico. Yeah. That's our whole generation coming out of the 1890s. America was ready. We'd gone through our Industrial Revolution. We had more wealth than any other nation at this point in time through the robber barons. We were ready to flex our muscle on the international stage. And these are the guys that made that happen. And he writes a book celebrating it. Bastard. Go to hell, Zimmerman. We're done with you.
1:06:29
Last guy we're going to do is a guy by the name of Roscoe Rocky Sudarth, 1956 class. It was hard to find a picture of him, but I did eventually. He was born in 1935 in Louisville, Kentucky. Goes to Yale, scrolling key. Then goes off to Oxford where he went to new college and got a BA in modern history. Studies systems analytics, sorry, systems analysis at MIT.
1:07:04
That's important. He would serve in the Air National Guard, 1958 to 61. Then he joins, stop me if you've heard this before, the U.S. Foreign Service in 1961. So we've got a new pathway. You go basically from scrolling key, take a couple of years to study abroad, and you come back to America to join our State Department. Wow. Why do we want all these people being trained overseas?
1:07:38
Well, especially the ones that go to Oxford. It's a brainwashing. It's basically just a grooming school. We'll talk about that a lot more when we get into the... You know what you can think of? So we talked about the grooming schools in the K through 12. This is kind of considered like the finishing school, right? Like the Southern Bells go to the finishing school. This is their finishing school.
1:08:15
Yeah, that's a pretty good analogy. I think that fits very well. And of course, they're getting invited to the right dinner parties. They're getting introduced around. It's very important. Okay, so he joins the Foreign Service in 61. From 61 to 63, he was the third secretary at the U.S. Embassy in Mali. In 63, I don't think anything was necessarily happening in Mali right then, besides the usual.
1:08:46
What do you mean wasn't happening in Maui? Maui's part of Indonesia. Yeah, but that's 61 to 63, wasn't it? Wasn't that a little bit more on the gold side? Didn't that start right after or did I miss something? Well, we tried to coup them before we actually couped them. So, yeah, he was there part of the whole Sukarno thing when we were trying to overthrow Sukarno. We were setting him up with the...
1:09:12
In Los Angeles, they rented a movie studio and dressed someone up as Sukarno and they were making porno flicks. And basically the CIA was going to release that to incriminate Sukarno. All that was going on during this time. Oh, that was 61. I had it later. So there's a period between the late 1950s where we shot down the one.
1:09:34
guy that was in the um aircraft and we found out that they were trying to overthrow him and then the actual coup happened in the later 60s the successful one yeah that's where i guess i was saying he missed out on that but long story short it's a pretty interesting first post yes from 63 to 65 he takes arabic language at the foreign service institute the u.s embassy in beirut 65 to 67 he becomes the second
1:10:07
secretary to the u.s embassy in yemen so gatekeeper 67 to 70 he's at the u.s embassy in tripoli libya sure does show up at some interesting spots and from 70 to 72 he's back in america sitting on the u.s embassy uh sitting on the tripoli desk at the u.s i'm sorry at the foggy bottom he's on the libyan desk at foggy bottom so he's now our expert on libya
1:10:43
Bit of a problem, what's going on in Libya in the 70s. He ducks out, goes back to MIT in 72 and gets a Master of Science. This is where you're going to start seeing the diplomacy as they're starting to put in the systems analysis, game theory and all that sort of stuff. He's one of those guys. This is where the State Department is making its transition. And he goes back to MIT to become a Masters of that. I think this is a negative on our foreign policy long term because all these models.
1:11:14
Don't really work in the real world. They just look really good in a boardroom and on paper. Right. It's not the best way of making decisions. 72, he becomes a political military officer in the Bureau of Political Military Affairs at State. It's another one of those positions. They're kind of wide swath. Then, from 75 to 79, he becomes deputy chief of mission for the U.S. Embassy in Amman, Jordan. From there, he becomes the...
1:11:48
Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs. What does that mean, Colonel? Political warfare. He's the number two with a background in the Middle East, applying game theory to our foreign diplomacy. 82 through 85, he becomes the chief of mission for the U.S. Embassy at a small place called Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. What's going on in 82 to 85 with Saudi Arabia? That's the launch of Iran-Qatar. Yeah. So you have...
1:12:28
Well, probably the most important thing you have going on there is BCCI, the bank that the Saudis and the UAE basically funded to create a money laundering operation for the CIA to cover, to hide all of their arms sales and their drug money laundering, etc. Saudi Arabia was front and center in that. You also have Saudi Arabia.
1:12:57
Coming over around that same time, that's the beginning of the savings and loan setup where you have Adan Khashoggi in the United States, who obviously is from Saudi Arabia. He's running all over doing, you know, illicit arms sales. So a lot of stuff going on at that time. Well, he leaves Saudi Arabia.
1:13:22
In 85-87, he becomes the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs while all this gun running is going on in the countries under his purview. Correct. The odds of him not knowing about every single bit of that are greater than zero? I'd say they hover right at zero. So in 87, Ronald Reagan nominates him to be the U.S. Ambassador to Jordan. He checks all the boxes, career diplomat.
1:13:53
Skrull and Key came from the Wright family. He's now a U.S. ambassador to Jordan. And that's a very important ambassadorship at the time because we got the rising Iraqi tensions. And he's the guy observing the buildup of Saddam's army. He came out there and said the U.S. signals were being misinterpreted by Saddam Hussein. And Saddam was looking at the U.S.-America signaling as a green light. He's the guy that said that. I think it's fair to say.
1:14:25
Saddam didn't need a green light because he had someone telling him exactly, hey, you can go invade Kuwait. April Gillespie. There you go. 1991, Mr. Rocky Sudark becomes the Deputy Inspector General of the State Department. Now, we know what the IGs have basically become over the last 30 years. They're cover-up artists. So he was covering up all the Desert Storm stuff. 91 to 94, I would think so.
1:15:00
Yep. Oh, and that's when all of the Operation Gladio stuff broke. It broke in 1990. So any questions about any of that to the U.S. would have went through this office as well. His last diplomatic job is he was an international affairs advisor and a professor at the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island. Which is what tells you what's broke with our war colleges.
1:15:31
Indeed, and he retires in 1995 with a rank of career minister. He's not done, though, because of his Middle Eastern background, he becomes the president of something called the Middle East Institute. The Middle East Institute is exactly what it sounds like. It's a think tank, kind of a lobbyist organization, trying to outreach to Middle Eastern interests. It's founded by someone by the name of George Camp Kaiser. He was the director.
1:16:01
Of the Cuban American Sugar Company and the Guantanamo Sugar Company. And, yeah, that's before Cuba falling. So obviously we know his connections, and now he's founding something called the Middle East Institute that our buddy Rocky Sudarth succeeds as the president of. Yeah, my investigation into all of these institutes is their CIA fronts. Well, let's see if that turns out to be true. Because...
1:16:32
Kaiser previously had been a first lieutenant in the U.S. Signal Corps. What's the U.S. Signal Corps? Intelligence. CIA. Code-breaking OSS. After Kaiser's death, his Middle East Institute, they had several other part-time presidents. One of them was Kermit Roosevelt Jr. Mr. CIA Iran himself. Sorry if you don't remember, Kermit Roosevelt is the guy who overthrew, who installed the Shah.
1:17:08
Mosaddegh. Yeah, Mosaddegh. And, of course, he is a descendant of the other Roosevelts. Grandson of Teddy Roosevelt. Yes. This organization, the Middle East Institution, would then be funded by some foundations. Want to guess which two? Rockefeller, Carnegie. Close. Rockefeller and Ford. Ford. Okay. Well, they are all priests. That's who this guy's working for.
1:17:37
In the 1980s, this organization was led by a guy by the name of Lucius D. Battle and Ambassador Christopher Van Hollen. And if that name sounds familiar, yeah, he's the father of Maryland Senator Chris Van Hollen, who flew down to meet with Abrago Garcia, the illegal alien. So Van Hollen's dad worked at the CIA place? Uh-huh. Oh, I see. And he was married to a woman named Edith.
1:18:07
Eliza Farnsworth, who is a CIA Russian studies expert, and she would become the chief analyst on Afghanistan for the State Department. You just can't make this shit up. And their kid is now a senator from Maryland. Holy crap. So Sue D'Arthur would then become the president of this organization from 96 to 01. And it's currently funded by a bunch of United Arab Emirates and Saudi sources and the Middle East Journal's first publication.
1:18:38
dates all the way back to 1947 right when we had the found the formation of the cia and it's important the uae and saudi because as i just said they're the same two countries that foment all of this they created the funding for the bcci bank to do all of the illicit weapons and narco money laundering um
1:19:04
you know, obviously prior to NBS, but the Saudi and UAE is in bed with all of this nefarious crap with the CIA. Yeah, without a doubt. And they've got very sophisticated intelligence organizations of their own. Yep. And they have a lot of money to spend over here on NGOs, et cetera. And that's the way the world actually functions. That's going to be it for the 1950s. When I look into these, the rest of the ones more recent,
1:19:35
alumni. Let's finish up in the 50s. It really set a new trend of these people, these groomed individuals to basically run our foreign policy. We get many examples of how high up they get. The people that aren't connected don't get those jobs. What we see throughout the 60s and on, we don't have as good of records, but you see a lot of people involved in the media. I'm just going to go over these names pretty quickly. The first one to jump off is A. Bartlett Giamatti.
1:20:06
Former president of Yale and, of course, the president of Major League Baseball. He's the commissioner. So I knew Bart Giamatti as a kid, but he came from Yale. He was a scrolling key. We have Timothy Mellon, who is the grandson of Andrew Mellon, who we've talked about before. BNY Mellon, a banker that's involved in a lot of this stuff. Timothy is one of the heirs to that fortune. We have Gary Trudeau, Doonesbury's cartoonist, one of our favorites.
1:20:39
Somebody by the name of Stone Phillips, who was on Dateline NBC. Gideon Rose, the editor of the CFR's magazine, Foreign Affairs, was class of 1985. Fareed Zakaria, who was the editor of Newsweek and host of a CNN show, was scrolling key, class of 1986. You're going to see a lot of media coming here. Dahlia Lithwick, we start getting females involved. She was an editor at Newsweek and Slate.
1:21:14
So you wonder why you can't trust the mainstream media? She was classed in 1990. 1994, we have Jeannie Rhee, R-H-E-E. Jeannie Rhee was a member of the Mueller team, special counsel. Yep. And the obstructive justice. Jeannie Rhee is a swamp critter and a lawfare person. Her parents actually grew up in Korea. And she's from Yale University, of course.
1:21:45
And basically went straight to become an assistant DA of District of Columbia in 2000. Worked for WilmerHale. We've talked about them before. She provided counsel to former Attorney General Eric Holder. So that's who this is. She represented Hillary Clinton during the private email lawsuit. She represented Obama's National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes in a 2015 racketeering case. And nobody talks about that one.
1:22:16
She would then, Jeannie Rhee would join Paul Weiss, Rifkin, Wharton, and Garrison in a practice in 19, in 2025. I'm sorry, 1919. 2019. In 2025, she was targeted, they said, in his retaliatory campaign against attorneys. And I believe she's one of the ones that lost her security clearance. But that's Jeannie Rhee. She was scrolling key. We've got a great guy by the name of Tom Perriello. He's a U.S. Congressman and Executive Director of George Soros' Open Society Foundation.
1:22:50
More media, we've got Ari Shapiro, the co-host of All Things Considered for NPR. And we've got Elizabeth Watkins, who's the CEO of the Roosevelt Institute. The last name on this smaller list of the later people is someone we've covered before. And that is none other than my neighbor, Maggie Goodlander, wife of Jake Sullivan, Joe Biden's National Security Director.
1:23:17
And most recently, we did a show on Maggie and Jake. You can find that on both of our channels if you scroll back. But we didn't do anything about what Maggie's been up to recently. And if you don't know, Maggie Goodlander is CIA through and through. We thought she and Jake looked like secret society. She wasn't listed back then as Skrull and Teach. Now she is, which makes perfect sense. And we think Jake Sullivan was probably Skrull and Bones. So this would be the first documented case of a Bonesman marrying.
1:23:47
A key person. And I hope to God they're not going to have kids. Because I do not know what that was going to be. But most recently. Miss Maggie Goodlander. Congressman from the great state of New Hampshire Shire. Former CIA. She is according to Svetlana Lakova. Now Svetlana is one of my favorites. She is a Russian born. Lives in England. Historian. Who is falsely implicated. Framed in the General Flynn. That accused them of having an affair. And she's been defending herself.
1:24:17
working with Horowitz and all the other groups trying to investigate Russiagate. She knows all of this stuff. And she claims that Jake Sullivan is the mastermind of Russiagate. And she claims that Maggie Goodlander is the mastermind of the six Congress critters who decided to tell the military not to obey lawful orders from President Trump. That is Maggie Goodlander, my dear neighbor, like literally blocks away from here.
1:24:46
And she was scrolling key. And I'll let the curl to hammer her home. But that's the exclamation point in our last scrolling key member. I would just tell people to go back and watch that segment of the video that we did. I don't really have anything else to add to that. It's critically important to understand the connections of these people.
1:25:14
And that's what I enjoy doing the show so much because it just illustrates it using actual example after example of all of the inbredding. I'm speaking about having kids because they do have kids and they all seem just like the Van Hollen that you were just mentioning. It's incredible to go back through these lineages and.
1:25:42
watch the destruction of our country unfold as these people are put in these positions to do exactly that. Yeah, and they're pretty darn good at it. I mean, they've been very successful of running a shadow government behind the scenes where most of the people in this country think they live in a democracy or even a republic. And it's not. It's an oligarchy ruled by very connected families. And that's the way the whole world works. That's why I keep talking about, you know, Superclass, the book by Rothkopf.
1:26:12
and there's thousands of families around the world and they operate with a different set of rules than the rest of us and we're just demonstrating pointing out we're mapping it out to show demonstrate exactly that this is the case and that's what i think was so valuable about the secret society's exercise that we've done is it provides the road map we knew what was happening and that's why i'm glad we did this we are done with scrolling key we're already finished scrolling bones
1:26:39
I suggest our next leap to continue this story is we jump across the pond. I'd like to go into some of the philosophers first, and then we'll get into Cecil Rhodes, then bring it forward to the 1890s, and we'll get to our Pilgrim Society and how they infiltrated over to America. Our faggots and pilgrims. We'll have to go deep into the Rhodes Scholars. We're going to have to go deep into the Tavistock Institute.
1:27:09
But that's going to bring us full all the way around to American foundations. And that's going to be the decisive narrative to tell us really how we got here. So we have months and months and months of work to do. I'm up for it. Very good. So I think Cecil Rhodes next week. Okay. And I've got that. I mean, I did that presentation a few years ago, so I'm just going to use my old notes, add anything to it.
1:27:38
But I'll start with the philosophers because I want to set the trend of everything from Hegel to Kant all the way on down. Where these mindsets, you know, where did Darwin fit in? Where did they get this depopulation agenda? Because it's always been part of it. It's always been about one world government depopulation. That's where all this conservationist stuff comes from. It's all code word for we want all the land for ourselves and we want to go back to feudalism. That's all it's code for. So I'm going to go through the philosophers. We'll do a 30,000 foot level. We don't have to go too deep.
1:28:07
But I think it's important to set the table with that. I agree. All right. And there you have it. Fun show. I agree. And stay tuned till next week. Thanks for joining me, Brady. Cheers, everyone. Good to be back.
Entities here
Thomas Enders25John Lindsay25Philip Heymann18Skull and Key17Warren Zimmerman15Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark14U.S. State Department13New York City13Skull and Bones11Frederick B. Dent9Yale University8William B. Zimmerman7CIA7Republican Party6Canada6George Roy Hill5Office of Special Investigations4U.S. Forest Service4Middle East Institute4Harvard Kennedy School4Yugoslavia4Watergate scandal4Saudi Arabia4Archibald Cox4Jake Sullivan4Business Advisory Council4Jeannie Rhee3United Arab Emirates3Alfred Thayer Mahan3George Camp Kaiser3Spain3Jordan3Cambodia3NATO3Theodore Roosevelt3Democratic Party3Maggie Goodlander3Libya2Mali2Russiagate2
Claims made here
George Roy Hill member_of
Skull and Key host_asserted
▶ 2:46
“All right. We were last left you off in the 1940s. And the last Kroll and Key alumni we did was the infamous Cord Meyer IV, class of 1943. And he was one of our arch villains of all time. Yes. Most of…”
George Roy Hill member_of
U.S. Marine Corps host_asserted
▶ 3:17
“He's kind of not our normal scrolling key guy. This guy was a filmmaker. Born in Minneapolis, goes to something called the Blake School, which is a private school in Minnesota, I believe. Then goes to…”
Frederick B. Dent member_of
Skull and Key host_asserted
▶ 5:21
“Yeah, and we saw that a lot with a couple of the grooming boarding schools when we went through their list of alumni. There's like a dozen or two actors and actresses that we'd heard of, and I don't r…”
Frederick B. Dent headed
Mayfair Mills host_asserted
▶ 6:27
“or the sub-chasers at least, were drawing from Skrull and Key. He ended up seeing action in the South Pacific where he ferried troops to beachheads, including Okinawa. So this guy was right in the mid…”
Frederick B. Dent headed
American Textile Manufacturers Institute host_asserted
▶ 7:03
“from 1958 to 72 and again from 77 to 88 so that's his background in business he becomes the president of the american textile manufacturers institute pretty much every industry has some kind of a you …”
Frederick B. Dent member_of
Business Advisory Council host_asserted
▶ 9:03
“And, of course, we know what that means. And that will come up again today. So keep that in front of your mind. It's a model. Have you ever heard of the Business Council? Yes. This is another one of t…”
Richard Nixon appointed
Frederick B. Dent host_asserted
▶ 11:40
“So the break he took from his textile plant was because Nixon appointed him the Secretary of Commerce from 1973 to 75. And he would then become Ford's trade representative from 75 to 77. Well, what's …”
Gerald Ford appointed
Frederick B. Dent host_asserted
▶ 11:40
“So the break he took from his textile plant was because Nixon appointed him the Secretary of Commerce from 1973 to 75. And he would then become Ford's trade representative from 75 to 77. Well, what's …”
David Kennedy succeeded
Frederick B. Dent host_asserted
▶ 13:15
“A line I was saying, David Kennedy at Continental Bank would have preceded him as Secretary of Commerce. And that's important to our story about Continental Bank and all of its shenanigans. It's tied …”
John Lindsay member_of
Skull and Key host_asserted
▶ 13:51
“Class of 1944. Are you familiar with the name? It seems vaguely familiar, but I don't know why. He was a big mayor of New York City in the 70s, late 60s, early 70s. And as we'll see, he'll go down as …”
John Lindsay member_of
U.S. Navy host_asserted
▶ 15:01
“Coming out of college right during World War II. And they all joined the military. And then would go their separate ways. This is going to be the last couple of those. But they're important. So he's a…”
John Lindsay member_of
Webster and Sheffield host_asserted
▶ 16:03
“And Marianne Harrison is a distant relative of William Henry Harrison and Benjamin Harrison. Good grief. Yeah. So connected. John Lindsay goes to work in 1949 in the private sector for a law firm know…”
John Lindsay founded
Youth for Eisenhower Club host_asserted
▶ 17:11
“Of the Youth for Eisenhower Club. Oh, great. And in 1952, he becomes the president of the New York Young Republican Club. Very interesting. Mm-hmm. So you know who's rubbing elbows with people like, y…”
John Lindsay headed
New York Young Republican Club host_asserted
▶ 17:11
“Of the Youth for Eisenhower Club. Oh, great. And in 1952, he becomes the president of the New York Young Republican Club. Very interesting. Mm-hmm. So you know who's rubbing elbows with people like, y…”
John Lindsay member_of
U.S. Department of Justice host_asserted
▶ 17:44
“He would join the Department of Justice in 1955 as an assistant to the Attorney General Herbert Brownwell. The executive assistant. That's one of the gatekeepers. Yes. And he worked mostly on civil li…”
John Lindsay member_of
Republican Party host_asserted
▶ 18:13
“He wins a Republican primary and is elected to Congress. His district is called the 17th District. It's known as the Silk Stocking District of New York, Upper East Side. Still pretty conservative. Whi…”
John Lindsay member_of
Liberal Party of New York host_asserted
▶ 19:19
“Yeah, because we know that the CIA was all involved in reading all of that mail. Yeah. Okay, fast forward to 1965. He wins the mayor race of New York mayor as a Republican. And he had the support of w…”
John Lindsay member_of
Kerry Commission host_asserted
▶ 21:28
“and he's not really dealing with it very well. He gets named to a National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders called the Kerner Commission. Remember, there's been a lot of riots in New York that's…”
John Lindsay member_of
Democratic Party host_asserted
▶ 26:28
“He had been considered as a VP possibility for the Republicans in 1968. Southern conservatives wouldn't have him, so that's how Speer Ragnew got the nod. 1971, Lindsey and his wife cut ties with the R…”
Thomas Enders member_of
Skull and Key host_asserted
▶ 28:10
“So he is one of the all-time worst mayors, ladies and gentlemen, John Lindsay, scrolling key. But he did his job for the people that he actually works for. Yeah, and we saw all those New York mayors, …”
Thomas Enders member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 32:11
“Uncle John is known as the father of modern vaccines. This guy's uncle. That's him, okay? Yep. We already went over his uncle and went through this stuff, but that's the guy. That's his nephew. Thomas…”
Thomas Enders member_of
U.S. Forest Service host_asserted
▶ 32:43
“So he's top of his class. Gets out of Yale and gets a Master of Arts from the University of Paris in 1955. And another Master of Arts from Harvard in 1957. So he's definitely being groomed. Oh, withou…”
Thomas Enders appointed
Henry Kissinger host_asserted
▶ 35:58
“Yeah, this is all black ops. None of this has been revealed to Congress at the time. This is black ops, totally off the books. Yes. And that's where they're setting up their drug smuggling. Yeah. So h…”
Thomas Enders appointed
Jimmy Carter host_asserted
▶ 38:01
“But I want to point something out. He's been working in the State Department for the last, oh, I don't know, 15, 20 years. We've gone from a Democrat to a Republican. Now we're back to a Democrat. And…”
Thomas Enders covered_up
El Mozote Massacre host_asserted
▶ 40:10
“Anything going on in 81? Oh, just a little bit. You know, we're getting ready to kick off the Iran-Contra. Exactly. Enders was pissed off at the New York Times and the Washington Post because they rep…”
Nancy Reagan removed_from_power
Thomas Enders host_asserted
▶ 42:24
“Spain's got a rising social party known as the PSOE. They're opposed to NATO. Their prime minister, Gonzalez, he proposed a national referendum so the people would vote whether we should join NATO or …”
Thomas Enders founded
Enders Endowment host_asserted
▶ 42:55
“But they got their NATO vote. He did his job. And after that, Enders was kind of persona non grata after Nancy Reagan personally stuck her nose and got him removed. He would basically create the Ender…”
Philip Heymann member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 44:26
“His father owned an insurance agency. He's a graduate of Pittsburgh private school named the Shadyside Academy. They should all be called the Shadyside Academy, right? You should. He goes to Yale, get…”
Philip Heymann member_of
Office of Special Investigations host_asserted
▶ 44:55
“Yeah, and we do that by sending him to Sorbonne in Paris to study from 1954 to 55. Spends two years in the Air Force's Office of Special Investigations, where his job was to review security clearances…”
Philip Heymann member_of
Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs host_asserted
▶ 46:03
“This guy is arguing in front of the Supreme Court. He argued six cases on his own at a very young age. 1965, he leaves the Solicitor General's office and he becomes a deputy in the Bureau of Security …”
Philip Heymann member_of
Archibald Cox host_asserted
▶ 50:41
“At the Harvard Law of a gentleman by the name of Archibald Cox. Huh. Archibald Cox then gets, shortly thereafter, is confirmed special counsel for Watergate. Heyman is one of the few faculty members h…”
Warren Zimmerman member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 53:57
“This picture of him speaking at the Library of Congress in 2002 later on. Mr. Zimmerman is class of 1956. Born in 1935 in Philadelphia, PA. Goes to Yale, gets tapped on the shoulder for scrolling key.…”
Warren Zimmerman member_of
U.S. Forest Service host_asserted
▶ 55:02
“He becomes a Carnegie Teaching Fellow at Yale in history. Of course. He does a brief attempt at journalism, and then in 1961, at the age of 26, he joins the U.S. Foreign Service. Mr. Zimmerman is insp…”
Warren Zimmerman member_of
Office of Research and Intelligence host_asserted
▶ 57:08
“Yes, we did. Lots is going on in Yugoslavia right now. Okay. And we're going to get to that. He becomes an analyst in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research. His focus is on policy…”
Warren Zimmerman covered_up
Lisbon Agreement host_asserted
▶ 59:50
“Well, I would argue the CIA is collapsing it. Well, let's find out. So there's a guy named Robert Tucker who's involved in putting together what's called the Lisbon Agreement that would have brought p…”
Warren Zimmerman targeted_for_regime_change
Yugoslavia host_asserted
▶ 59:50
“Well, I would argue the CIA is collapsing it. Well, let's find out. So there's a guy named Robert Tucker who's involved in putting together what's called the Lisbon Agreement that would have brought p…”
Samantha Power exposed
William B. Zimmerman book_quoted
▶ 1:01:23
“hatreds are aggravated on purpose to break nation states apart that's certainly why you draw artificial borders and force people with ancient hatreds to have to live among each other we did that throu…”
William B. Zimmerman targeted_for_regime_change
Serbia host_asserted
▶ 1:01:52
“by frustration with the resistance of the Bush administration to intervene. Zimmerman would then support military interventionism in Bosnia and Serbia. And we bombed the hell out of it. Yeah, he was l…”
William B. Zimmerman targeted_for_regime_change
Bosnia host_asserted
▶ 1:01:52
“by frustration with the resistance of the Bush administration to intervene. Zimmerman would then support military interventionism in Bosnia and Serbia. And we bombed the hell out of it. Yeah, he was l…”
CIA recruited
William B. Zimmerman host_asserted
▶ 1:02:23
“Which basically means all of the people that we used in theater to instigate all of that stuff is going to be ferreted out of there and resettled in the United States. That's basically what that means…”
William B. Zimmerman removed_from_power
U.S. State Department documented
▶ 1:02:52
“Very much so. And this guy took the job of making sure to coordinate the refugee affairs. He oversaw the war and he oversaw the relocation of the people that caused the war into the United States. Pre…”
William B. Zimmerman founded
Origins of Catastrophe: Yugoslavia and Its Destroyers documented
▶ 1:03:24
“For not being hawkish enough. We were better war mongers, wouldn't you say? Yeah. He'd go on to teach at John Hopkins in Columbia until 2000, and he wrote a couple of books. One of them, he writes, is…”
William B. Zimmerman founded
First Great Triumph: How Five Americans Made Their Country a World Power documented
▶ 1:03:55
“A lot of what he says is absolute hogwash. Yes. The other book cracks me up. It's called First Great Triumph, How Five Americans Made Their Country a World Power. The five Americans he lists are Teddy…”
William B. Zimmerman member_of
First Great Triumph: How Five Americans Made Their Country a World Power book_quoted
▶ 1:04:25
“Related to John, the namesake for John A. Whitney, one of our heroes. Elihu Root, who we've talked about many times. And a gentleman we haven't talked about much by the name of Admiral Alfred T. Mahan…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
University of Oxford documented
▶ 1:06:29
“Last guy we're going to do is a guy by the name of Roscoe Rocky Sudarth, 1956 class. It was hard to find a picture of him, but I did eventually. He was born in 1935 in Louisville, Kentucky. Goes to Ya…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
Yale University documented
▶ 1:06:29
“Last guy we're going to do is a guy by the name of Roscoe Rocky Sudarth, 1956 class. It was hard to find a picture of him, but I did eventually. He was born in 1935 in Louisville, Kentucky. Goes to Ya…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
U.S. Forest Service documented
▶ 1:07:04
“That's important. He would serve in the Air National Guard, 1958 to 61. Then he joins, stop me if you've heard this before, the U.S. Foreign Service in 1961. So we've got a new pathway. You go basical…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
Mali documented
▶ 1:08:15
“Yeah, that's a pretty good analogy. I think that fits very well. And of course, they're getting invited to the right dinner parties. They're getting introduced around. It's very important. Okay, so he…”
CIA attempted_coup_against
Sukarno host_asserted
▶ 1:08:46
“What do you mean wasn't happening in Maui? Maui's part of Indonesia. Yeah, but that's 61 to 63, wasn't it? Wasn't that a little bit more on the gold side? Didn't that start right after or did I miss s…”
CIA carried_out_attack
Sukarno host_asserted
▶ 1:09:12
“In Los Angeles, they rented a movie studio and dressed someone up as Sukarno and they were making porno flicks. And basically the CIA was going to release that to incriminate Sukarno. All that was goi…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
Yemen documented
▶ 1:09:34
“guy that was in the um aircraft and we found out that they were trying to overthrow him and then the actual coup happened in the later 60s the successful one yeah that's where i guess i was saying he …”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
Lebanon documented
▶ 1:09:34
“guy that was in the um aircraft and we found out that they were trying to overthrow him and then the actual coup happened in the later 60s the successful one yeah that's where i guess i was saying he …”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
Libya documented
▶ 1:10:07
“secretary to the u.s embassy in yemen so gatekeeper 67 to 70 he's at the u.s embassy in tripoli libya sure does show up at some interesting spots and from 70 to 72 he's back in america sitting on the …”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
U.S. State Department documented
▶ 1:11:14
“Don't really work in the real world. They just look really good in a boardroom and on paper. Right. It's not the best way of making decisions. 72, he becomes a political military officer in the Bureau…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
Jordan documented
▶ 1:11:14
“Don't really work in the real world. They just look really good in a boardroom and on paper. Right. It's not the best way of making decisions. 72, he becomes a political military officer in the Bureau…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
Saudi Arabia documented
▶ 1:11:48
“Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs. What does that mean, Colonel? Political warfare. He's the number two with a background in the Middle East, applying game theory to our foreign diplomacy…”
BCCI laundered_money_for
CIA host_asserted
▶ 1:12:28
“Well, probably the most important thing you have going on there is BCCI, the bank that the Saudis and the UAE basically funded to create a money laundering operation for the CIA to cover, to hide all …”
Saudi Arabia funded
BCCI host_asserted
▶ 1:12:28
“Well, probably the most important thing you have going on there is BCCI, the bank that the Saudis and the UAE basically funded to create a money laundering operation for the CIA to cover, to hide all …”
United Arab Emirates funded
BCCI host_asserted
▶ 1:12:28
“Well, probably the most important thing you have going on there is BCCI, the bank that the Saudis and the UAE basically funded to create a money laundering operation for the CIA to cover, to hide all …”
Adnan Khashoggi trafficked
Saudi Arabia host_asserted
▶ 1:12:57
“Coming over around that same time, that's the beginning of the savings and loan setup where you have Adan Khashoggi in the United States, who obviously is from Saudi Arabia. He's running all over doin…”
Ronald Reagan appointed
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark documented
▶ 1:13:22
“In 85-87, he becomes the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs while all this gun running is going on in the countries under his purview. Correct. The odds of hi…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
Jordan documented
▶ 1:13:53
“Skrull and Key came from the Wright family. He's now a U.S. ambassador to Jordan. And that's a very important ambassadorship at the time because we got the rising Iraqi tensions. And he's the guy obse…”
April Glaspie ordered_assassination_of
Saddam Hussein host_asserted
▶ 1:14:25
“Saddam didn't need a green light because he had someone telling him exactly, hey, you can go invade Kuwait. April Gillespie. There you go. 1991, Mr. Rocky Sudark becomes the Deputy Inspector General o…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
U.S. State Department documented
▶ 1:14:25
“Saddam didn't need a green light because he had someone telling him exactly, hey, you can go invade Kuwait. April Gillespie. There you go. 1991, Mr. Rocky Sudark becomes the Deputy Inspector General o…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark member_of
National War College documented
▶ 1:15:00
“Yep. Oh, and that's when all of the Operation Gladio stuff broke. It broke in 1990. So any questions about any of that to the U.S. would have went through this office as well. His last diplomatic job …”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark covered_up
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:15:00
“Yep. Oh, and that's when all of the Operation Gladio stuff broke. It broke in 1990. So any questions about any of that to the U.S. would have went through this office as well. His last diplomatic job …”
George Camp Kaiser founded
Middle East Institute documented
▶ 1:15:31
“Indeed, and he retires in 1995 with a rank of career minister. He's not done, though, because of his Middle Eastern background, he becomes the president of something called the Middle East Institute. …”
George Camp Kaiser headed
Cuban American Sugar Company documented
▶ 1:16:01
“Of the Cuban American Sugar Company and the Guantanamo Sugar Company. And, yeah, that's before Cuba falling. So obviously we know his connections, and now he's founding something called the Middle Eas…”
George Camp Kaiser headed
Guantanamo Sugar Company documented
▶ 1:16:01
“Of the Cuban American Sugar Company and the Guantanamo Sugar Company. And, yeah, that's before Cuba falling. So obviously we know his connections, and now he's founding something called the Middle Eas…”
George Camp Kaiser member_of
U.S. Signal Corps documented
▶ 1:16:32
“Kaiser previously had been a first lieutenant in the U.S. Signal Corps. What's the U.S. Signal Corps? Intelligence. CIA. Code-breaking OSS. After Kaiser's death, his Middle East Institute, they had se…”
Kermit Roosevelt member_of
Middle East Institute documented
▶ 1:16:32
“Kaiser previously had been a first lieutenant in the U.S. Signal Corps. What's the U.S. Signal Corps? Intelligence. CIA. Code-breaking OSS. After Kaiser's death, his Middle East Institute, they had se…”
Kermit Roosevelt overthrew
Mohammad Mosaddegh documented
▶ 1:16:32
“Kaiser previously had been a first lieutenant in the U.S. Signal Corps. What's the U.S. Signal Corps? Intelligence. CIA. Code-breaking OSS. After Kaiser's death, his Middle East Institute, they had se…”
Ford Foundation funded
Middle East Institute documented
▶ 1:17:08
“Mosaddegh. Yeah, Mosaddegh. And, of course, he is a descendant of the other Roosevelts. Grandson of Teddy Roosevelt. Yes. This organization, the Middle East Institution, would then be funded by some f…”
Rockefeller Foundation funded
Middle East Institute documented
▶ 1:17:08
“Mosaddegh. Yeah, Mosaddegh. And, of course, he is a descendant of the other Roosevelts. Grandson of Teddy Roosevelt. Yes. This organization, the Middle East Institution, would then be funded by some f…”
Lucius D. Battle headed
Middle East Institute documented
▶ 1:17:37
“In the 1980s, this organization was led by a guy by the name of Lucius D. Battle and Ambassador Christopher Van Hollen. And if that name sounds familiar, yeah, he's the father of Maryland Senator Chri…”
Christopher Van Hollen Sr. headed
Middle East Institute documented
▶ 1:17:37
“In the 1980s, this organization was led by a guy by the name of Lucius D. Battle and Ambassador Christopher Van Hollen. And if that name sounds familiar, yeah, he's the father of Maryland Senator Chri…”
Roscoe "Rocky" Sudark headed
Middle East Institute documented
▶ 1:18:07
“Eliza Farnsworth, who is a CIA Russian studies expert, and she would become the chief analyst on Afghanistan for the State Department. You just can't make this shit up. And their kid is now a senator …”
United Arab Emirates funded
Middle East Institute documented
▶ 1:18:07
“Eliza Farnsworth, who is a CIA Russian studies expert, and she would become the chief analyst on Afghanistan for the State Department. You just can't make this shit up. And their kid is now a senator …”
Saudi Arabia funded
Middle East Institute documented
▶ 1:18:07
“Eliza Farnsworth, who is a CIA Russian studies expert, and she would become the chief analyst on Afghanistan for the State Department. You just can't make this shit up. And their kid is now a senator …”
Edith Eliza Farnsworth member_of
U.S. State Department documented
▶ 1:18:07
“Eliza Farnsworth, who is a CIA Russian studies expert, and she would become the chief analyst on Afghanistan for the State Department. You just can't make this shit up. And their kid is now a senator …”
A. Bartlett Giamatti member_of
Yale University documented
▶ 1:20:06
“Former president of Yale and, of course, the president of Major League Baseball. He's the commissioner. So I knew Bart Giamatti as a kid, but he came from Yale. He was a scrolling key. We have Timothy…”
Timothy Mellon member_of
BNY Mellon documented
▶ 1:20:06
“Former president of Yale and, of course, the president of Major League Baseball. He's the commissioner. So I knew Bart Giamatti as a kid, but he came from Yale. He was a scrolling key. We have Timothy…”
Jeannie Rhee member_of
Yale University documented
▶ 1:21:14
“So you wonder why you can't trust the mainstream media? She was classed in 1990. 1994, we have Jeannie Rhee, R-H-E-E. Jeannie Rhee was a member of the Mueller team, special counsel. Yep. And the obstr…”
Jeannie Rhee member_of
Investigation documented
▶ 1:21:14
“So you wonder why you can't trust the mainstream media? She was classed in 1990. 1994, we have Jeannie Rhee, R-H-E-E. Jeannie Rhee was a member of the Mueller team, special counsel. Yep. And the obstr…”
Jeannie Rhee member_of
Eric Holder documented
▶ 1:21:45
“And basically went straight to become an assistant DA of District of Columbia in 2000. Worked for WilmerHale. We've talked about them before. She provided counsel to former Attorney General Eric Holde…”