The Anchormen Show EP 105 - Spy Games w: Pearson Sharp & Mark Kiriakou
Episode Stats
Harmful content
Misogyny
3
sentences flagged
Toxicity
12
sentences flagged
Hate speech
10
sentences flagged
Summary
John Kiriakuk, a former CIA counterintelligence officer, joins us to talk about the CIA's counter-espionage efforts in the lead-up to 9/11, and the methods they used to get their own citizens to reveal their secrets.
Transcript
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now it's time for the anchorman podcast with matt gates and pearson sharp
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welcome back to another episode of anchorman we are so excited uh that we are going to be able
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to bring you such a level of expertise and insight in this program i'm joined as always
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by my co-host at pearson sharp host of the sharp report here on our network and the building is a
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buzz because we've got john kiriaku with us for uh an hour and we so many of our producers whenever
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we book john on the matt gates show uh everyone's excited everybody wants to contribute to the
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discussion because we always learn a great deal john kiriaku was a cia officer in the lead up to
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9-11 then takes major roles within the cia counterintelligence in 2007 famously becomes part
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of this major disclosure that torture is being uh administered by the united states government
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john later pled guilty to a crime revolve involving a disclosure of information uh he uh was sentenced
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to 30 months he got out after two years and really has been heralded by many as a whistleblower as
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someone who saw things going on in the government that uh the the country wasn't aware of people
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weren't aware of and uh you know has been really out there john thanks so much for joining us uh
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i've had i've really enjoyed having you on the matt gates show uh talking about my pleasure lots of
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fun well you're a really smart guy you've lived an incredible life uh my co-host and buddy here
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pearson sharp has been all over some of these things we've seen in the headlines and wants to ask
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you about them so go right ahead pearson hey john how you doing good to see you good
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so did you see the news that came out about uh the vaccines and the cia operations recently
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yeah um so apparently it was called project artichoke and for anyone who's not familiar
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apparently it ran from 1951 to 1956 and it focused on uh behavior control interrogation techniques
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uh psychological manipulation but the interesting part that got everybody paying attention was the fact
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that it was being administered through injections and vaccines that was the big one and um i want to
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know what your take on that was would do you know anything about it what's your thoughts oh yeah
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project artichoke was a sub operation of mk ultra which by now most americans know that mk ultra was
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experimentation essentially on american citizens mostly using lsd there were a bunch of sub operations here
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project artichoke being one where the cia began by experimenting on its own employees and after that
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didn't go well they began experimenting on just innocent residents of san francisco what they did as part of
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project artichoke was to break into um a uh a vaccine developer in switzerland steal the formula for
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some of the vaccines and then try to manipulate the formula so that they could give somebody a vaccine
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have it act like a truth serum and then get these people to involuntarily tell the truth with the idea
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being that you would use it on russians and chinese the way this all got started in the very early 1950s
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is there was the cia recruited a soviet uh intelligence officer kb a kgb officer who told him
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that who told the agency rather that the russians were developing this kind of technology that was not
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true the russians were not developing that technology the chinese were but we didn't know that the chinese
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were and so the cia panicked and said well we've got to beat the russians to this uh to this technology
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this science and so they started this experimentation as i said first on their own employees and then on
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just innocent americans as part of of uh operation artichoke one of the things they did was they
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recruited a bunch of prostitutes in uh san francisco they rented a safe house where the prostitutes would
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bring the johns back they would dose the johns with lsd and then try to get them to reveal their
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innermost secrets under the the influence of the lsd i don't mean to smile by the way right by the way
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there's plenty of people that you wouldn't even have had to trick to right yeah they sign up for that
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right it's like uh you know prostitutes and lsd there'd be there's some places in san francisco
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there'd be a long line of volunteers isn't that the truth i'm so excited when we get our
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meriwether farm shipments in you get a beautiful piece of ribeye look at that marbling now i take
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it out of the package let it get down to room temperature all i've got on here is a little
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salt a little pepper and then a little avocado oil and then i've had my pan preheating with a little oil
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head to meriwetherfarms.com and enter promo code matt g for 15 off your first order
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so this thing went on for years for years and then when it was finally revealed in the church
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committee hearings in 1975 um the cia director was ordered not to destroy the documents and he went
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back from capitol hill and ordered the destruction of all the documents right and so what we what we
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know now is is from the 15 percent of documents that survived yeah um one of the things that was
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they said was also the goal was to coerce people into committing criminal acts against their will
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potentially including assassinations and unrelated to this i just came across an article recently about
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uh charles whitman are you familiar with him i don't know that name so in uh 1966 charles whitman who
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was just the most upstanding patriotic guy you could possibly imagine had an iq of 138
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former marine uh married had a family suddenly decided that he was going to kill his wife in the
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middle of the night kill his mother as well and then climb the tower at university of texas in austin
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and with a sniper rifle kill 13 people including pregnant women and a bunch of others and he left
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a suicide note behind that said i have no idea why i'm doing this i don't want to do it it doesn't feel
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like me i can't stop myself i i hope that when i do it and i die that someone will cut open my brain
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and you know see what happens like is there something wrong with me because i can't stop
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myself from doing this um apparently there was like a tumor or something that had grown and was
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pushing on his amygdala but this guy seems like the exact kind of case that you would see from a
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project like artichoke or mk ultra i'm just curious what your thoughts were well you have to ask
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yourself too you know there were references to los angeles county community college in the mk ultra
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documents there was some kind of experimentation going on at the la community college and it just
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so happened to be exactly the same time that sirhan sirhan was taking classes there and so there's been
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speculation over the years that sirhan may have either volunteered to be a part of these um these
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experiments for money or was you know tricked or somehow duped into taking part of the experiments
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because he too later said and he's been relatively consistent about this that he doesn't know why he
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killed bobby kennedy he doesn't have any memory of killing bobby kennedy and that was one of the goals
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was they'd have no memory of doing any things exactly and you know that gave rise to the whole
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manchurian candidate uh fear in the 1950s if this technology was being developed um what was its
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end point and yeah is it is it is it a working assumption that these types of programs and
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activities are ongoing today or or did we reach some reckoning we'll see on on these tactics that's
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what i want to know because well that's why i asked john that's that's our fear is that we've seen
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them using vaccines for this project artichoke and after 2020 i think a lot of us were concerned what's
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going in these vaccines why are why is everybody demanding that we take these vaccines what is
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going on here and so yeah with mk ultra and this we know the government does this we know they lie to
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us that we know they inject us with things that we don't willingly consent to so what are your thoughts
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on that yeah and isn't it ironic that the government just tells us take our word for it right we're the
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yeah of course yeah we're the experts well you know i don't mean to sound cynical but i i almost can't
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help myself after the odyssey that my life has been over the last 25 years but um you know we've
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got the house permanent select committee on intelligence and the senate select committee
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on intelligence these are supposed to be the the two oversight committees and they're really not
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oversight committees so much as they are cheerleaders for the cia so we've been told that mk ultra and all
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of its associated sub operations ended by 1975 how do we know that we don't know it we're just supposed
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to take their word for it and trust these cheerleaders senators and congressmen uh with for with telling
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the truth that these programs don't exist any any longer but you know what though even if they do exist
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they would be so tightly controlled so compartmentalized that only the gang of four the gang of eight would
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uh would have access to the information anyway and it would be so highly classified that they wouldn't
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be able to say anything do you think so do you think i don't know trump knows no i don't so uh i can
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confirm your concerns about how people get on those committees uh the the uh usual way a committee is
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populated is by a steering committee we have of course in congress we have a committee on committees
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uh and it democratizes power it dilutes power so you know ostensibly if you talk to a lot of members
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you could get on the armed services committee you could get on the agriculture committee but the
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intelligence committee is unique it is direct appointment by the speaker of the house the speaker
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of the house hires and fires every member of the intelligence committee and what that turns into
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is the intelligence community selecting their own overseers i remember what a what a coup it was to get
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congressman scott perry on the intelligence committee and we kind of had to leverage speaker
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johnson on that one a little bit we had to tell speaker johnson that if he wanted an outcome a certain
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way on the floor with the votes we needed to see scott perry on uh on the intelligence committee that
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would give us confidence and when we did because he wasn't he was picked by us not by the ic the attacks
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on him the op-eds written about this guy who's a general and and and they couldn't they couldn't
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take it because he wasn't part of the club they want to know i frankly think they want to know they
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want to hold compromising information over the people that are on those committees but they
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certainly want to know that they're on the team and are not going to ask ask too many questions
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and john you know did you have other questions about artichoke uh no go ahead yeah so i before before
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before congressman before you ask your question may i add one little thing just to sort of prove
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to prove your point a couple of weeks after i got out of prison i was invited to dinner at the
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at the greek ambassadors residence so i went and there was a democratic senator there from the senate
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intelligence committee and he walked up to me and he said hey welcome home we were so worried about
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you i said thanks senator but i gotta tell you i was disappointed i thought i thought you would stand
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up for me and he got angry and he said look it took everything i had just to not lose my security
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clearance and i said oh you're afraid of them and then he just walked away from me
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so what you're saying is exactly true yeah it's i i saw it and it the the unique opportunity though is
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one person can put people on and take people off and so if you if you play the game right and utilize
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leverage right there are opportunities to get eyes on some of this i mean john that you said he was
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afraid the people in power the highest people in power are afraid of these people yes how should the
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rest of us feel i know right right some system we've given ourselves and and we all thought that
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was going to change in 1975 and it changed for a minute and then by 1982 you know the cia was the old
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cia again doing the same cia things it was doing in the 50s but but it it does suffer from some of the
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like normal bureaucracy stuff that is common to all of the agencies in washington i had a cia uh person
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still still still with the agency who said matt everybody thinks it's all jack bauer but it's way
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more the office uh comments to like comments to that john i mean how this it's this mystical force
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that people um you know opine about but but you were inside the belly of the beast is it is it more
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jack bauer or more the office oh it's decidedly more the office we used to have this ongoing joke
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that when you went into a meeting don't touch the table because you don't know who was having sex on
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it last night i thought that was going to be a fingerprints reference that's true in congress
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now too well yeah in the committee hearing rooms yeah exactly yikes man no total lack of creativity
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john john f kennedy once called the cia the best and the brightest and oh how i wish that were true
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um yes there are some really brilliant people in there and for the most part these are these are
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whatever it is now 30 40 000 people who who want nothing more than to serve the american people but
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without appropriate oversight you know it's human nature just to push and push and push the envelope
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until somebody or something pushes back and as a result you have a cia that you know in a cycle
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of every 20 or 30 years it goes out of control you've heard me talk about all family pharmacy
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next door there was a there was a great comic and maybe we can find it um i saw of when the cia was
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created it showed the president holding a little puppy on a leash and it said like 10 years later
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flash forward and it was this like giant pit bull that was attacking the president and like if you
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know history i was thinking back to rome when the praetorian guard basically took over rome and they
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were picking and choosing the emperors and running things behind the show and i'm wondering is that
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what's happening now is the cia and and these secret organizations actually in charge of everything
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you know i hate to say yes but but my answer has got to be yes and i'll give you one one example too
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um i i was stationed overseas and i had to do a very sensitive counterterrorism approach it was to a
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woman and she was a known bomber shooter this was a bad bad woman well she had been approached once
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before 20 years earlier by a guy who later went on to be a senior station chief you know senior
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intelligence service so he was a friend of mine and i sent him a cable and i said listen i'm going to do
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this high threat approach but you've spoken to her once before she'll remember you can you fly out here
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and do the approach with me so she doesn't feel threatened so he flew out and we were doing a foot
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surveillance detection route it was a very heavily populated city so we're doing our surveillance
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detection route by by foot and his cell phone rings and it was the president of the country
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that he was serving in as the station chief and i heard him say yes madam president yes madam president
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and this is going on for a minute or two and he says well my choice is and then he names a name
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and uh i could hear madam president say thank you so much for taking care of this and she hung up
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and i said what was all that about and he said that was the president of you know the country i said
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what'd she want he said uh she wanted me to choose the next intelligence service director so i chose my
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guy and i said we do that oh yeah we do we definitely still do that yeah i mean oh as a congressman i
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weighed in on on who i thought should be in intelligence services in foreign government we
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want him to be on team america we want him to be frank we had we had victoria newland picking the
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next prime minister in ukraine i mean exactly right yes this is this is how this is how politics works in
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a globalized age don't don't hand ring about that but john you moved up in this system you went from
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a cia officer to someone who had major responsibilities you know i i think people know know you as a
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whistleblower but before that moment you really did play the game right and accumulate power and so
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talk to us about uh maybe an experience or or an anecdote that showcases how within that system
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you thrived oh i did i'll tell you the truth i was a true believer for many many years
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and uh i was smart i was good briefer i was willing to take the worst assignments i was willing to go to
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the worst countries i've been to 72 countries over the years and i was very happy to do it um yeah i'll
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give you an example uh i um i got a call once from a friend who was a cia station chief in the middle east
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and he said that uh that one of his officers had had recruited a double agent and this was a double
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agent for a major enemy of the united states it not not hard to guess who and so uh the guy insisted
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on meeting with the station chief he said could you come out here and uh and pretend to be me
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and handle this double agent i said of course so i started flying out to the middle east every couple
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of weeks meeting with this guy giving him assignments and then all the while as soon as
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we leave the meeting he's on the phone with his other handlers reporting uh what uh what they
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wanted him to report it got to the point where i was i was home at headquarters and i got a call from
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a sister agency on the other side of the of the city and um they said are you handling this double
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agent in the middle east and i said yeah and the woman said you should know that they just ordered
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him to kill you in the next meeting i said oh please this guy's afraid of his shadow he's not going to
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kill me my boss comes running out of his office you got to abort the operation he's going to kill you
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i said please hear me out at least to make a long story short i flew back out i was able to tackle him
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as he entered the the hotel room our liaison partners burst in from the from the next door room
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all while this guy is shouting allahu akbar allahu akbar and i'm i'm disarming him and i'm sitting on
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his chest and i said to him did you really think i was so stupid that i didn't know that you were a
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double agent all this time did you really think i was such an amateur that i didn't know that you
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came here to kill me today i said i'm offended well that was 24 years 25 years ago he's still in prison
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and uh we dismantled dismantled a terrorist group in that country because of that arrest
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incredible but i i was perfectly happy to volunteer and go anywhere in the world to do operations like
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that and so i moved up quickly to the point where i became the the uh executive assistant
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to the cia's deputy director for operations it was in that position that i finally had access to
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literally everything that the cia was doing around the world and some of it was just wrong wrong wrong
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well i understand and i know there's only so much you can you can sort of talk about that stuff
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but let's cat let's talk about the category of wrong you know right yeah right because because
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some people would say oh yeah maybe wrong is you know uh deceiving someone lying to someone to get
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them to do what you want them to do maybe wrong is threatening someone um threatening their family um you
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know maybe wrong is like the stuff we've seen uh in the epstein files where where real people are
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enduring incredible harm and the people who are administering that harm believe it is in service
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of some broader virtuous goal like hell put put the harm in buckets for us yes i was unwilling to break
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u.s law listen when you're a cia officer your job is to break the law it's to break the laws of other
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countries i was thrilled to get on a plane go overseas and commit espionage that's what i was paid to do and
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it was fun and it was rewarding but i drew the line where it came to breaking u.s law and i said to my
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my superiors at the time in in the middle of 2002 we have something called the federal torture act of
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1946 which specifically prohibits us from doing exactly the things that you're telling me we're going
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to start doing plus not only were we signatories to the united nations convention against torture we wrote
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the united nations convention against torture and it was uh uh clear that was a law for everybody else
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yeah right and but torture at the time was romanticized in enhanced interrogation yeah oh
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no but it was uh you 24 was the aforementioned 24 was one of these iconic television shows and you
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always rooted for uh jack bauer to to to administer pain on the bad guy until they gave the critical
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information and in in hollywood torture worked in hollywood it worked in hollywood is that was was
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that not your experience in the cia that was a big problem for us actually through through the
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aughts uh because torture had been romanticized americans did come to believe that torture worked you
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know i'll tell you a little side story after i led after i left the cia i uh i was uh made an adjunct
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professor of intelligence studies at the helm school of government at liberty university and so
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i worked i worked alongside a senior professor had been there 30 years but who had also been a cia
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officer early in his career he showed me the final exam that he gave his students one day and it was
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such a powerful exam it has stuck in my mind all these years it was just a handful of questions
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so he the first question he put on the board um you have captured a bona fide terrorist you know
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that a bomb is going to go off in a major american city you have two hours to get the information and
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defuse the bomb do you torture this man yes no explain yourself that was 15 minutes 15 minutes
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later the guy is a true believer he didn't give you anything but you have his wife in custody do you
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beat his wife in front of him just to get him to give you the the information remember american lives
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are on the line yes no explain yourself the third question is the wife's a true believer too but you
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have their children in custody do you beat the children or threaten to beat the children yes no
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explain yourself where do you draw the fourth question yeah the fourth question was you've died and
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you're at the gates of heaven and peter uh refers you to god himself and he says now you explain
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yourself what do you tell him do we do that stuff do we beat people's children in front of them
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we we've certainly threatened to do worse than just beat the children yes we yeah we i was unaware of
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any children being beaten but yes it was common to threaten to beat the children and the children are
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always separated from the parents so the parents don't know if the kids are being beaten or not
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but yeah we would make that threat quite frequently
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there's a big gulf between threatening and doing though yeah yeah um uh when you say uh u.s laws
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you know that was your that was your north star um so are do you believe today the cia is breaking
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u.s laws uh abroad and what what are the laws that you're most worried about being violated today
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in all honesty the the u.s laws that i'm the most worried about are are laws surrounding uh the
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weaponization of intelligence i really truly believe that the cia was weaponized uh during the
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obama administration especially to go after the uh the cia's enemies or the dnc's enemies listen it
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it it wasn't i i blew the whistle on the on the george w bush torture program and the bush justice
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department investigated me for a year from december of 07 to december of 08 and decided in the end that
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i had not committed a crime and they dropped the case it was the obama administration specifically
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john brennan who personally asked eric holder to reopen the case against me secretly it was the
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obama administration that prosecuted me and not just me eight national security whistleblowers which
00:26:51.400
is almost three times the number of all previous presidents combined so you know while the cia's
0.76
00:26:59.200
mandate is to break laws overseas i think that they're breaking laws in the united states yeah one
00:27:06.100
of the concerns i always had was when we developed these exquisite tools of deception mind control uh
00:27:13.840
sigint gathering and processing when we develop them abroad it's human beings who'd have those skills
1.00
00:27:20.220
and those human beings end up coming and living back in the united states and a whole lot of them
00:27:24.800
end up working for contractors where those tools that were intended to be used against america's enemies
00:27:29.540
abroad are visited in these internal struggles we have we have here uh what is the scale of that do you
00:27:37.140
think john i think the scale is huge the scale is huge because look at the the scandals that have
00:27:43.360
already come to light in places like greece or the united arab emirates where where israeli uh software
00:27:51.400
a pegasus software specifically has been used first through a an american contractor and then through
00:27:59.720
the israelis directly uh where it's being used against americans there was a scandal what two years ago
00:28:05.340
where it was like the american soccer team or something was being intercepted in greece it it literally
00:28:12.220
brought down the greek government so yeah we need to be and so people understand pegasus because i got
00:28:18.580
i got pretty concerned about this on the judiciary committee it is a tool that that will give uh the
00:28:25.700
holder of the pegasus technology full access to your phone and you don't have to take any action so you
00:28:31.920
don't have to click a link you don't have to mash a button that they can use your phone and they can
00:28:37.900
exploit all the information on it they can exploit the camera the microphone at any time they want
00:28:42.620
and so so uh this was technology that was developed in israel the major commercial user is the cartels
00:28:50.620
the uh they are the major commercial commercial user okay that's not like government and then we found
00:28:57.860
that the fbi had paid five million dollars for this to to pegasus and so we we bring christopher
00:29:05.040
ray in and and some of these guys and say why why is the fbi doing this and their answer was we paid
00:29:10.320
five million dollars just to test what its capabilities were um in the event that we had
00:29:16.800
to defend against it in the event that we had to defend against it which i thought was totally bogus
00:29:20.920
but we won't use it at the time um do you think that this is going to be pegasus do you think pegasus
00:29:26.060
will be used to topple other governments and do you think that there's a there's a political node to it
00:29:32.160
or is it just like a mercenary eyes to technology i think it's i think it's more sophisticated and more
00:29:40.400
broadly spread uh than than what we know right now and one of the one of the terrible things
00:29:48.220
is that first of all it's so good and like you said congressman you're exactly right you don't have
00:29:54.480
to take any action to activate it on your phone you don't have to click a link you don't have to
00:29:58.540
respond to a text message or anything like that it just works just like that and you have no idea
00:30:04.720
we wouldn't have known that similar uh similar software programs were being used by nsa against
00:30:12.260
american citizens it's illegal for nsa to spy on americans it's a part of nsa's charter it's founding
00:30:18.960
charter that it can't spy on americans and thanks to ed snowden we know that you know easily 50 of what
00:30:25.540
nsa does is to spy on americans well now when pegasus or systems akin to pegasus are available
00:30:33.300
commercially i mean how how do you protect yourself somebody asked me the other day if there were any
00:30:40.380
um chat apps that were truly secure and i i i wanted to give a an intelligent answer so i called
00:30:48.100
my friend tom drake the nsa whistleblower and i asked him and he said no the easy answer is no
00:30:54.200
nothing secure even signal even if it's not true that the u.s intelligence community has a backdoor
00:31:01.160
into signal signal is only encrypted when you hit the send button that's when it encrypts they can
00:31:08.440
intercept your message as you're typing it before you hit send right and so it doesn't matter if they
00:31:15.700
can't break the encryption so that i kind of speaking of pegasus and what you just said about
00:31:20.200
signal um because i use signal and i picked it up after i did a documentary in 2018 about the nsa and
00:31:26.300
obama's spying and surveillance and stuff and that terrified me so i got signal because edward snowden
00:31:30.820
recommended it but is there any such thing as privacy anymore is there any private communications
00:31:37.420
or any privacy in your life that you would reasonably expect president trump signed the order to end the
00:31:43.880
loony left's war on crypto and with the genius act now law america is officially the crypto capital of
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sure to check them out today okay that answers that yeah sorry i i hate to say it but there's no such
00:32:55.440
thing no i i'm i'm just not i'll tell you i'll tell you what wiki leaks an offshoot of wiki leaks was
00:33:01.720
working 10 years ago on on a new chat app that was not just encrypted but where the where the chat would
00:33:11.860
disappear like after i think it was 30 seconds of of disuse right so you finish your chat you've
00:33:19.640
exchanged your messages and then poof 30 seconds later would just disappear but they couldn't get
00:33:24.220
past this notion that it can be intercepted before it's encrypted nobody can figure out how to get around
00:33:30.660
that one of the things that um what was frequently debated in in the back rooms and in congress was
00:33:37.680
this blend of investment into signals intelligence exploitation versus human intelligence exploitation
00:33:44.540
and uh you know you'd get the the the wizards of of tech to say look all this human stuff is all like
00:33:52.480
the stuff of the cold war 80s everything we're going to need we're going to be able to exploit with signals
00:33:57.480
intelligence what do you think is the right blend and is there any is there any experience you've had
00:34:02.040
that might be a cautionary tale to those who would deplete some of the human capabilities in service of
00:34:08.660
of these uh ambitions that's a great question that's a that's a not just an important question but i think
00:34:14.840
it's the most important question for any incoming new cia director uh sigint is not going to save the day
00:34:22.820
yes sigint is great you can grab every every phone call every text message every email out of the air
00:34:30.460
and put it in your giant cray computers in the utah desert and have it sit there for 500 years until
00:34:36.300
you need it that's great but sigint isn't going to be inside the room when saddam hussein makes a
00:34:43.480
decision to invade kuwait or when you know the chinese decide to go to war with india over their border
00:34:50.600
or vladimir putin makes the decision to invade ukraine you have to get that information from
00:34:56.440
a human source and every new incoming cia director says it's time to get back to basics we're going to
00:35:02.700
rely on human intelligence our job is to recruit spies to steal secrets everybody says that and then
00:35:09.600
you know they they get distracted by these you know shiny objects called signals intelligence
00:35:16.460
and uh and they walk away from human intelligence and and what do you think is the cost of that
00:35:22.460
ultimately oh ultimately we don't know that the berlin wall is coming down that israel is on the verge
00:35:31.740
of attacking uh iran and they've made the decision to do so that saddam is going to invade kuwait any of
00:35:38.920
these these momentous global events were missed by the cia for the most part i mean analytically
00:35:46.300
yeah we made the the judgment that saddam was going to invade kuwait yes we made the analytic
00:35:51.520
judgment that that putin was going to uh invade ukraine but you got to have somebody in the room
00:35:57.880
who can report back to you so you know exactly what the the thought process is and that helps the
00:36:04.120
president to create his own policy to counter whatever the decision was it's always surprised me
00:36:10.420
how how many foreign officials the cia really did control um either through i mean and sometimes
00:36:17.660
like payment sometimes um just uh foreign officials admiration for the united states and they would love
00:36:24.740
to know who the station chief was they would love to be you know having meetings with the embassy and
00:36:29.020
and talking about stuff how would you describe to our audience um the scale scope and meaning of
00:36:35.980
the united states government basically having foreign officials doing our bidding by hook or by crook
00:36:42.580
i was at a cocktail party once a diplomatic cocktail party and uh and i met a guy who i immediately
00:36:53.560
recognized as a former prime minister and i thought oh my god he's a former prime minister now he's a
00:37:01.140
member of not just a member he's a founder of a of a less populous less popular party he's probably not
00:37:08.720
going to be prime minister again but maybe he will be who knows so i rush back to the embassy i fill out a
00:37:14.940
a template for this cable and i say hey i met this i met the former prime minister give me a name trace
00:37:22.820
on him looking for any vulnerabilities i'm going to invite him to dinner i'm going to try to get him
00:37:28.140
and then they send me a cable back the next day and they said cease and desist he's been ours since
00:37:35.300
the 70s and and is that is that largely maintained through through financial distributions that like
00:37:43.540
what what what is the what is the waterfall of of uh choices that you make when you're when you're
00:37:49.960
turning someone like that blackmail let me let me address blackmail because that's important people
00:37:54.700
raise this with me literally every single day the cia doesn't blackmail um we used to but they they
00:38:00.980
haven't done that since the 70s uh because it's not effective in order to really squeeze great
00:38:07.360
information out of a source the source has to love you the source has to think that you're his best
00:38:12.900
friend that sure you know you're doing it you guys are doing this because you're paying him but
00:38:17.540
but really it's because you're in a bromance and he loves hanging out with you and he's going to give
00:38:23.400
you the plans to the the new generation russian tank just because he loves you um studies have
00:38:30.940
been done about this internally at the cia 95 of these relationships are based on cash exchanges
00:38:37.520
simple as that we have money you need the money i'm happy to give you whatever money you want so long
00:38:44.640
as you give me the information i want and we shake hands you sign this ridiculous little contract that i
00:38:49.600
made up in ms word and uh and everybody's happy the other five percent is interesting the other five
00:38:58.160
percent is ideology sometimes they just love love love the united states sometimes it's excitement
00:39:04.940
because they've seen all the james bond movies and the jack reacher movies and all these others and
00:39:09.380
they just want to experience the excitement of the clandestinity of these operations sometimes it's
00:39:17.580
revenge they got passed over for promotion they're angry at their bosses and they just want to screw
0.72
00:39:22.920
the boss and so by god they're gonna they're gonna reach out to the cia and they're gonna volunteer
00:39:27.620
but 95 of it is money it's a cash transaction and if you you know let's say you have access to the
00:39:36.920
local communist party that might be good for two three thousand dollars a month but if you're gonna give
00:39:43.800
me osama bin laden i'm gonna give you 25 million 50 million dollars and i'll give it to you in cash
00:39:50.720
in gold in diamonds in bitcoin i'll give it to you any way you want to receive it if you want it in land
00:39:57.000
i'll give it to you in land and just because i'm a nice guy and i like your face i'm willing to resettle
00:40:03.740
you in any country in the world where you would like to live how do we get access to those uh to those
00:40:10.500
different asset classes to redistribute in exchange for information yeah that's also a great question
00:40:16.280
and you know early on in my career uh the instructors told all of us that the best agents that you will
00:40:24.960
ever recruit are going to be people you had never heard of who are just going to walk into the american
00:40:31.160
embassy and say i want to speak to a cia officer like for example i can't name an iranian nuclear
00:40:39.340
scientist and i follow the issue i can't name a single one of them but if one of them walks into
00:40:44.980
the american embassy in vienna austria because he happens to be in town to attend some seminar
00:40:49.840
i'm going to grab him and that recruitment is going to make my career i'm going to send him back with
00:40:55.960
some sort of listening device that he can use to issue burst transmissions and send me classified
00:41:02.420
reports on the iranian nuclear program wow but does that happen the other way john because you did you
00:41:08.540
did counterintelligence work too uh talk to talk to the uh frequency scope and concern about other
00:41:16.200
countries using these exact tools you've described bribes um ideology whatever to to get our our our
00:41:23.680
countrymen to to do their bidding good well there was that story that just came out about i think it
00:41:27.300
was the air force pilot who was giving our information over well no he was training the
00:41:31.360
chinese yeah training training on uh yeah he was training the chinese my guess is he wasn't a
00:41:37.800
volunteer probably right now i don't think it was a volunteer i can't get my glasses straight
0.98
00:41:41.960
no i don't think it was a volunteer uh but you're right you know other countries aren't stupid
00:41:47.780
these are not secret techniques that we're using we're just trying to exploit human nature
00:41:52.660
and so certainly there are there are other intelligence services that are actively trying
00:41:59.900
to recruit americans it's going to be a little rate to recruit cia well hold on yeah rate the ones
00:42:06.600
that are the best at getting our people to flip is it mi6 israel yeah well hold on in order okay go
00:42:14.320
ahead okay in order in order i would say the israelis number one are they're our greatest ally why would
00:42:20.920
why would why would they be trying to flip right you know the thing about the israelis
00:42:27.240
um and and i'm not talking just about jonathan pollard that's that's ancient history my very
00:42:32.680
first day at cia my very first day the first thing we did is we stood up we put our hands in the air
00:42:37.800
and we swore to uphold the constitution and to protect it against all enemies domestic and foreign
00:42:42.420
and then we got a briefing by the director of security for the whole cia now granted this is
00:42:49.440
36 years ago but but it it is you know still current and he said our greatest challenge as
00:42:59.700
individual officers was going to be counterintelligence because they're going to be
00:43:02.820
temptations out there and our friends and our enemies are going to try to exploit our own
00:43:09.860
vulnerabilities do you drink maybe to excess a little bit do you like to gamble you know whatever
00:43:16.260
the problem is tell us now so we can help you work your way through it but he said that day that the
00:43:23.620
israelis have two declared intelligence officers at the israeli embassy in washington one from mossad
00:43:29.060
and one from shin bet shin bet being the domestic uh intelligence service akin to the fbi
00:43:34.020
and he said the fbi has been able to identify 187 undeclared israeli intelligence officers spread
00:43:44.980
all across the united states actively trying to recruit employees of our defense contractors and i'll
00:43:51.700
give you an example why we developed the f-35 and the israelis were the first ones they said we want the
00:43:57.380
f-35 we said sure we'll give you the f-35 we're gonna slightly degrade the avionics just slightly
00:44:05.780
just so that god forbid if one gets shot down the russians or the chinese can't take it and reverse
0.99
00:44:10.420
engineer it we're gonna call it the f-35i for israel they said no no we want the f-35 we want the same
00:44:16.020
one you have we said no we'll give you the f-35i in the meantime the emiratis came to us and they said
00:44:21.700
we want this f-35 we said great we're gonna slightly degrade the avionics we'll call it the f-35e for
00:44:27.940
emirates and we'll sell you that they said great we'll take it the israelis have been out there
00:44:32.740
trying to steal the f-35 avionics ever since we said the word f-35 because they really believe that
00:44:41.460
at the end of the day they stand alone against the rest of the world and if we're not going to give them
00:44:47.220
literally everything that they say they want then by god they're going to recruit spies and
00:44:52.100
they're going to steal it from us and this is worse than what china does the chinese are very very laser
1.00
00:45:00.180
focused no pun intended on technology the thing is is the chinese don't really have a a true
1.00
00:45:08.020
understanding and appreciation of american culture so the chinese will walk up to you and say i will give
00:45:13.540
you money you give me technology and you know there's no like there's no you know at least
00:45:19.300
buy me drink first yeah right yeah there's none of that the russians have a long view they're they're
00:45:24.740
quite good at it too um are they the second best yeah the russians i i would put the russians at second
00:45:31.460
best and cubans are third best the cubans really i would think you can cubans are good cubans are very
00:45:38.340
very very good in fact um the the cia has never recruited a cuban who didn't turn out to be a
00:45:44.420
double agent that says something yeah wow believers well well the cubans don't operationalize the
00:45:52.420
intelligence they're just a marketplace that's right they have commoditized it appears and i promised
00:45:57.140
that you would get some questions about current events i could talk for hours about the intelligence
00:46:01.060
definitely john but but but please go ahead heading heading into this interview i was doing some research
00:46:06.020
and um i was reading about some former cia operations uh you obviously know about operation
00:46:11.220
ajax uh in 1953 in iran where we overthrew the government um well then we have also operation
00:46:17.940
pb success in 1954 in guatemala where we overthrew the government operation in congro uh where we
00:46:23.860
overthrew patrice lumumba uh 1965 uh operation in chile where we overthrew the president uh salvador
00:46:30.500
alende um and now we're seeing a lot of things happening in iran um that well in operation ajax we
00:46:40.580
had um the cia funded anti-government protests we had paid journalists to publish propaganda we had cia
00:46:49.540
backed street mobs rioting in the streets and all this is just seeming very familiar and i'm just
00:46:54.660
wondering from your perspective if you think that what we're seeing right now is another cia operation
00:46:59.140
yeah i think it is i think it's more um a joint mosad cia operation and the only reason i say that is
00:47:07.620
because the mosad has bragged about it in the israeli press yeah that they were working with the mek the
00:47:13.940
mujahideen hulk formerly a terrorist group and uh they were able to lightly arm the mek uh they were able
00:47:24.180
to get mek operatives in iran to set fire to mosques and then to burn 38 fire trucks so there
00:47:31.940
was no way to put out the the fires at the mosques so the israelis were they couldn't help themselves but
0.66
00:47:37.940
to brag about it in um in the israeli media what two three weeks ago i think that look history has
00:47:48.660
proven that it is it's easier it's cheaper and it's safer for americans if you let controlled
00:47:57.220
mobs do your dirty work rather than putting your own operatives on the ground and you know carrying
0.99
00:48:02.580
out close-in assassinations and things like that the risk is just too high for something like that
00:48:08.660
and so to answer your question yeah there's a long history as you as you correctly noted there's a long
00:48:14.580
history of the cia doing things like this i've got to tell you the guatemala operation is one of my
00:48:20.500
favorite to talk about because it is so outrageous there's a long history there's a long history that
00:48:26.820
went into that operation in guatemala that started actually before there was anything called a cia it
00:48:31.940
started in the late 19th century there was an american railroad tycoon who bought a narrow strip of land
00:48:38.900
from from guatemala city to the coast with the idea being that he could transport goods from the coast
00:48:45.700
to the guatemala city and make money being the the sole way of transporting these goods so they hired you
00:48:53.140
know local indigenous people to lay the track and he went down there to uh just to take a look at his
00:49:00.260
investment watch them lay the track and every day at lunchtime the workers would take a break and they
00:49:05.860
would pick these fruits off of the trees and they would eat the fruits and so the tycoon said what
00:49:11.060
are these fruits that that the workers are eating and he was told they're called bananas he had never
00:49:17.220
seen a banana before he'd never heard of a banana so he tried one and it was delicious and sweet and he
00:49:22.820
said we should take the bananas and send them to america and he did and got even richer than he always
00:49:30.020
was he also changed the name of the company to the united fruit company well this went for the next
00:49:36.500
three quarters of a century and finally in 1954 uh the guatemalan government said you know we're sending
00:49:45.060
all these bananas to the united states we're not making any money on these bananas at all the united
00:49:50.340
fruit company owns the the train it owns the tracks it owns the land on the two sides of the tracks where
00:49:56.100
all the bananas are growing we're not making anything on this we should nationalize the bananas
00:50:02.020
well three of the members of the board of directors of the united of the united fruit company were john
00:50:07.860
foster dulles the secretary of state alan dulles his brother the cia director and president eisenhower's
00:50:15.300
secretary's brother and so we overthrew the guatemalan government we installed a military
00:50:23.140
dictatorship that brutalized the population for the next 20 plus years and that country still
00:50:30.500
hasn't gotten over that coup it's still one of the most dangerous places in the world i went to
00:50:35.460
guatemala a couple of years ago to volunteer for a couple of weeks at an orphanage and thank god that
00:50:40.660
the orphanage had a 20 foot high concrete wall all the way around it because i could barely get to sleep
00:50:46.420
at night for all the gunfire outside it's still a terrible place and it's a terrible place because we
00:50:52.340
made it that way yeah yeah we don't have a great record of overthrowing these governments having
00:50:57.300
positive we really don't you know we're good at overthrowing i thought there would be more like
00:51:01.620
united fruit standard fruit resentment over our venezuela operation i spent a lot of time in latin
00:51:06.100
america i covered latin america extensively i i i thought that that would sort of tickle those um
00:51:13.380
frustrations of yesteryear and i'm surprised it didn't almost everyone i know in latin america was
00:51:19.220
thrilled that maduro was removed and i i did ask you know the question is this is this a precedent
00:51:25.300
that that we're going to be excited about when democrats are in power like are they is is like
00:51:30.020
a future president aoc gonna order delta force to go and like yank javier malay out of argentina
00:51:37.860
if she doesn't doesn't like you know the fact that he fired uh teachers who were trying to teach
00:51:43.620
pronouns i i don't know you're absolutely right i i have burned my hour with uh with john did you
00:51:50.580
have any any any final questions yeah one one final question we talked about privacy before there's the
00:51:57.300
popular myth that the cia knows all and sees all and is in your phone and your email and watching
00:52:01.780
through your tv uh knows everything that you're doing but we constantly see cases where there's domestic
00:52:08.500
terrorism or someone goes out and kills somebody and has been texting with people and posting on
00:52:12.500
forums and leaving a trail that you'd think would be caught so how really omnipotent is the cia are
00:52:20.420
these agencies and how much of that is just popular mythos and and i guess how much of it is allowed to
00:52:28.340
happen now that's the 64 000 question right there um they're not omnipotent their computer systems are near
00:52:36.500
omnipotent but you don't have a human being that's going over all this this data you know it's yes
00:52:43.220
it's all being collected it's all being just pulled out of the ether and stored in these computers but
00:52:49.140
human beings don't actually look at it until after the fact look at the san bernardino attack from
00:52:55.380
whatever it was 2017 or 2016 the the terrorists in that case in san bernardino california were
00:53:04.420
communicating through the chat function of a game app well i'll tell you who pioneered that was was
00:53:11.940
the mossad that's how they would communicate in their anti-hezbollah operations um but the fbi it
00:53:18.500
never occurred to the fbi that they should be working with nsa to to collect you know in-game chat apps i
00:53:27.700
mean who would even think of such a thing so yeah the information's out there it's just not necessarily
00:53:33.140
being seen by a human being for the cia i mean the cia will tell you right off the bat um that they
00:53:39.620
recruit spies to steal secrets and they only do that overseas okay i want to believe that i'm not
00:53:45.060
sure that i do but i would be more worried domestically far more worried about nsa and fbi and one other
00:53:52.020
thing about fbi that i think we should be worried about for for you know 250 years practically well not
00:53:59.540
250 since the fbi was founded in the early 1920s if they wanted information personal information on
00:54:06.020
an american or from an american they had to get a warrant right you have to go before a judge you
00:54:10.180
have to have probable cause you have to do it with a warrant they don't anymore we have for a while
00:54:15.540
right right yeah right after 9 11 they fisa number one number two right after 9 11 they started using
00:54:21.620
these things called national security letters which were just like threatening letters to the
00:54:25.860
to the isp providers saying we're the fbi and you're not and we want this information and you
00:54:32.660
have 48 hours to to cough it up okay that's not a warrant if hearing all these crazy stories about
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number three the the social media platforms sell our metadata to anybody who wants to pay
00:55:40.500
and so why would the fbi go before a judge and have to make a probable cause argument when they can just
00:55:47.060
go to meta and just buy it we we we tried to pass laws to say that the uh that the fbi could not
00:55:56.020
buy like use data brokers to get information that would otherwise require a warrant yes and i mean
00:56:01.860
you might you might as well have been cheerleading the fall of the twin towers making that suggestion
00:56:07.620
people were saying oh we're gonna have the next 911 the blood's gonna be on your hands we uh i pursued that
00:56:13.380
along with some of the some of the folks like daryl isa and and we totally lost that legislative
00:56:18.820
effort but the national security letters guess who's receiving those letters at the big tech
00:56:22.900
companies former fbi leadership right right if you fought if you follow the revolving door between fbi cia
00:56:32.420
and big tech that's where they go to cash out and so it's a it's a cia fbi person writing a letter to
00:56:39.140
someone who months before was a cia a fbi person and you're just the deliverable you you the american
00:56:45.860
public what a cheery note to end on uh john kiriaku we always appreciate your uh your insights your
00:56:52.020
perspective your expertise uh it's added so much to our network and our program to introduce you to
00:56:57.220
our viewers and uh and we wish you well and hopefully thank you so much thank you pleasure i look
00:57:02.420
forward to it we'll get you next uh what what a discussion so long story short we are the bad guys
00:57:10.500
we're just going to change the name of this podcast to pearson sharp is not satisfied
00:57:14.660
like i said yesterday are you satisfied never thanks for joining me but we'll be back next
00:57:18.740
week to be unsatisfied together want to see more great videos like this click on the link below to
00:57:24.180
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