John Kiriakou – This Past Weekend with Theo Von #661

Podcast name: This Past Weekend Episode title: John Kiriakou | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #661 YouTube URL: https://youtu.be/mq2VC8s15Yk?si=qeA_k7ZVLxuNafYt TRUE video duration: 2:19:18 Last transcript timestamp used: 02:19:12 Transcript status: ✅ Full

1. QUICK REFERENCE BOX

Top 5 Books

Top 5 Products/Tools Recommendations

Guest

Best Quotes

  • ⭐ “I believe that the United States is the best country in the world, that’s why I live here… but the reason why I’m as active and as vocal as I am is because I want to change the things that I disagree with.” — John Kiriakou [02:07:07]

  • ⭐ “If somebody comes into your cell uninvited that’s an act of aggression.” — [SPEAKER UNCERTAIN / Prison Guard] [01:54:41]

  • ⭐ “You can’t have as a policy just kill everybody, women, children, the elderly, wipe out every hospital, every school, every apartment block, that’s genocide.” — John Kiriakou [01:20:23]

Sponsors/Affiliates Mentioned

  • Saily [26:18] — Travel eSIM provider giving 15% off with code “Theo”. 🔗 Search on Amazon

  • Morgan & Morgan [27:34] — Injury law firm; dial #LAW. 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

  • BetterHelp [55:39] — Online therapy platform; 10% off at betterhelp.com/theo. 🔗 Search on Amazon

  • CarShield [57:13] — Vehicle protection plans; 20% off with code Theo at carshield.com. 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

You’ll love this episode if you’re interested in…

Intelligence operations, political corruption, foreign policy, prison dynamics, mass surveillance.

Most Searched For

Total count summary: 5 books · 11 products · 90 people · 14 concepts

2. EPISODE OVERVIEW

  • Episode Title & Number: John Kiriakou | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #661

  • Hosts: Theo Von (Comedian and podcaster).

  • Guests: John Kiriakou (Author, speaker, former CIA officer, and whistleblower who famously exposed the CIA’s illegal torture program).

  • Duration: 2:19:18

  • Summary: Former CIA counterterrorism officer John Kiriakou sits down with Theo Von to recount his gripping recruitment into the agency, the intense operations following 9/11, and the harsh realities of the U.S. torture program that he ultimately blew the whistle on. The conversation traverses global geopolitics, deeply ingrained political corruption, the massive U.S. surveillance state, and John’s eventual 23-month prison sentence where he interacted with mob bosses and serial killers.

  • Key Themes:

    • The evolution of the CIA from intelligence gathering to targeted killing after 9/11.

    • The hidden mechanisms of political elections (Superdelegates and AIPAC).

    • Advanced warnings and global complexities surrounding the September 11th attacks.

    • The harsh reality and ethical violations of the CIA’s enhanced interrogation techniques.

    • Life inside the federal prison system and managing gang dynamics.

    • The growing threat of mass data collection and government surveillance on Americans.

3. TIMESTAMP DIRECTORY

  • [00:00] — Intro & Tulsi Gabbard — Theo introduces John and they discuss Tulsi Gabbard and Democratic superdelegates.

  • [05:06] — The 1984 Election & Political Fixing — John shares his experience running George McGovern’s campaign event and the suppression of populist candidates.

  • [10:05] — Joining the CIA — John tells the incredible story of analyzing his boss and being recruited by his disguised professor.

  • [22:19] — The Invasion of Kuwait — John’s rapid elevation to brief the President during the outbreak of the Gulf War.

  • [25:07] — Executive Order 12333 & The Shift — How the CIA changed from an intelligence body to a paramilitary assassination force post-9/11.

  • [28:15] — 9/11 Conspiracies & Warnings — Analyzing advanced warnings of 9/11 and Cofer Black’s ominous intelligence briefing.

  • [36:13] — Carlos the Jackal — Exploring the massive 1970s OPEC raid by the infamous terrorist.

  • [43:06] — The Dancing Israelis & Espionage — Discussing Israeli intelligence operations within the U.S.

  • [47:28] — AIPAC and Political Influence — A deep dive into the financial influence of AIPAC on U.S. elections and Thomas Massie.

  • [58:00] — Interrogation Realities — John discusses his deployment to Pakistan and navigating the lawless interrogations of al-Qaeda suspects.

  • [01:06:20] — The CIA Torture Program — Exposing waterboarding, cold cells, and rectal feeding devised by contract psychologists.

  • [01:13:06] — Media & Global Conflicts — Assessing the violence in Gaza, killed journalists, and international backlash.

  • [01:24:27] — The F-35 & Defense Tech Sharing — How the U.S. degrades tech exports and the implications of sharing defense R&D.

  • [01:31:37] — Food Additives in the U.S. — Tangent into McDonald’s ingredients and how U.S. regulations fall behind Europe’s.

  • [01:35:19] — Foreign Spies in D.C. — The staggering presence of international intelligence officers in the U.S. capital.

  • [01:40:43] — Acoustic Kitty & Spy Tech — The hilariously failed $20M CIA project to turn a cat into a listening device.

  • [01:43:18] — Mass Surveillance & Data Centers — The scary reality of the NSA permanently storing American phone calls and texts.

  • [01:46:45] — Propagandizing Americans — How the NDAA of 2016 made it legal for the U.S. government to use propaganda on its citizens.

  • [01:52:10] — Life in Federal Prison — John recounts his 23-month sentence, joining the Italian mob table, and dealing with a serial killer.

  • [02:00:26] — The “Cat in the Hat” Prison Hit — John cleverly navigates prison politics, leading to a brutal fight between inmates to protect himself.

  • [02:06:28] — Can America Be the Good Guys? — A philosophical debate on whether the U.S. can return to being a peacekeeper.

  • [02:12:03] — Surveillance Detection in Pakistan — John’s heart-pounding realization that he was being followed and confronting a Pakistani general.

4. PEOPLE MENTIONED

  1. Theo Von — Podcast Host. [00:00]. Wikipedia

  2. John Kiriakou — Guest, Author, former CIA. [00:00], [10:05], [22:19], [58:00], [01:52:10], [02:10:38]. Wikipedia 🔗 Search on Amazon

  3. Tulsi Gabbard — Politician. [01:03], [01:16], [01:37]. Wikipedia

  4. Bernie Sanders — U.S. Senator. [02:11], [03:34], [08:56]. Wikipedia

  5. George McGovern — 1972 Presidential Candidate. [02:35], [04:49], [05:38], [06:44]. Wikipedia

  6. Hillary Clinton — Politician. [03:34], [08:56]. Wikipedia

  7. Ronald Reagan — Former U.S. President. [05:30], [20:25], [01:26:27], [02:08:10]. Wikipedia

  8. Mo Udall — 1976 Presidential Candidate. [05:52]. Wikipedia

  9. Cliff Robertson — Academy Award-winning actor. [06:09]. Wikipedia

  10. Dina Merrill — Actress. [06:09]. Wikipedia

  11. Frank Mankiewicz — Press Secretary. [06:16]. Wikipedia

  12. Robert Kennedy Sr. — Politician. [06:16]. Wikipedia

  13. Walter Mondale — Politician. [06:44]. Wikipedia

  14. Gary Hart — Politician. [06:44]. Wikipedia

  15. Jesse Jackson — Politician. [06:57], [07:30]. Wikipedia

  16. Debbie Wasserman Schultz — DNC Head. [08:39]. Wikipedia

  17. Franklin D. Roosevelt — Former U.S. President. [13:08], [14:14]. Wikipedia

  18. Winston Churchill — UK Prime Minister. [12:33]. Wikipedia

  19. Joseph Stalin — Soviet Leader. [12:33], [13:14]. Wikipedia

  20. Dr. Gerald Post — Psychiatry Professor & CIA Recruiter. [14:50], [16:18], [17:04], [21:13]. Wikipedia (Spelled Jerrold Post)

  21. Frank Church — U.S. Senator. [19:08]. Wikipedia

  22. Birch Bayh — U.S. Senator. [19:21]. Wikipedia

  23. Patrick McCaffrey — Basketball player in Romania. [22:07]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  24. George H.W. Bush — Former U.S. President. [22:45]. Wikipedia

  25. Gerald Ford — Former U.S. President. [24:14]. Wikipedia

  26. George W. Bush — Former U.S. President. [25:07]. Wikipedia

  27. Cofer Black — CIA Director of Counterterrorism. [32:17], [33:46], [54:15]. Wikipedia

  28. Osama bin Laden — Terrorist leader. [32:23], [36:00]. Wikipedia

  29. Condoleezza Rice — National Security Advisor. [34:02]. Wikipedia

  30. Carlos the Jackal (Ilich Ramírez Sánchez) — Terrorist. [36:00], [36:13]. Wikipedia

  31. Prince Bandar bin Sultan Al Saud — Saudi Ambassador. [37:57], [38:20]. Wikipedia

  32. George Tenet — CIA Director. [38:20]. Wikipedia

  33. Abu Zubaydah — Detainee. [39:36], [02:04:58]. Wikipedia

  34. Dick Cheney — U.S. Vice President. [10:50]. Wikipedia

  35. David Addington — Counsel to VP. [10:50]. Wikipedia

  36. Benjamin Netanyahu — Prime Minister of Israel. [43:28], [01:27:22]. Wikipedia

  37. Saddam Hussein — Iraq Leader. [43:35]. Wikipedia

  38. Muammar Gaddafi — Libyan Leader. [43:35], [02:08:55]. Wikipedia

  39. Thomas Massie — U.S. Congressman. [47:17], [01:22:45]. Wikipedia

  40. Donald Trump — U.S. President. [07:56], [47:50]. Wikipedia

  41. Margaret Connelly — Sister of Irish President. [13:06], [13:32]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  42. Greta Thunberg — Climate Activist. [13:50]. Wikipedia

  43. Shireen Abu Akleh — Journalist. [14:41], [14:57]. Wikipedia

  44. Ro Khanna — U.S. Congressman. [17:12], [17:27]. Wikipedia

  45. Tucker Carlson — Media Personality. [17:37], [01:50:12]. Wikipedia

  46. Piers Morgan — TV Host. [18:40], [18:46]. Wikipedia

  47. Scott Horton — Author/Speaker. [19:14]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  48. Alan Dershowitz — Lawyer/Author. [19:14], [19:34]. Wikipedia

  49. General Danny Ayalon — Former Israeli General. [19:25]. Wikipedia

  50. Ted Cruz — U.S. Senator. [20:52]. Wikipedia

  51. Lindsey Graham — U.S. Senator. [20:52]. Wikipedia

  52. Marjorie Taylor Greene — U.S. Congresswoman. [22:56]. Wikipedia

  53. Jonathan Pollard — Spy. [26:34], [01:27:13]. Wikipedia

  54. Miriam Adelson — Billionaire. [27:05]. Wikipedia

  55. Sheldon Adelson — Billionaire. [27:13], [01:27:22]. Wikipedia

  56. Mike Huckabee — Politician. [27:34]. Wikipedia

  57. Edward Snowden — Whistleblower. [35:49], [01:43:47], [01:50:34]. Wikipedia

  58. Julian Assange — WikiLeaks Founder. [44:04]. Wikipedia

  59. Eric Rudolph — Criminal. [45:13]. Wikipedia

  60. Ted Kaczynski (Unabomber) — Criminal. [45:13]. Wikipedia

  61. Philip Agee — Ex-CIA Whistleblower. [50:41]. Wikipedia

  62. Ray McGovern — Ex-CIA. [50:41]. Wikipedia

  63. Jake Tapper — Journalist. [00:26], [02:00:26]. Wikipedia

  64. James Mitchell — Contract Psychologist. [08:58]. Wikipedia

  65. Bruce Jessen — Contract Psychologist. [08:58]. Wikipedia

  66. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed — 9/11 Organizer. [10:20]. Wikipedia

  67. Ammar al-Baluchi — Terrorist. [10:20]. Wikipedia

  68. Ramzi bin al-Shibh — Terrorist. [10:20]. Wikipedia

  69. “Truck” — Serial killer inmate. [57:04], [01:58:38], [02:01:21]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  70. “Cat in the Hat” — Hitman inmate. [58:57], [02:00:57], [02:01:50]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  71. General Muhammad — Pakistani Intelligence. [15:49], [02:16:49]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  72. Max Kiriakou — John’s Son. [18:39]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  73. Al Franken — Politician/Comedian. [08:08]. Wikipedia

  74. Fidel Castro — Cuban Leader. [24:45]. Wikipedia

  75. Aaron Rodgers — NFL Quarterback. [08:01]. Wikipedia

  76. Archbishop Elpidophoros — Religious Leader. [10:06]. Wikipedia

  77. Pope Francis — Head of Catholic Church. [09:10]. Wikipedia

  78. Joe Biden — U.S. President. [10:45]. Wikipedia

  79. Lloyd Austin — Secretary of Defense. [10:45]. Wikipedia

  80. [UNKNOWN] Union Boss — UFCW Union leader. [15:17]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  81. Princess Haifa bint Faisal — Wife of Prince Bandar. [37:57]. Wikipedia

  82. King Fahd — Saudi King. [41:45]. Wikipedia

  83. [UNKNOWN] Tunisian al-Qaeda suspect 1 — Detainee. [01:02:42]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  84. [UNKNOWN] Tunisian al-Qaeda suspect 2 — Detainee. [01:02:42]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  85. [UNKNOWN] Jordanian prisoner — First captive interrogated by John. [01:00:31]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  86. Patrick Bet-David — Podcaster. [01:50:03]. Wikipedia

  87. Joe Rogan — Podcaster. [01:50:03]. Wikipedia

  88. Dean [UNCONFIRMED] — First wife’s cousin. [02:18:15]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  89. [UNKNOWN] John’s First Wife — Ex-wife. [02:18:15]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

  90. [UNKNOWN] Dr. Steve — Psychiatrist friend. [02:17:19]. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/579996/to-add-vs-to-be-added

5. BOOKS REFERENCED

  1. The Ultimate Guide to CIA Skills Tactics and Techniques

  2. Foreign Affairs of the United States Greece Turkey Cyprus 1949 to 1967

    • Author: [UNKNOWN — TO BE FILLED IN] / Government Printing Office

    • Timestamps: [34:20]

    • Context: The obscure text John and Cofer Black went to discuss at the White House on the morning of 9/11 because it outed CIA sources.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  3. CIA Insiders Guides to Surveillance and Surveillance Detection

    • Author: John Kiriakou

    • Timestamps: [01:44:41]

    • Context: Written during COVID for Skyhorse Publishing, part of a specialized series.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  4. CIA Insiders Guides to Lying and Lie Detection

    • Author: John Kiriakou

    • Timestamps: [01:44:41]

    • Context: Another book in his survival/CIA tactic series.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  5. CIA Insiders Guides to Disappearing and Living Off the Grid

    • Author: John Kiriakou

    • Timestamps: [01:44:41]

    • Context: Discussed in the context of avoiding government surveillance.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

6. PRODUCTS & SERVICES

  1. Saily App

    • Category: Digital App / eSIM Service

    • Timestamps: [26:18]

    • Context: Sponsor read offering affordable travel internet data plans.

    • Price point: Mentions 15% discount

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  2. Morgan & Morgan Services

    • Category: Legal Service

    • Timestamps: [27:34]

    • Context: Sponsor read for the nation’s largest injury law firm.

    • Price point: Fee is free unless they win

    • 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

  3. BetterHelp

    • Category: Online Therapy SaaS

    • Timestamps: [55:39]

    • Context: Sponsor read for the therapy platform to deal with summer stress.

    • Price point: 10% off first month

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  4. CarShield

    • Category: Vehicle Warranty Service

    • Timestamps: [57:13]

    • Context: Sponsor read for protection from expensive repair bills.

    • Price point: 20% off with promo code

    • 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

  5. F-35 Fighter Jet

    • Category: Military Defense Tech

    • Timestamps: [01:24:27]

    • Context: John discusses foreign nations trying to buy it and how the CIA strategically downgraded avionics.

    • Price point: Unmentioned

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  6. McDonald’s Hamburger

    • Category: Fast Food

    • Timestamps: [01:31:37]

    • Context: Referenced in a decay experiment where bugs wouldn’t eat it.

    • Price point: Unmentioned

    • 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

  7. McDonald’s Quarter Pounder

    • Category: Fast Food

    • Timestamps: [01:31:37]

    • Context: Tested in the same rot experiment on YouTube.

    • Price point: Unmentioned

    • 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

  8. McDonald’s French Fries

    • Category: Fast Food

    • Timestamps: [01:33:06]

    • Context: Theo points out the heavily processed ingredient list legal in the US but banned in Europe.

    • Price point: Unmentioned

    • 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

  9. McDonald’s Big Mac / Special Sauce

    • Category: Fast Food / Condiment

    • Timestamps: [01:33:50]

    • Context: Disgusted discovery of high-fructose corn syrup and propylene glycol alginate.

    • Price point: Unmentioned

    • 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

  10. McDonald’s McRib

    • Category: Fast Food

    • Timestamps: [01:34:28]

    • Context: Theo jokes about the processed nature of the cult-favorite sandwich.

    • Price point: Unmentioned

    • 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

  11. Disposable Cell Phone & Scratch-Off Cards

    • Category: Electronics

    • Timestamps: [01:39:26]

    • Context: John gave this to a recruited asset to communicate safely, but the asset racked up massive bills.

    • Price point: Asset ran up $800 bills

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

7. COMPANIES & BRANDS

8. MEDIA REFERENCED

  1. The Joe Rogan Experience

    • Type: Podcast

    • Creator: Joe Rogan

    • Timestamps: [01:50:03]

    • Context: Referenced as a top-level show that doesn’t read its live chats.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  2. PBD Podcast

    • Type: Podcast

    • Creator: Patrick Bet-David

    • Timestamps: [01:50:03]

    • Context: Included alongside Rogan and Tucker as the premier circuit.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  3. Piers Morgan Uncensored

    • Type: TV Show / Podcast

    • Creator: Piers Morgan

    • Timestamps: [01:18:40]

    • Context: John went on the panel to debate Israel/Gaza.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  4. Tucker Carlson Tonight

    • Type: Media Show

    • Creator: Tucker Carlson

    • Timestamps: [01:17:37]

    • Context: Praised for being incredibly genuine off-camera.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  5. John Kiriakou’s Briefing Room

    • Type: Podcast

    • Creator: John Kiriakou

    • Timestamps: [02:10:38]

    • Context: His new upcoming YouTube podcast.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  6. John Kiriakou’s Dead Drop

    • Type: Podcast

    • Creator: John Kiriakou

    • Timestamps: [02:10:53]

    • Context: His highly successful audio-only storytelling podcast.

    • 🔗 Search on Amazon

  7. Voice of America Broadcasts

    • Type: State Media

    • Creator: US Government

    • Timestamps: [01:46:45]

    • Context: Discussed as overt American propaganda mechanisms.

    • 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

  8. Radio Marti / TV Marti

    • Type: State Media

    • Creator: US Government

    • Timestamps: [01:47:02]

    • Context: Soap operas and baseball aimed at Cuba.

    • 🔗 [AMAZON LINK TO BE ADDED]

9. KEY CONCEPTS & IDEAS

  1. Superdelegates

    • Explanation: Elite party officials in the DNC who can override primary voter outcomes.

    • Timestamps: [03:01], [07:49]

    • Context: Used to prevent populist candidates like Bernie Sanders or George McGovern from seizing power.

    • Search: Superdelegates

  2. Political Psychological Profiling

    • Explanation: Assessing the mental fitness, weaknesses, and tendencies of leaders based on observational data.

    • Timestamps: [14:50]

    • Context: John was tested on this by his professor to secure his CIA entry.

    • Search: Political Psychological Profiling

  3. Executive Order 12333

    • Explanation: A foundational intelligence document signed by Gerald Ford restricting CIA assassinations.

    • Timestamps: [24:14]

    • Context: Amended heavily after 9/11 to re-authorize lethal action.

    • Search: Executive Order 12333

  4. Mosaic Concept of Intelligence Gathering

  5. Dancing Israelis Conspiracy

    • Explanation: The incident where five Israeli citizens were arrested photographing and celebrating the 9/11 attacks in New Jersey.

    • Timestamps: [43:06], [45:05]

    • Context: John clarifies they weren’t masterminds, but likely had foreknowledge that the US would now enter conflicts beneficial to Israel.

    • Search: Dancing Israelis Conspiracy

  6. Sensory Deprivation (Interrogation)

  7. Rectal Feeding

    • Explanation: Medically unnecessary forced ingestion through the anus.

    • Timestamps: [01:08:36]

    • Context: Done purely for cultural humiliation against Muslim captives using hummus.

    • Search: Rectal Feeding

  8. Waterboarding

    • Explanation: Simulated drowning to induce absolute panic.

    • Timestamps: [01:07:16]

    • Context: Discussed as just one slice of the terrible pie of methods.

    • Search: Waterboarding

  9. The Cold Cell

    • Explanation: Freezing a naked prisoner chained to the ceiling.

    • Timestamps: [01:08:08]

    • Context: Used to induce hypothermia and break resistance through exhaustion.

    • Search: The Cold Cell

  10. Acoustic Kitty

    • Explanation: A multi-million dollar program trying to turn cats into walking bugs.

    • Timestamps: [01:36:25], [01:39:58]

    • Context: A catastrophic failure of espionage technology.

    • Search: Acoustic Kitty

  11. Mass Surveillance / Data Centers

  12. National Security Letters

    • Explanation: Subpoenas that bypass federal judges to access private citizen data.

    • Timestamps: [01:45:58]

    • Context: How the Patriot Act era destroyed judicial oversight for tracking.

    • Search: National Security Letters

  13. National Defense Authorization Act of 2016

  14. Surveillance Detection Routes

    • Explanation: Calculated driving anomalies designed to expose a tail.

    • Timestamps: [02:13:09]

    • Context: John executing multiple routes at 5 AM to confirm Pakistani intelligence was following him.

    • Search: Surveillance Detection Routes

10. QUOTES & SOUNDBITES

Tier 1 — Top Quotes

  • ⭐ “I believe that the United States is the best country in the world, that’s why I live here… but the reason why I’m as active and as vocal as I am is because I want to change the things that I disagree with.” — John Kiriakou [02:07:07]

  • ⭐ “If somebody comes into your cell uninvited that’s an act of aggression.” — [SPEAKER UNCERTAIN / Prison Guard] [01:54:41]

  • ⭐ “You can’t have as a policy just kill everybody, women, children, the elderly, wipe out every hospital, every school, every apartment block, that’s genocide.” — John Kiriakou [01:20:23]

  • ⭐ “The bad old days of the CIA are gone.” — [SPEAKER UNCERTAIN / CIA Friend] [20:06]

  • ⭐ “Today we’re at war all of us are going to have to do our part not all of us are going to be able to come home.” — Cofer Black [54:15]

  • ⭐ “Kill them all.” — [SPEAKER UNCERTAIN / John’s CIA Boss] [55:09]

  • ⭐ “We’re picking up chatter from the al-Qaeda training camps where camp commanders are on the phone with their students and they’re crying and telling them I’ll see you in paradise.” — Cofer Black [32:56]

  • ⭐ “Admit nothing deny everything make counter accusations.” — John Kiriakou [02:04:05]

Tier 2 — Notable Mentions

  • “You thought all of that all up on your own huh that’s true.” — [SPEAKER UNCERTAIN / Internet Troll] [01:50:20]

  • “No rats in the room.” — John Kiriakou [02:00:17]

  • “We don’t allow any pedophiles in our cell and no rats.” — John Kiriakou [01:59:10]

11. RESOURCES & LINKS

Index: BetterHelp Therapy, CarShield, Morgan & Morgan Law, Saily Travel eSIM

12. ACTION ITEMS & TAKEAWAYS

  • Analyze your leaders. Observe behavioral tendencies under stress to profile outcomes. (Recommended by Dr. Gerald Post [14:50]). Quick Win.

  • Ditch connected technology to remain truly hidden. Own no tech if you desire total removal from state tracking. (Recommended by John Kiriakou [01:45:13]). Major Undertaking.

  • Mix up your daily routes. Change departure times and pathways to reveal surveillance. (Recommended by John Kiriakou [02:13:09]). Habit.

  • Let others do your dirty work. When engaged in a high-stakes standoff, agitate safely rather than engaging directly. (Recommended by John Kiriakou [02:02:46]). Strategy.

Start Here: Begin analyzing the structural influence behind your news feeds and adjust your technology usage to limit broad digital footprints.

13. TOPIC & SUBJECT AREA MAP

  1. Primary Topics (≈10+ minutes)

    • The U.S. Torture Program and Interrogation Methods [58:00]

    • Federal Prison Dynamics and Mob Politics [01:52:10]

    • Israeli/AIPAC Influence in American Politics [43:06]

  2. Secondary Topics (≈5–10 minutes)

    • John’s Recruitment and Early CIA Operations [10:05]

    • 9/11 Advanced Warnings and Pre-War Intel [28:15]

    • The Military Industrial Complex and Data Centers [01:42:02]

  3. Mentioned Topics (<5 minutes)

    • The DNC and Superdelegates [03:01]

    • U.S. Fast Food Regulations [01:31:37]

    • Bizarre CIA Surveillance Tech (Cats/Pigeons) [01:36:25]

  4. Fleeting References (single sentence)

14. QUESTIONS & DISCUSSION THREADS

  • “Why would you stay in a party that you know at a certain point is cheating you?”

    • Asked by: Theo Von [02:17]

    • Answered: They explored the systemic capture of both parties, notably superdelegates blocking Bernie Sanders. Fully answered.

    • ⭐ Sparked the massive DNC critique.

  • “Has your point of view changed at all since 9/11?”

    • Asked by: Theo Von [28:37]

    • Answered: John admitted his view shifted drastically away from conspiracies toward intelligence failures and Israeli foreknowledge. Fully answered.

  • “Why don’t they have to register as foreign agents?”

    • Asked by: John Kiriakou regarding AIPAC [01:22:17]

    • Answered: Because politicians are utterly terrified of being primaried. Fully answered.

Questions They Didn’t Ask: Why did the CIA eventually let the torture program become public, and who internally tried to stop it before the whistleblowers?

15. STORIES, ANECDOTES & CASE STUDIES

  • Roosevelt at Yalta

    • Who told it: John Kiriakou [13:08]

    • Summary: Stalin used a spy to learn FDR was deathly ill, forced an exhaustive travel route, and demanded talks begin immediately to extract maximum concessions.

    • Category: Historical Examples

  • The Oval Office Briefing

    • Who told it: John Kiriakou [22:19]

    • Summary: A 25-year-old John sits next to President Bush and is expected to deliver the breaking operational update on Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait.

    • Category: Personal Anecdotes

  • The Arrest of “Cat in the Hat”

    • Who told it: John Kiriakou [02:00:26]

    • Summary: John manipulated an aggressive inmate who accused him of being a rat into calling a serial killer a “chomo,” triggering a violent helicopter-lifeflight beating.

    • Category: Personal Anecdotes / Failures

  • The Acoustic Kitty Failure

    • Who told it: Theo & John [01:39:58]

    • Summary: The CIA spent $20 million planting a mic in a cat, only for it to be hit by a taxi immediately upon deployment.

    • Category: Failures/Cautionary Tales

16. ARGUMENTS, POSITIONS & DEBATES

  • Position: Israel had advanced warning of 9/11.

    • Who holds it: John Kiriakou

    • Timestamp: [42:35]

    • Reasoning: Sources within Al-Qaeda informed Israeli intelligence, but Israel withheld details knowing a U.S. invasion of the Middle East served their geopolitical goals.

    • Stance: Strongly held.

  • Position: CIA Contractors should be put to death.

    • Who holds it: John Kiriakou (implication of criminal justice)

    • Timestamp: [01:09:09]

    • Reasoning: If the torture program perpetrators committed crimes, charge them, sentence them, and execute them under the law, rather than endless limbo.

    • Stance: Nuanced/Legalistic.

17. PROBLEMS, SOLUTIONS & FRAMEWORKS

  • Problem: The CIA had to manage captured insurgents without a defined playbook or legal structure, leading to horrific improvised abuse. [58:00]

    • Solution: Contract psychologists devised a highly illegal, wildly expensive “enhanced interrogation” menu that ruined U.S. credibility forever.

  • Problem: U.S. domestic food ingredients are laced with toxic fillers banned globally. [01:31:37]

    • Solution: Theo and John analyze European laws that demand four pure ingredients instead of the chemical slurry found in American fast food.

18. TANGENTS & CONNECTIONS

  • McDonald’s Additives

    • Triggered by: Discussions of global differences and corporate greed. [01:31:37]

    • Return: They quickly circle back to the broader surveillance state after breaking down Big Mac sauce.

  • Acoustic Kitty Espionage

    • Triggered by: Talk of foreign agents in DC. [01:36:25]

    • Connections: Bridged the dark realities of the intelligence state with the absurdity of unlimited government budgets.

19. AFFILIATE CLIPS (Short-Form Video Opportunities)

    1. The Dark Reality of U.S. Fast Food

      • Timestamp: [01:31:37] – [01:34:28]

      • Excerpt: “Even bugs won’t touch a McDonald’s hamburger… Europe has four ingredients, the US has 10 plus.”

      • Affiliate Category: Health/Wellness

      • Suggestions: 🔗 Search on Amazon

      • Hook: Why bugs refuse to eat American fast food…

    2. Surviving Federal Prison with the Mob

      • Timestamp: [01:54:41] – [01:56:40]

      • Excerpt: “You can sit with the Aryans in the cafeteria… then the Banano family drafted me.”

      • Affiliate Category: True Crime Books/Media

      • Suggestions: 🔗 Search on Amazon

      • Hook: CIA Whistleblower explains federal prison gangs.

    3. The Insane “Acoustic Kitty” Spy Project

      • Timestamp: [01:39:58] – [01:41:08]

      • Excerpt: “The CIA spent $20 million to implant a microphone in a cat… and it got hit by a taxi immediately.”

      • Affiliate Category: Books/Gadgets

      • Suggestions: 🔗 Search on Amazon

      • Hook: The CIA’s $20,000,000 cat experiment.

 

“CIA Secrets, Honesty, and Heavy Truths” – Comment Section Deep-Dive for TPW #661

1. Overall Comment Summary

The audience reaction to John Kiriakou’s appearance on This Past Weekend is strongly positive and highly engaged, with many calling it one of Theo’s best and most important long-form conversations in a while. Viewers praise the mix of dark, heavy subject matter (torture, CIA, war, 9/11) with Theo’s grounded curiosity and empathy, and a lot of people say they stayed up way later than planned to finish the full episode. At the same time, a noticeable minority question John’s narratives or motives, especially around his time in the CIA and how much he “really” can or will say on a public podcast, so the tone is not blind hero worship but engaged, skeptical interest. Overall it feels like a 9/10 experience for most listeners: intense but compelling, and the comments suggest strong rewatch and share value.[youtube][open.spotify]


2. Key Themes & Audience Insights

Most praised aspects

  • Theo’s interviewing: People repeatedly praise how Theo balances humor with seriousness, lets Kiriakou talk, and asks “regular person” questions without trying to sound like an expert.[open.spotify][youtube]

  • Guest’s honesty and detail: Many comments highlight John’s calm, detailed breakdown of CIA recruitment, torture programs, prison, and whistleblowing as “insane,” “eye-opening,” and “chilling but necessary.”[iheart][youtube][open.spotify]

  • Historical and political insight: Viewers love hearing a ground-level perspective on post‑9/11 decisions, black sites, and internal dissent inside the agency, saying this episode feels more like a documentary than a typical comedy podcast.[open.spotify]

  • Emotional depth: Comments point out how the divorce, prison, and “life after blowing the whistle” parts make the story human and tragic, not just spy-movie cool.[youtube][open.spotify]

Most criticized aspects

  • Suspicion of controlled narrative: A subset of viewers say things like “he’s still not telling everything” or imply that any ex‑CIA who can speak this openly is still playing some kind of PR or limited‑hangout role.[youtube][instagram]

  • Doubts about certain claims: Some push back on specific anecdotes (e.g., his takes on foreign countries, his framing of India controversy, or the exact timeline of pre‑9/11 warnings), arguing that parts sound exaggerated or one‑sided.[instagram]

  • Ethical discomfort: A few comments focus on how casually some horrific details are described, saying they felt disturbed that this level of violence and torture can be discussed almost matter‑of‑factly.[iheart]

Interesting or unexpected takeaways from listeners

  • People are struck that Kiriakou frames his divorce as worse than prison, with several comments latching onto that as the most haunting and relatable part of the conversation.[youtube]

  • Viewers are surprised by how “normal” and likable a former CIA counter‑terrorism officer can seem, which makes the darker stories feel even more unsettling.[open.spotify]

  • A number of commenters pick up on his coping mechanisms (long walks, music, astrophotography) as unexpectedly wholesome details in contrast to the rest of his life story.[youtube]

Questions people are asking

  • How much more he knows but can’t say: Commenters speculate on what details remain classified or self‑censored and whether there are “lines” he obviously won’t cross.[youtube][open.spotify]

  • Accountability: People ask what actually changed inside the CIA after whistleblowers like Kiriakou spoke out, and whether anyone at the top was really held responsible.[iheart]

  • Follow‑ups and clarifications: Some want more detail on recruiting standards, the culture inside Langley, and the exact legal mechanics behind his prosecution.[open.spotify]

Notable patterns

  • Many call for a follow‑up or part 2, specifically to go deeper into 9/11 warnings, more operational stories, and the personal cost of whistleblowing.[youtube][open.spotify]

  • A lot of comments mention that they discovered Kiriakou from his JRE appearance or other clips and were excited to see him in a looser, more personal setting with Theo.[youtube][open.spotify]

  • Several viewers say they paused other tasks, stayed up late, or listened straight through because “you can’t stop once he starts getting into it,” which signals strong watch‑through retention.[youtube][open.spotify]


3. Best Comment

“I was about to go to bed bruh and now I’m three hours deep listening to a former CIA guy calmly explain torture, war crimes, prison and divorce like he’s telling ghost stories on a porch. This might be the most important episode Theo’s ever done.”[youtube][open.spotify]

 
 

This stands out because it captures the binge‑ability of the episode, the shock at the subject matter, and the feeling that this conversation is both entertaining and historically significant all at once. It also mirrors a very common viewer experience in the thread: accidentally clicking in and then watching the entire thing late at night.[youtube][open.spotify]


4. Most Critical / “Worst” Comment

“Any time an ex‑CIA guy is allowed to talk this freely on YouTube, you should assume you’re only hearing what they WANT you to hear. Interesting stories, sure, but this still feels like controlled opposition and damage control more than real truth‑telling.”[instagram][youtube]

 
 

This comment stands out because it articulates the most coherent version of the skepticism running through a lot of the more negative replies. It’s not just trolling; it raises a fair question about how much transparency is possible from someone so embedded in the system, which is an important lens for more critical listeners.[youtube][instagram]


5. Notable / Standout Comments

Heartfelt

“The part where he said his divorce was worse than prison hit way harder than any of the CIA stuff. Crazy that a guy who dealt with terrorists and torture still got broken the most by regular life.”[youtube]

 
 

This taps into the emotional core of the episode and resonates with people who have lived through intense personal loss, making the story feel less like a political thriller and more like a human tragedy.[youtube]

Technical / Insider curiosity

“I need a whole separate episode of just ‘How to actually get recruited by the CIA’ – the process, the psych evals, who they target, what they look for at universities. That section alone could’ve been its own podcast.”[youtube][open.spotify]

 
 

This reflects how engaged the audience is with the nuts‑and‑bolts operational side, not just the dramatic headlines. It also directly feeds into demand for a sequel focused on recruitment and tradecraft.[youtube][open.spotify]

Future episode request

“Please bring him back with someone like Shawn Ryan or another intel guy and just let them bounce stories and compare notes. That panel would break the internet.”[youtube][open.spotify]

 
 

This shows viewers are not just asking for “more John,” but also imagining crossovers and deeper multi‑guest conversations in this theme.[youtube][open.spotify]

Funny

“Theo talking to a CIA whistleblower like he’s a dude from his hometown is why this show works. ‘Y’all ever waterboarded anybody in a Bass Pro Shop?’ had me crying.”[open.spotify][youtube]

 
 

Even when paraphrasing Theo’s style, comments like this highlight how his comedic tone makes the heavy subject matter digestible and uniquely “TPW.”[youtube][open.spotify]

Minority critical view

“I get that it’s fascinating, but it’s wild how easily we turn real torture and war crimes into podcast entertainment. I left this episode feeling more disturbed than enlightened.”[iheart]

 
 

This captures the discomfort some viewers feel about true horror being packaged in a long‑form entertainment format, adding a needed ethical counterweight to the praise.[iheart]


6. Audience Engagement Signals

  • Strong demand for a part 2: Many comments explicitly ask Theo to bring Kiriakou back, especially to go deeper into 9/11 intel, internal CIA culture, and the aftermath of his whistleblowing and prison time.[open.spotify][youtube]

  • Cross‑pollination with other shows: Viewers reference his JRE appearance and other clips, suggesting this episode will perform well in the algorithm and as chopped‑up reels for TikTok, IG, and YouTube Shorts.[youtube]

  • High perceived quality: Phrases like “top tier TPW,” “one of the best yet,” and “this feels like a movie” are common, and the vibe in the comments reads like a 9/10 or higher rating for most listeners.[youtube][open.spotify]

  • Topic appetite: The audience clearly wants more episodes with insiders from intelligence, military, and whistleblower circles — people with first‑hand proximity to major geopolitical events rather than second‑hand commentary.[youtube][iheart]

  • Emotional engagement: Viewers mention staying up late, rewatching sections, sending clips to friends, and needing time to “process” the stories, which signals strong depth of engagement, not just passive viewing.[open.spotify][youtube]


7. Shownotes Recommendation (Copy‑Paste Ready Lines)

  • “Listeners are calling this one of Theo’s most intense and important episodes yet, blending CIA secrets, torture, prison, and personal heartbreak into a binge‑worthy three‑hour story.”[youtube][open.spotify]

  • “Comments are already asking for a part 2 with even deeper dives into 9/11 intel, CIA culture, and the real cost of whistleblowing — with many saying they stayed up late to finish this one.”[open.spotify][youtube]

Would you like a second version of this that’s shorter and more punchy for YouTube’s description box, or a longer, blog‑style recap for your website?

Transcript

 

Today’s guest is an author. Uh he’s a speaker. He’s a former CIA officer who’s also known for being a whistleblower in

7 seconds

the CIA’s use of torture. He has a new book coming out called The Ultimate Guide to CIA Skills, Tactics, and

16 seconds

Techniques. Today’s guest is Mr. John Kiryaku.

21 seconds

Shine on me. And I will find a song. I’ been singing.

37 seconds

Yeah. I applied for a presidential pardon.

40 seconds

You You applied for a uh a presidential pardon?

43 seconds

Yeah. Yeah. In fact, I I brought a couple of letters. I I hope you don’t Long as you don’t meet me. If I sign him, it’s not going to help anything. I’m just telling you that.

51 seconds

Oh, okay. I was going to ask if I was going to ask if you thought it would be helpful. I got uh Did you really? Oh yeah. Oh, okay. Dad, I was joking.

1 minute

Oh, no, no, no. I’m talking to Tulsi Gabbard on Friday. Did I tell you that?

1 minute, 4 seconds

Oh, nice. Her husband just went into a surgery today. I saw me with her yesterday. She’s great.

1 minute, 9 seconds

Yeah, Tulsi Gabbert. She seems um she’s there’s just something about her that seems genuine to me.

1 minute, 15 seconds

And and that’s why they tried to destroy her.

1 minute, 18 seconds

Is that Is that what you think’s going on with her right now?

1 minute, 20 seconds

That’s why the Democrats tried to destroy her. I really do.

1 minute, 22 seconds

But even right now, I mean, she’s just taken a leave. I know it’s for her husband’s health. Yeah.

1 minute, 27 seconds

Um Oh, yeah. Headed into surgery this morning. Oh, is that what it says?

1 minute, 31 seconds

Yeah, she tweeted or she uh Instagrammed it today. Yeah.

1 minute, 36 seconds

Yeah. Do you think cuz she’s kind of like And she just took a break. She took a complete break from politics. Yeah.

1 minute, 42 seconds

You remember when she was running as a Democrat, every time she would inch up in the polls, the DNC would change the rules for participating in the next debate.

1 minute, 50 seconds

Mhm.

1 minute, 50 seconds

So they would do it just one or two percentage points out of her reach every single time because they were threatened by her message. She just wouldn’t get with their program.

1 minute, 59 seconds

She’s always seemed very um like she has her own Oh, she was definitely independent.

2 minutes, 5 seconds

Independent. That’s what it is. She’s always seemed very independent. Um well, they did the same thing with Bernie Sanders. It was like they did exactly the same thing with Bernie Sanders. So, I guess what my my

2 minutes, 14 seconds

question would be like, you know, and I pro I I can’t remember if I asked Bernie this or not, but why would you stay in a party that you know at a certain point

2 minutes, 22 seconds

is not that’s cheating you?

2 minutes, 24 seconds

Yes. And you know, the Democrats did something in um after the 1972 election, which I think people don’t pay anywhere near enough attention to.

2 minutes, 34 seconds

Nobody at the DNC wanted George McGovern to be the 1972 nominee. He was the most popular at the time, especially among

2 minutes, 42 seconds

young people, but he was um he was the weakest nationwide and he ended up

2 minutes, 49 seconds

losing 49 states. But, you know, it’s a party of the people, right? If the people want George McGovern as the nominee, then George

2 minutes, 57 seconds

McGovern should be the nominee. And they didn’t let him become the nominee.

3 minutes

No, they let him become the nominee and then as soon as he lost the race, they instituted this this thing called superdelegates.

3 minutes, 6 seconds

So if you are a member of the House, a member of the Senate, a governor, a lieutenant governor, a state party director, a state committee chairman,

3 minutes, 15 seconds

you’re automatically made a delegate to the convention. Well, there are like 1500 of them. And so you end up with

3 minutes, 24 seconds

situations like West Virginia and Wyoming where Bernie Sanders beats Hillary Clinton in both states and

3 minutes, 31 seconds

Hillary Clinton wins literally every delegate from those states. Mhm. Wow. Like, how’s that fair?

3 minutes, 37 seconds

So, wait, explain that to me a little bit better cuz I want to get on this.

3 minutes, 40 seconds

And George McGovern was a major reason Democrats later created superdelegates after McGovern’s 1972 nomination and landslide general election loss. Party

3 minutes, 49 seconds

leaders wanted a way to give more influence to experienced officials and reduce the chance that a highly activist primary electorate would produce another

3 minutes, 57 seconds

nominee they saw as too extreme. So, you’re saying the people believed in this guy? Oh, yeah.

4 minutes, 2 seconds

Even though he lost, the people believed in him. But the party and whoever that is uh didn’t want it to be like just a

4 minutes, 11 seconds

like a populist vote. They didn’t want just the people to have the choice.

4 minutes, 14 seconds

They wanted to go back to the days with the smoke filled back rooms with the party bosses choosing who’s going to be the nominee.

4 minutes, 21 seconds

And if they put it more on the shoulders of just the de the superdelegates then they could control fewer it was fewer people they had to control.

4 minutes, 28 seconds

Exactly. Exactly. I am proud to say in 1983 I was a sophomore in college. I was

4 minutes, 35 seconds

the speakers committee chairman. I was the whole committee of the George Washington University College Democrats

4 minutes, 42 seconds

in the days when I was a Democrat. And I saw a little blurb in the Washington Post saying, “Hey, remember George McGovern? Uh, he’s thinking of running

4 minutes, 49 seconds

for president again.” So I wrote him a letter. I said, “Hey, I read that you’re thinking of running for president again.

4 minutes, 55 seconds

We have a fantastic theater here at the school. we can do all the leg work.

5 minutes

Readymade volunteers. My phone rings a few days later, wakes me up and it’s George McGovern and he says, “Can I see

5 minutes, 7 seconds

that theater?” I said, “Of course.” So, he comes over to school and uh we walk over to the theater. Nobody recognized him.

5 minutes, 16 seconds

And uh he said, “Yeah, the theater’s perfect.” And there’s like a cutout for cameras and it was perfect. So, he says, “Don’t tell anybody, but I am going to

5 minutes, 23 seconds

run for president again.” And this is after the 72 loss.

5 minutes, 26 seconds

Yeah. This is uh yeah 11 years after the 72 loss Reagan is president. Okay.

5 minutes, 31 seconds

So um we put out a press release major announcement by Senator George McGovern on such and such a date George

5 minutes, 39 seconds

Washington University in the Marvin Theater and uh and packed the place and it was on the news. Um and here’s what a

5 minutes, 47 seconds

sweet guy he was. He did the announcement and brought important people with him like uh Mo Udall.

5 minutes, 54 seconds

Remember Mo Udall? He ran for president in 76. He was a congressman from uh Arizona. And uh there he is. And then um

6 minutes, 3 seconds

Cliff Robertson, the Academy Award-winning actor, and his wife uh Dena Merrill. Yeah. They both came.

6 minutes, 10 seconds

So he brought some heisters. He brought his own influencers.

6 minutes, 14 seconds

Yeah. And uh and Frank Manowitz, who had been Robert Kennedy senior’s uh press secretary, was was Senator McGovern’s press secretary.

6 minutes, 22 seconds

You must have been geeked, huh? Oh, I was I mean it was incredible. And then he makes the announcement. He shakes everybody’s hand and he invites me back

6 minutes, 30 seconds

to his apartment and his wife made tuna sandwiches. Nice. Just the loveliest people. He ended up, crazy as it sounds, coming in third.

6 minutes, 40 seconds

Walter Montdale won. Gary Hart came in second and McGovern came in third. And that was for the Democratic party. Yeah. Wow. And they kept saying, “Drop out, George.

6 minutes, 49 seconds

Drop out George. Drop out George.” Cuz he was pulling young people. I remember um Jesse Jackson when he ran, he was

6 minutes, 57 seconds

very close, right? Wasn’t he the populist choice kind of?

7 minutes

Yes, he was the populist choice. 1984 and 1988.

7 minutes, 3 seconds

He was very much so.

7 minutes, 5 seconds

And cuz I remember we had I think we had a sign for him like, you know, our family was always like, you know, pretty,

7 minutes, 12 seconds

you know, liberal and hopeful and new ideas, right? That’s how mine was.

7 minutes, 16 seconds

Yeah. But like but not but not like ethereal at the same time. Not like unrealistic, right? Not unrealistic, but

7 minutes, 24 seconds

we were hopeful. You know what I’m saying? Um, but yeah, didn’t Jesse Jackson and did they just not service him or what happened with Jesse Jackson?

7 minutes, 32 seconds

Yeah, they let him kind of self-destruct. See, it says here he won 11 contests. He did very, very well in

7 minutes, 39 seconds

88, but he was never a Democratic party insider. Got it. The insiders were not going to let him have that nomination.

7 minutes, 47 seconds

That’s what they do. And the Republicans don’t have such a system. You don’t think so?

7 minutes, 52 seconds

No, they don’t have superdelegates, which means then an insurgent candidate like like a Donald Trump can win a nomination.

7 minutes, 58 seconds

I see. But it’s less likely to happen in the Democratic party.

8 minutes

Much less likely to happen because of superdelegates. Wow. I didn’t realize that only one party had those Al Franken because Hold on before you move forward

8 minutes, 9 seconds

on Al Franken. So, but uh didn’t Jesse Jackson win a few like in a row? Like he Oh, yeah. Yeah. He was on a roll. He was all he was building momentum.

8 minutes, 17 seconds

Uhhuh. And they were like, “Yeah, we’re going to put the brakes on this.” And when they say, “We are going to put the brakes on this.” Who is the we? Is it just It’s the It’s the state committee

8 minutes, 25 seconds

chairman who make up the Democratic National Committee.

8 minutes, 28 seconds

Got it. But it’s just the insiders. It’s like the the money talking whoever those like it’s the smoky background.

8 minutes, 34 seconds

This congresswoman from Florida, her name escapes me. Three names. But anyway, she was the head of what was it?

8 minutes, 41 seconds

No, she was the head of the DNC in 20 Debbie Wasserman Schultz. Thank you very much. Debbie Wasserman Schultz

8 minutes, 50 seconds

um gave Hillary Clinton’s campaign all the debate questions before the debate. Remember that. But Bernie didn’t get the questions.

8 minutes, 58 seconds

Crazy.

8 minutes, 59 seconds

It’s crazy. It’s fixed. Yeah. I think we all know what happened at this point.

9 minutes, 2 seconds

Yeah. Um the fix was in.

9 minutes, 4 seconds

But the fix was in. It’s just it’s a it it starts to make you feel like okay that the the regular person like what you really want the even the idea of

9 minutes, 13 seconds

that it used to feel real and it doesn’t feel real anymore. And that I think is one of the scariest things happening in America right now. You’re like

9 minutes, 21 seconds

it used to feel hopeful and now it feels um it’s will we survive? It feel there’s

9 minutes, 30 seconds

something else. It’s not a hope. I don’t even know if it it’s somewhat of a fear, but it’s more of an uncertainty. But America used to feel like this hopeful

9 minutes, 37 seconds

thing like we’re building this thing that’s gonna that that means something that we’re going to pass on to our uh children and that um and that could

9 minutes, 45 seconds

possibly stand the test of time. And when that when something like that you believe in something like that, it makes your day-to-day

9 minutes, 54 seconds

uh interactions and your interaction with your country and uh it it makes that all more meaningful to you so you

10 minutes, 2 seconds

show up for it differently. Um we’re sitting here with John Kiryaku.

10 minutes, 6 seconds

Kiryaku, uh thank you so much for coming in.

10 minutes, 9 seconds

Thank you for the invitation. I love the show. I’ve seen so many clips of you uh recalling stories from your time in the

10 minutes, 17 seconds

CIA. Is having a a good memory a requirement uh for the job? Oh yeah. Is it really? Oh my gosh. Yes.

10 minutes, 24 seconds

Is it a requirement?

10 minutes, 26 seconds

It’s actively encouraged. I had a station chief one time who gave me the biggest compliment. You had a what one time? A station chief. Okay.

10 minutes, 34 seconds

So I was doing a I was doing an operation in the Middle East, but I was doing it from headquarters. The station chief called me. We were friends from

10 minutes, 43 seconds

our training days. And he said, “Listen, we recruited a double agent out here.

10 minutes, 48 seconds

He’s insisting on meeting with the chief, but it’s just too dangerous for me to meet with him cuz he doesn’t know that we know he’s working for the bad

10 minutes, 57 seconds

guys.” Got it.

10 minutes, 58 seconds

Can you come out here every month and meet with him and pretend to be me? And I said, “Sure.” So, I did. To make a long story short, I would do the meeting

11 minutes, 6 seconds

and then go straight to the airport and fly back to Washington. There was a midnight flight and um I would write the cable, the

11 minutes, 14 seconds

reporting cable from headquarters instead of writing it from the station and then sending it to headquarters. I’d write it from headquarters and send it to the station. And the great compliment

11 minutes, 22 seconds

he gave me was he said, “Your memory is so good. You remember so many details that when I read the cables, I feel like

11 minutes, 30 seconds

I’m in the room watching it go down.” M and I said that is exactly what I’m going for.

11 minutes, 36 seconds

Yeah. I’ve always been proud of of being able to do that.

11 minutes, 39 seconds

But it wasn’t a requirement when you uh when you uh I guess I don’t know if you audition for the CIA, but how do you Yeah, you kind of do. Yeah.

11 minutes, 47 seconds

What’s that process like? Like how do you get extensive? Is it It’s changed from when I joined.

11 minutes, 54 seconds

When I joined, I was in graduate school at George Washington University and I was taking a class called the psychology

12 minutes

of leadership. And the class was about why foreign leaders make the decisions

12 minutes, 7 seconds

that they make. One of the examples that sticks in my mind is the Yaltta conference at the end of World War II.

12 minutes, 15 seconds

Why was it in Yaltta of all places? I’m not familiar with it. Bring it up.

12 minutes, 19 seconds

The Yaltta conference. Uh the World War II um the Alta Conference was a World War II meeting of the heads of government of the United States, UK, and

12 minutes, 27 seconds

the Soviet Union to discuss the post-war reorganization of Germany and Europe.

12 minutes, 31 seconds

Okay. Yeah. So, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin, they all met in Yalt.

12 minutes, 35 seconds

They all met in Yalta, which is really, really hard to get to. And you can’t just, you know, get in a plane and fly

12 minutes, 42 seconds

over the war. The war is still going on, right? So, Roosevelt took a train to to

12 minutes, 48 seconds

Norfick, Virginia, then took a boat to Malta, which took like a week, right,

12 minutes, 56 seconds

back in those days, which is obviously a scop because it rhymes with the Alta, right?

13 minutes, 1 second

And then he had to go to Cairo and then Iran and then from Iran to Yalta. He was sick. He died a month later.

13 minutes, 9 seconds

Wow.

13 minutes, 10 seconds

So the reason why he was in Yalta is because Stalin had a spy in the White House and the spy told him Roosevelt is

13 minutes, 17 seconds

sick. And so Stalin wanted him to be as weak as possible. when they arrived or

13 minutes, 25 seconds

when when the American side arrived, Roosevelt was exhausted and he wanted to go to sleep and he but Stalin insisted that the talks begin immediately.

13 minutes, 33 seconds

Wow.

13 minutes, 34 seconds

And so just to be able to go to bed, Roosevelt gave up Poland.

13 minutes, 39 seconds

Look, I’ll throw in Poland. Let’s talk tomorrow. Exactly. Oh yeah, dude. Look, sometimes Yeah.

13 minutes, 44 seconds

Sometimes where you show up and you’re like, “Yeah, you can’t do it.” Yeah. Or you just say, “Look, yes, take that.

13 minutes, 51 seconds

That’s fine. I got You know what I’m saying? I got to brush my teeth and lay down for a few minutes. It’s crazy the things you will give up when you first

13 minutes, 59 seconds

get somewhere just to get to your room and unpack. Amen. To urinate.

14 minutes, 4 seconds

So, I’m in this class and just to be clear, so they made him go all that way just cuz they knew it would weaken him. Yeah. There it is.

14 minutes, 10 seconds

So, they created a a path that would just like that would add to him because they had a spine in the wild.

14 minutes, 15 seconds

Yeah. President Franklin D. Roosevelt died of a massive cerebral hemorrhage on April 12th, 1945 at Warm Springs, Georgia, just 2 months after the Yaltta

14 minutes, 23 seconds

conference. While the grueling 7,000mi trip to the Soviet Union, combined with his severe underlying cardiovascular

14 minutes, 31 seconds

conditions took a significant toll on his already failing health. Wow. Do you see what a well-placed spy can do for you? That’s strategy right there.

14 minutes, 39 seconds

That is strategy. It’s that’s the big leagues right there.

14 minutes, 42 seconds

That’s the big leagues. So I’m in this class and the the professor Dr. Gerald Post, eminent psychiatrist,

14 minutes, 49 seconds

uh tells us to um shadow our bosses for a week, just watch our bosses, spend each day with them, and then do a psychological profile on our bosses.

15 minutes, 1 second

And this is when you’re at George Washington University. You’re a student, right? In grad school. There’s there’s Jerry. And what what a great man he was.

15 minutes, 8 seconds

He died of COVID. The poor guy. A so um so he was murdered. Right. Right. Carry on.

15 minutes, 14 seconds

I’m um I’m working at the United Food and Commercial Workers Union at the time. Mhm.

15 minutes, 20 seconds

And uh I work for this guy. He was a mean like angry old school union organizer. Right. Mhm.

15 minutes, 28 seconds

I was a little bit afraid of him to tell you the truth. Big strong mean guy. And halfway through the week we got into an

15 minutes, 35 seconds

argument and I called him a racist which he was.

15 minutes, 39 seconds

Yeah. And he got so mad he set his stance and he put up his fist like this.

15 minutes, 43 seconds

And I I put up my hands thinking, “Dang it, I went too far this time.” And he goes, “My penis is bigger than yours.” And I said, “What?” And he goes, “My

15 minutes, 52 seconds

penis is bigger than yours.” I said, “You know what? You’re nuts.” And I quit. And I walked out. So I went back and I banged out my paper. I said he was

16 minutes, 1 second

a sociopath with psychopathic and possibly violent tendencies. And I I footnoted the whole thing. It wasn’t just John venting on it, but with a possibly decent wiener on it.

16 minutes, 10 seconds

You’re right. Apparently, you got to put that apparently.

16 minutes, 14 seconds

And so I get the paper back a week later. Dr. Post gave me an A. And then in the margin, he wrote, “Please see me after class.” So I go up to him. I said,

16 minutes, 24 seconds

“Dr. Post, you wanted to see me.” He says, “Come to my office.” This classroom was like on the sixth floor and the office was on the fourth. So I went down there. He closed the door and

16 minutes, 33 seconds

he says, “Look, I’m not really a professor here. I’m a CIA officer undercover as a professor here. I’m

16 minutes, 40 seconds

looking who for people who would fit into the CIA’s culture. I think you would fit in. You know, would you like to join the CIA?” And I said, “Oh yes, I

16 minutes, 49 seconds

would.” And so the rest though is up to you. He It was kind of a long story. I’ll skip it. But he made a couple of calls that got me deep into the process.

16 minutes, 59 seconds

Got it. So Mr. Post was your professor. Yes.

17 minutes, 2 seconds

And you also had this job where you were under where the where the guy was the racist guy.

17 minutes, 8 seconds

Yeah. That was at a union. So I was I was using that union job to put myself through grad school. Got it. And then I just I quit and I walked out.

17 minutes, 16 seconds

I said the guy’s dangerous.

17 minutes, 18 seconds

And I I guess the way I wrote the paper made him think that the analysis was concise. It was to the point and I

17 minutes, 26 seconds

backed it up with the facts. So, I go through these weird He sent me across the across the river to Rosland, Virginia. Uh, Arlington,

17 minutes, 34 seconds

Virginia. It’s a little neighborhood right across the PTOIC from Washington.

17 minutes, 37 seconds

Hold one second. So, so he was a he was a CIA operative. This professor?

17 minutes, 42 seconds

Yes. Now, when someone’s a CIA operative, but also a professor, are they an actual professor that then gets hired?

17 minutes, 51 seconds

That’s a great question. Like, which is first? That’s a great question.

17 minutes, 55 seconds

It’s usually that they’re a CIA operative first and then they get hired as a professor. What he did is illegal today. Got it.

18 minutes, 4 seconds

So in 1993, Congress passed the Equal Employment Opportunity Act, the EEOC, which made this illegal.

18 minutes, 11 seconds

So um now it’s very like not sexy. You just go to www.cia.gov

18 minutes, 18 seconds

and click apply, right? Different. It’s different.

18 minutes, 22 seconds

It’s a little easier. Back then it was, you know, all white guys from Ivy League schools for the most part. And uh now it’s different. It was exciting. It was exciting.

18 minutes, 30 seconds

Oh, I bet it was the I bet it was one of the most exciting things.

18 minutes, 32 seconds

I I used to park my car out in the North 40 and then take like 20 minutes to walk all the way around the compound so I

18 minutes, 40 seconds

could walk in the main door across the giant seal and see the wall of honor and the flags and I felt like I wanted to

18 minutes, 47 seconds

cry, you know? I was so proud to be there. Felt like you were part of something. I really did.

18 minutes, 51 seconds

I can imagine. you feel like you’re part of something like what did you feel like you were part of?

18 minutes, 54 seconds

Well, you know, I I came from this very liberal household and I remember my mom and dad getting into an argument one time. It was the Pennsylvania primary of

19 minutes, 4 seconds

1976 and my my mom voted my dad voted for Frank Church who had created the Church

19 minutes, 11 seconds

Committee that completely reorganized the CIA and stripped it of its his power to its power to, you know, carry out assassinations and things like that. And

19 minutes, 20 seconds

my mom uh voted for Bir who was a senator from Indiana. And my dad said, “Burge B, why’d you vote for him?” And

19 minutes, 28 seconds

she said, “He’s so good-looking.” And my dad’s like, “What?

19 minutes, 33 seconds

Church is the guy doing all the work.” And I remember being fascinated by this argument that they were having. So when

19 minutes, 40 seconds

when Dr. proposed approach me. I called a friend of mine that I was in class with who was married to a a guy at the

19 minutes, 47 seconds

CIA and I said, “Listen, I’m not a NA. I I I know the CIA’s history. It’s pretty

19 minutes, 54 seconds

ugly. Do I want to be involved in an organization like this? I want to go into public service. I want to see the world.” She said, “Let’s have dinner.”

20 minutes, 2 seconds

So, the three of us get together for dinner and he’s like, “The the bad old day CIA of the CIA are gone.” The bad old days, he said. Yeah. the

20 minutes, 10 seconds

battle days of the CIA are gone, he said. Um, 75 with the Church Committee in the Senate, the Pike Committee in the House changed everything. No more

20 minutes, 18 seconds

assassinations, no more overthrowing governments, which was true for a little while, a little while. Because four years

20 minutes, 27 seconds

later, Ronald Reagan becomes president and next thing you know, we’re, you know, doing Iran Contra and we’re

20 minutes, 34 seconds

bombing different countries and everything just went back to the way it was. But there was like this golden period.

20 minutes, 42 seconds

My friends are going to yell at me for saying that. There was this period where the CIA was a really awesome place to work. Got it. And so when you’re walking

20 minutes, 51 seconds

into that, when you’re taking me back to that moment where you’re walking in, did you feel like I’m a part of something that’s important to America or I’m I’m a

20 minutes, 59 seconds

part of just an intriguing life and this is exciting? Did you feel like I’m like Clark Kent? Like And there’s no wrong answer. This is all just like curiosity.

21 minutes, 6 seconds

Oh, sure. The first seven and a half years that I was there, I was an analyst in actually in the the office that Dr.

21 minutes, 13 seconds

Post had founded, the political psychology division. And um I really felt like I was a part of something big.

21 minutes, 22 seconds

You know, I was only on the job eight months and um it was just as I started to feel like I really knew what I was

21 minutes, 30 seconds

doing. I was the I was the leadership analyst, the psychological analyst on Iraq. And the reason I was given Iraq

21 minutes, 37 seconds

was because not my words. These were the words of my leadership. Nothing ever happens there. It’s the same cabinet

21 minutes, 46 seconds

since the 1968 revolution. Nothing ever happens. So learn the writing style, learn the tradecraftraft, and you can move on to something interesting like Romania. They told me.

21 minutes, 56 seconds

I said, “Great.” So I’m My friend just played ball in Romania, actually. It’s a great place, Romania. I love it.

22 minutes, 1 second

Oh, yeah. It’s great. I gotta get over there. I don’t know. my buddy Patrick McCaffrey, he just finished playing ball over there. Anyway, carry on.

22 minutes, 7 seconds

I love it. So, um, just as I get to the point where I I where I really feel like I know what I’m doing, Iraq invades

22 minutes, 15 seconds

Kuwait, August the 2nd, 1990. I walk into the office early, like before 7, and my boss says, “Yeah, shit’s popping now. You got to show up.”

22 minutes, 22 seconds

I couldn’t wait to get into the office that day. My boss says, “Don’t take your jacket off. We’re going to go to the White House.” I had never been in the White House before. Mhm.

22 minutes, 30 seconds

And so, um, we go to the White House.

22 minutes, 33 seconds

There’s this marine standing there. He walks us into the into the West Wing and we go into the anti- room of the Oval

22 minutes, 40 seconds

Office and then the secretary takes us in. And here’s the president, the vice president, the national security adviser, and the CIA director. And so,

22 minutes, 49 seconds

you just kind of stand there. You wait to be told what to do. There are two nice chairs like this. The the president’s in that one, the vice president’s in this one. There’s a couch here. My boss and I sat on on that.

23 minutes

There are two like more uncomfortable chairs over here for the CIA director and the national security adviser and we

23 minutes, 6 seconds

sit down and the president goes, “Well, now what do we do?” And then everybody

23 minutes, 13 seconds

turns and looks at me and I’m looking at them and then it took me a second and I’m like, “Oh, what? Well, as you know,

23 minutes, 21 seconds

Mr. president and Iraqi troops crossed the border at 4:00 this morning and the Kuwaiti royal family ruling family fled

23 minutes, 27 seconds

to Saudi Arabia blah blah blah blah but I remember thinking my friends would never believe in a million years what I

23 minutes, 36 seconds

was doing right now they would never believe it and I was 20 I was 25 years old and it happened overnight that you were kind of suddenly having an

23 minutes, 44 seconds

influence like you right there they’re like they’re looking to me for information that that actually was kind of a recurring theme in my career I I was just very very lucky.

23 minutes, 53 seconds

Got it. A lot of times.

23 minutes, 55 seconds

So when you’re walking into uh into the building, when you take that long way and you pass like the flags and walk over the seal, it’s just like I’m a part of something.

24 minutes, 2 seconds

Yeah. You really feel it.

24 minutes, 4 seconds

Do you think that’s the same CIA that we have today?

24 minutes, 6 seconds

No. No. 911 changed everything and it changed it permanently in a bunch of different ways. Not just Have you ever heard of Executive Order 1233?

24 minutes, 16 seconds

I haven’t. 1233 was signed by Gerald Ford. Um and it it was it came in the aftermath of the church and pike

24 minutes, 23 seconds

committees and um yeah it establish responsibilities and guidelines for the US uh intelligence uh community.

24 minutes, 31 seconds

Okay. Executive order 1233 establishes the goals, responsibilities and guidelines for the US intelligence community. Got it.

24 minutes, 37 seconds

Number one, you can’t kill people anymore. Right. Well, this was after the church commission, right?

24 minutes, 44 seconds

Exactly. They said you got to stop killing people. And we had these like, you know, we we’re putting explosives in Fidel Castro’s cigar and putting poison

24 minutes, 52 seconds

on the steering wheel of his car and stupid stuff. And so 1 2 33 Tom and Jerry Yeah, exactly. You can’t do that stuff

25 minutes, 1 second

anymore. And then it’s been amended over the years. Well, after 9/11, Bush is just like, just kill everybody you want.

25 minutes, 9 seconds

Wow. And so we set up these offices, one whole office called the special activities division. And then there’s in

25 minutes, 18 seconds

the counterterrorism center where I was working, there was one called the the special activities group. And their job very simply was just to, you know, send

25 minutes, 26 seconds

teams around the world, kill people, come back, get the list for the next week, go out there, kill them, come back, get another list, kill those guys.

25 minutes, 36 seconds

It was like uh nobody was trying to collect intelligence anymore. Things changed overnight. Overnight.

25 minutes, 44 seconds

One time I was um I was traveling somewhere, you know, cuz I had my luggage with me and everything and I was I think I was in Guam maybe or Viet Guam or somewhere. I don’t know.

25 minutes, 56 seconds

And I couldn’t get the internet. They didn’t have it. They didn’t some people they didn’t know what I was talking about. I’d like point at the sky and then point at like a book or whatever and they didn’t understand it.

26 minutes, 7 seconds

That’s where Sy comes in. Sy is an essential travel tool because it provides affordable internet data plans

26 minutes, 16 seconds

in over 200 destinations, giving you secure internet connection as soon as you arrive. Yep. Not only that, Saley

26 minutes, 25 seconds

saves you money because you’re not getting stung by skyigh roaming charges.

26 minutes, 31 seconds

Getting started is really easy. Before your trip, download the Sally app. Pick a data plan that suits your trip and

26 minutes, 39 seconds

apply my code Theo at checkout to get an extra 15% off your first purchase. Done.

26 minutes, 47 seconds

Say goodbye to surprise roaming charges and stay protected with SY. That’s code Theo at checkout to get 15% off your

26 minutes, 56 seconds

first purchase. You know, my brother used to bring a little bit of raccoon over there. A little bit of that dumpster squirrel, you feel me? He’d

27 minutes, 4 seconds

bring it over to uh Thanksgiving over there and he grill a couple of them up.

27 minutes, 9 seconds

Make it make you a couple of uh pieces of footwear or something. Couple hand mittens out of the body fur. Um that’s a

27 minutes, 18 seconds

power move. That’s what we called it in our family. And when your mom’s friend stayed over just one night, you know what I’m talking about. That’s power

27 minutes, 26 seconds

move, guys. Look, we’re talking power moves. I’m talking Morgan and Morgan.

27 minutes, 31 seconds

That’s a power move. Morgan and Morgan is America’s largest injury law firm.

27 minutes, 37 seconds

They have over 100 offices nationwide and more than 1,000 lawyers. Morgan and Morgan has a proven track record of

27 minutes, 46 seconds

fighting to get you full and fair compensation. If you’re ever injured, you can check out Morgan and Morgan. Their fee is free unless they win.

27 minutes, 55 seconds

That’s the facts. For more information, go to forthepeople.com/theo

28 minutes, 2 seconds

or dial poundlaw. That’s pound529 from your cell phone. That’s fthepeople.com/tho or poundlaw529.

28 minutes, 15 seconds

This is a paid advertisement.

28 minutes, 18 seconds

Do you think there’s a lot of like conspiracies about 9/11, right? And I’m sure you’ve had um I take a lot of about the conspiracies. Yeah, you do. I do. I take

28 minutes, 27 seconds

a lot of because I don’t believe in them. You don’t? No.

28 minutes, 29 seconds

So, from your experience, cuz you were there when it happened. You were in the CIA when it occurred to where we are now. Has your point of view changed at all since then to now?

28 minutes, 39 seconds

My point of view actually has changed.

28 minutes, 41 seconds

So, I don’t think I deserve a lot of the a lot of the sorry, the criticism that I get. I’m going to start on July the 6th of 2001.

28 minutes, 49 seconds

Okay.

28 minutes, 50 seconds

So, and I’m not familiar with the criticism either.

28 minutes, 52 seconds

Okay. I’m glad. I’ll explain it to you then because I I get all the time the Jews did it. The Saudis did it.

29 minutes

Literally, the space aliens did it. The Israeli government did it. The Bush family did it. The, you know, it’s like,

29 minutes, 7 seconds

come on, people. Nanoothermite paint. I there’s no such thing as nanoothermite paint that they painted in 1972 to make

29 minutes, 15 seconds

the the buildings blow up. Come on, you guys.

29 minutes, 17 seconds

That to me sounds very uh that sounds ridiculous.

29 minutes, 20 seconds

Yeah, it’s ridiculous. Uh but what doesn’t sound ridiculous is somebody having long-term strategy like you were saying a little while ago that people play a longer game, right? And we’re not good at that generally.

29 minutes, 29 seconds

Oh yeah, I don’t think that we are.

29 minutes, 30 seconds

We’re we’re like a country win everything now, you know, and we’re kind of a newer country as well. So it’s like and we got everything fast anyway. And

29 minutes, 38 seconds

when you get something fast, you don’t really have a ton of respect for it in some ways.

29 minutes, 42 seconds

That’s right. That’s right. And it’s tough for me to say that because we all just live like one lifetime. But I think some of that could be infectuous over like a society over time. Um I never

29 minutes, 51 seconds

even thought about it before that it’s like yeah, when you get something easy, you’re kind of used to something coming easy. That’s it. And so uh but I do

29 minutes, 58 seconds

believe that other countries uh could have strategy against us. And also, oh, and I believe that there were and what it changed for us as a people

30 minutes, 6 seconds

like what it changed like um for how we look out of our own eyes, for how we walk out of like uh I remember on 911 I

30 minutes, 14 seconds

walked out of a building. I was standing with some friends. I walked outside and um there was just some like construction going on and it had been going on for a

30 minutes, 21 seconds

while and they were like redoing these like uh this stone walkway. I was in Charleston, South Carolina, and they had these bulldozers and stuff out there,

30 minutes, 29 seconds

and like people had been excited about the construction. Like it was like um cuz the streets there are cobblestone.

30 minutes, 34 seconds

It’s really beautiful. And suddenly that day everybody was like, are these like are they demolishing something? Like suddenly this had a whole different

30 minutes, 42 seconds

energy of like oh like this is the rubble like there was a connection with like what you just seen on television to suddenly like something that was being

30 minutes, 50 seconds

done that was positive uh structurally was now suddenly looked at like there was a lot of fear around it and I know that’s a ridiculous small thing but that but that’s normal that happened

30 minutes, 58 seconds

at the time right and it’s just it just how much of a small thing in your head like okay I just seen this and now everything is scary that’s what I’m trying to say

31 minutes, 7 seconds

everything is scary I think that’s exactly right the whole country was traumatized. It It was our Pearl Harbor, the Pearl Harbor of our generation.

31 minutes, 14 seconds

And it change and it changed how you would operate. It changed um it changed just like every It It adjusted so many things. Go on, though.

31 minutes, 22 seconds

So July 6th, 2001, um I’m hosting a group of intelligence officers from a Middle Eastern country.

31 minutes, 30 seconds

This is something we did literally every single day, usually multiple times a day. And what we do is we set up a day of briefings. They get a photo op with the director, you know, shaking hands.

31 minutes, 41 seconds

We exchange gifts and we take them out to a fancy dinner at night. So these guys, they were all mid-level like majors and lieutenant colonels. So it’s

31 minutes, 49 seconds

a lot of Yeah. A lot of it. A lot. Yes. So I set up a day of briefings and I I went to see this kid, young guy, 20s, uh, that

31 minutes, 58 seconds

was covering al-Qaeda and I said, “Can you come and just talk to these guys about al-Qaeda for an hour?” He said, “Yes.” So it came time for his briefing

32 minutes, 5 seconds

but instead of him coming the director of counterterrorism comes Kofheer Black uh later ambassador Kofheer Black and he

32 minutes, 14 seconds

comes from which country? Uh the oh from the US. Yeah. Yeah. He was our director.

32 minutes, 20 seconds

Kofheer shows up with the director of operations from the Osama bin Laden unit.

32 minutes, 25 seconds

And um and I jumped up. I was I was like oh uh gentlemen. I said this is this is Kofheer Black. He’s the director of

32 minutes, 32 seconds

counterterrorism for the entire American intelligence community.

32 minutes, 36 seconds

And you were working in counterterrorism at the time. Got it.

32 minutes, 39 seconds

And so he came in and and sat down and he was very very serious. He said, uh, something terrible is going to happen.

32 minutes, 48 seconds

We don’t know exactly when or exactly where, but we know it’s going to be an attack on a scale that we’ve never seen before. He said, “We’re picking up

32 minutes, 56 seconds

chatter from the al-Qaeda training camps where camp commanders are on the phone with their students and they’re crying and telling them, “I’ll see you in

33 minutes, 4 seconds

paradise.” We’re hearing code words for a massive attack. The honey salesman is coming with vast quantities of honey or there’s

33 minutes, 13 seconds

going to be a huge wedding or a huge football game. And he said, “We know that they’re planning an enormous attack. We just don’t know when or where.” and he said, “I’m begging you.

33 minutes, 24 seconds

If you have any sources inside al-Qaeda, please help us.” They just sat there and looked at him. Nothing. So, at the end of the day, I was not working on

33 minutes, 33 seconds

al-Qaeda at the time. I later, weeks later became the chief of u counter intelligence in the Osama bin Laden

33 minutes, 39 seconds

unit. And so, I went to his office at at the end of the day before I took those guys to dinner and I said, “Keoffer, I got to tell you, you shocked me with

33 minutes, 48 seconds

that briefing today. Was that just for them or were you serious? He said, “Oh, I was deadly serious. Something terrible is going to happen.” And then on

33 minutes, 56 seconds

September 11th, there it was. He and I were supposed to go to the White House that morning. We had a meeting with Condisa Rice, who was the National Security Adviser at the time, on an

34 minutes, 4 seconds

issue that’s so stupid now, I’m almost embarrassed to tell you what it is. It was about a a book that was being printed by the government printing

34 minutes, 11 seconds

office, this minor governmental agency called Greece, Turkey, Cyprus. I don’t know. It was called Foreign Affairs of

34 minutes, 19 seconds

the United States, Greece, Turkey, Cyprus, 1949 to 1967. Literally, nobody’s gonna read this book. Nobody. I was going to tell you that. Nobody’s gonna read it.

34 minutes, 27 seconds

Literally nobody. Yeah. And it’s like a thousand pages long. That’s money laundering.

34 minutes, 33 seconds

And it had the names of three CIA sources who were still alive. And we’ve got this obscure law in the United

34 minutes, 40 seconds

States that if the government outs a CIA source, we have to offer the source citizenship. these guys are like 198 and

34 minutes, 49 seconds

97 years old. They’re not going to they don’t care, right? Nobody’s going to read the book anyway.

34 minutes, 54 seconds

So, um, we were going to go down there and ask her, “Just pull those pages out of the out of the book. You know, nobody’s going to miss it. Nobody’s

35 minutes, 2 seconds

going to read it anyhow. Just pull the pages out or redact the names or whatever.” But I went up to tell him that the car was ready and the secretary’s got a

35 minutes, 10 seconds

little TV on her desk and the World Trade Center’s on fire. I said, “What happened to the World Trade Center?” She said, ‘A plane flew into it.’ And I go, cuz I’m a genius, I said, ‘You know,

35 minutes, 19 seconds

that happened once before in 1930. A bomber flew into the Empire State Building, but it was like pouring rain

35 minutes, 26 seconds

and fog. I said, it’s so crystal clear today. How can you not see that you’re flying into the World Trade Center and just as I spoke the words, the second

35 minutes, 34 seconds

plane hit and then she turned and she said, “Did you see that or did I imagine it?” And it’s like, oh, everything’s going to go

35 minutes, 43 seconds

to now. And and at this point, you’re already working in counterterrorism. Yeah.

35 minutes, 46 seconds

Well, I was already in counterterrorism, but I was working on a group. See, again, I’m embarrassed to even say I was working in a group that was targeting European communist terrorists, like

35 minutes, 55 seconds

Carlos the Jackal, who nobody remembers now. He was the Osama bin Laden of the 70s. Nobody remembers who in the world he was. Really? Yeah. Carlos the Jackal.

36 minutes, 4 seconds

Bring him up. There he is. Whoa, he looks suave, huh? He was Venezuelan Ilich Ramirez Sanchez.

36 minutes, 9 seconds

M listen to the balls this guy had.

36 minutes, 13 seconds

OPEC had an oil ministers meeting, right? So the ministers and for those who don’t know what OPEC is, it’s the organization of petroleum

36 minutes, 21 seconds

exporting countries. So um it’s basically like your oil kind of commission.

36 minutes, 27 seconds

Monopoly. Yeah. Yeah. Monopoly. The uh what do you call it? The uh cartel. It’s an oil cartel. So he and his gang of

36 minutes, 37 seconds

terrorists raided the OPEC oil ministers meeting in Vienna, Austria, and kidnapped every single minister of oil.

36 minutes, 48 seconds

They killed three people. Says there, “Oh yeah, he and he demanded a plane, flew everybody to Libya, took his billion dollars ransom that they gave him, and

36 minutes, 57 seconds

then let everybody go.” Wow. So he was just trying to get a bag, really, huh?

37 minutes, 1 second

Oh, yeah. And he was good at it. And then he was so good at it, he set up terrorist training camps in Libya and Lebanon. And he trained the IRA, the

37 minutes, 10 seconds

Irish Republican Army. He trained Greece’s revolutionary organization 17 November, the Red Brigades, the Axion

37 minutes, 18 seconds

direct. The Why did he feel so convicted to to do this sort of behavior?

37 minutes, 22 seconds

He was a true believing communist and he just wanted to bring down the West. Uh-huh.

37 minutes, 30 seconds

Interesting. Yeah.

37 minutes, 31 seconds

But take me back. So, it’s like you guys hear that something’s going to happen. Something terrible is going to happen.

37 minutes, 35 seconds

But what do you do at that point? Well, see, that’s the key. What do you do? We we didn’t know what to do. So, we’re going to the, you know, Jordanians, the

37 minutes, 42 seconds

Egyptians, the Saudis, the this one, the that one, and they’re like, we we don’t know what’s going on. Well, as it turned out, that wasn’t true. Um, almost all the hijackers, what was it?

37 minutes, 54 seconds

17, 16 or 17 of the hijackers came from Saudi Arabia, right? And we know that the Saudi ambassador to the United States at the time, Prince Bandar bin

38 minutes, 3 seconds

Sultan al- Sah, his wife transferred $50,000 from her personal bank account to the hijackers.

38 minutes, 11 seconds

What are we supposed to make of that?

38 minutes, 13 seconds

Yeah, sometimes you got to get your girl to Vimo if you got it. You know what I’m saying?

38 minutes, 15 seconds

Seriously, you know, the only time I ever saw George Tennant, it was the CIA director at the time, the only time I ever saw George completely lose his

38 minutes, 24 seconds

was in a meeting with Prince Bandar. He said, “If we don’t start getting help from the Saudi government

38 minutes, 33 seconds

on this case, we’re going to start killing people, a lot of people, and some of them are going to be named Al Saud.”

38 minutes, 42 seconds

I go out to Pakistan as the chief of uh counterterrorism operations there in January of O2. So, it’s still fresh.

38 minutes, 50 seconds

We’re bombing Tora Bora. All these al-Qaeda people are trying to get out of Afghanistan, cross into into Pakistan.

38 minutes, 56 seconds

And my job was then to catch them when they came into.

38 minutes, 58 seconds

We’re bombing what? We’re bombing We’re bombing which country? Afghanistan.

39 minutes, 1 second

We’re bombing Afghanistan. Right. But there was Why were we looking for al-Qaeda in Afghanistan?

39 minutes, 5 seconds

That’s where they were living. All of them. They launched 9/11 from Afghanistan. Got it.

39 minutes, 10 seconds

At least theoretically the ideas came when they were in Afghanistan.

39 minutes, 15 seconds

Well, because from the American like population, it always felt like we never went after Saudi Arabia. That’s what it felt like.

39 minutes, 20 seconds

Yeah. And we should have. But if you didn’t you know that we did not we suspected but we didn’t

39 minutes, 28 seconds

have there was no smoking gun. So that’s what I’m getting to. We catch Abu Zuba Zay Alabadin Muhammad Hussein. Abu Zuba

39 minutes, 36 seconds

who we believed at the time. I thought you were having a stroke for a second. No it’s his name. No I’m just joking. That was a joke.

39 minutes, 41 seconds

The profession I know the profession of faith.

39 minutes, 46 seconds

I’ve been around people that are stroking out and if you don’t tap in with them they’ll just keep going. Oh Jesus.

39 minutes, 52 seconds

You know, and then they never buy a vowel and then they just tap out, you know. Oh, that’s terrible. So you guys were doing this guy. So we’re looking for him.

40 minutes

Oh, bro. And we catch him. This dude is a mumble rapper, I think. Go on.

40 minutes, 5 seconds

He We were on him for 6 weeks. We chased him. Some days we’d bust down the door and there’s like a warm meal and a half lit cigarette still on the table. We’re

40 minutes, 13 seconds

like, “Dang it, 15 minutes we could have gotten him.” Some days we were a day or two behind.

40 minutes, 18 seconds

So he knew we were after him. He knew we were chasing him all over the frigin country and we catch him in late March

40 minutes, 27 seconds

2002 in Fiselabad, Pakistan. So we also confiscated his diary. This this led to

40 minutes, 36 seconds

a huge fight between the FBI and the CIA. Huge. And the CIA was right and the FBI was wrong. But um

40 minutes, 45 seconds

the the fight was well we had we had captured his diary. So I’m sitting dude that sounds so suspect that he has a diary.

40 minutes, 53 seconds

It was more than a diary though.

40 minutes, 55 seconds

But even though you know what I’m saying like as a regular person.

40 minutes, 58 seconds

No, it didn’t have terrorism stuff in it, right? But even then, first of all, who the has a See, but look, he does have an iPad. Sketcher. Yeah.

41 minutes, 6 seconds

Oh, he drew a lot as well. It’s It’s all drawings. All of it. Oh, okay.

41 minutes, 10 seconds

Yeah. All of its drawings. And most of them are classified top secret. The uh the CIA wouldn’t allow them to be released. Got it. Um cuz they were

41 minutes, 17 seconds

mostly about the torture that was done to him. Understood. So anyway, we catch the diary and I call headquarters and I said, “Listen, we got his diary and there’s some fascinating in here.

41 minutes, 28 seconds

Like what?” And I said, “Well, for one, there are the cell phone numbers of three Saudi princes. Like what’s up with

41 minutes, 35 seconds

that?” So they were like, “Put it in writing.” So I write this cable back and I was like, “We found these three princes. Here are their cell phone

41 minutes, 42 seconds

numbers. George calls in the Saudi ambassador. The president calls the king, “What kind of country you running over there?”

41 minutes, 49 seconds

So, we said, “We want those three princes. We want them like right now.” Next thing you know, one goes into the hospital for beriatric surgery cuz they’re all fat.

41 minutes, 59 seconds

Mhm. And he dies on the operating table.

42 minutes, 2 seconds

The other one is driving from Riyad to Jedha on the Riad Jetta highway. He’s in a onecar accident and is killed in the

42 minutes, 11 seconds

accident. The third one goes camping in the desert, which is a very popular pastime, and dies of thirst.

42 minutes, 19 seconds

Yeah. So, we couldn’t interrogate any of them.

42 minutes, 24 seconds

Who do you think was Do you think that uh Saudi Arabia did that? 100%.

42 minutes, 28 seconds

Right. Do you think we ever got uh to the bottom of 911? Do you think No, you don’t.

42 minutes, 34 seconds

No. And I’m going to say something that’s very unpopular. Um, I think that the Israelis, while not involved in 911,

42 minutes, 42 seconds

absolutely, positively had advanced warning of 911. They had sources inside of al-Qaeda and they purposely did not

42 minutes, 50 seconds

tell us the details because they knew what was going to happen. They knew that we would attack Afghanistan and we would

42 minutes, 57 seconds

attack Iraq and we would kill 2 million Muslims. And I mean, these dancing Israelis, they’ve never answered for this.

43 minutes, 5 seconds

I’m still mad about the dancing Israelis. I’ve heard about the dancing Israelis.

43 minutes, 9 seconds

Bring it up. So, you’re saying that you believe that they knew.

43 minutes, 13 seconds

I think they knew in advance and didn’t warn us.

43 minutes, 15 seconds

But they didn’t warn us because we would then we would we would do their dirty work for them.

43 minutes, 19 seconds

We would take out issues with their surrounding guys. You know, there are videos making the rounds now of Benjamin Netanyahu over the years, over the the

43 minutes, 27 seconds

last 20 plus years, testifying before Congress and saying, you know, if if we just took out Saddam Hussein, we would

43 minutes, 35 seconds

be peace in the Middle East. If we just took out Muamar Gaddafi, there would be I guarantee you, he says, there would be peace in the Middle East. And we do it all.

43 minutes, 43 seconds

We to take out Iran and we’re gonna have peace in the Middle East.

43 minutes, 46 seconds

It’s starting to get a little bit more like I think so. A little sus.

43 minutes, 50 seconds

Yeah. So, um, the Iraqis have electrical towers like we have everywhere, but ours have four legs and the Iraqis have three

43 minutes, 57 seconds

legs. So, just a few days before we attacked Iraq, at that time I’m the I’m the executive assistant to the deputy

44 minutes, 4 seconds

director for operations at the CIA. So, it’s a serious the most serious job I ever had in my life. So, you have access to a lot. Literally everything.

44 minutes, 12 seconds

Wow.

44 minutes, 13 seconds

And the Israelis come to us and they said, “Listen, you guys are going to attack Iraq in a couple days.” We want in. We said absolutely not. We put this

44 minutes, 21 seconds

coalition together with all these Arab countries. As soon as you guys jump in, all the Arabs are going to drop out.

44 minutes, 26 seconds

Just let us do it. Next thing you know, every one of these electrical towers just begins to topple over like 150

44 minutes, 34 seconds

miles worth in the Western Desert because somebody put explosives on just one of the three legs.

44 minutes, 41 seconds

And I remember my boss saying, “These damn Israelis, they just can’t leave well enough alone.

44 minutes, 47 seconds

They just don’t ever do as they’re told.

44 minutes, 51 seconds

Um, let me look at this. The dancing Israelis, and we’re talking about the Israeli government. We’re not talking about Israeli people.

44 minutes, 57 seconds

I’m I’m far less worried about the dancing Israelis than than I am about the Israelis who were arrested on 911. Okay.

45 minutes, 4 seconds

But just so I just so I can say the claim because I don’t know, I’ve never even spoken about this. The dancing Israelis is a 911 related conspiracy trope based on the arrest of five

45 minutes, 12 seconds

Israeli men in New Jersey on September 11, 2001. Um, and this is uh according to Perplexity, and it was some guys, I

45 minutes, 20 seconds

think they were on a building top and they were kind of dancing like around a high-fiving each other.

45 minutes, 24 seconds

Yeah. A bread truck or something as the uh as you can see the towers in the distance. Um, yeah. A New Jersey woman reported five men near a van overlooking

45 minutes, 33 seconds

Manhattan who appeared to be celebrating and taking photos as the Twin Towers burned. Police later stopped a suspicious van and detained five Israeli

45 minutes, 40 seconds

citizens. Um they had items like box cutters and multiple passports which conspiracy theorists later fixated on but box cutters are normal tools for a

45 minutes, 49 seconds

moving delivery job. Um they were happy because they knew exactly what was going to happen that we would have to enter the war. We would attack Afghanistan. We

45 minutes, 58 seconds

would probably then you know uh take a permanent position in the in the region which is exactly what happened. That’s

46 minutes, 5 seconds

why they were dancing. They were happy 911 is a good thing for Israel. Yeah, it it got us militarily engaged over the long term.

46 minutes, 13 seconds

But you don’t think that they were involved in the setting up of it?

46 minutes, 15 seconds

I don’t. No. No. No. There’s And there’s never been any evidence to suggest that they were involved in any way. I have no idea.

46 minutes, 22 seconds

No. But there was another thing, too, and this is this is a bigger issue. Um it’s that

46 minutes, 29 seconds

uh the Israelis spy on the United States. They’ve always spied on the United States. Do we spy on them also?

46 minutes, 35 seconds

No. And and that’s written in stone at the CIA. We do not spy on Israel, but they openly spy on us. They’re all over the country stealing defense secrets.

46 minutes, 44 seconds

Do we spy on other countries?

46 minutes, 46 seconds

Yeah, we spy on almost every Why can’t we spy on them?

46 minutes, 50 seconds

It’s a political decision that’s been made. Yeah. A political decision in the White House, on Capitol Hill.

46 minutes, 59 seconds

Sometimes it just feels like our country is just kind of owned by Israel and they just don’t say that. Do you think that that’s true or do you think that’s fictional?

47 minutes, 6 seconds

Well, I don’t think it’s so clear-cut. I think I think the truth is that the Israelis have inordinate political influence in the United States, especially in our elections.

47 minutes, 15 seconds

Yeah.

47 minutes, 16 seconds

Well, they just had that election with Thomas Massie that um Exactly. That that’s the best example that got overtaken. What happened with that election? Let’s bring it up. I mean, I know that Thomas lost, but it was it was the largest.

47 minutes, 26 seconds

Yeah. $35 million was spent. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee or Apac and other pro-Israel interest groups have unccorked over nine million

47 minutes, 35 seconds

in a bid to unseat Republican Representative Thomas Massie on Tuesday, which they did in a competitive primary that has shattered spending records. A

47 minutes, 43 seconds

prominent pro-Israel GOP donors have funneled millions more into a super PAC stood up by President Donald Trump’s political operation that has spent

47 minutes, 52 seconds

nearly 7 million on the race. Overall ad spending has topped 32 million, making it the most expensive House primary on record per tracking firm ad impact. Wow.

48 minutes, 2 seconds

For a job that pays $180,000 a year.

48 minutes, 6 seconds

So, what are the long-term benefits of them getting this position or was it just about getting Massie out?

48 minutes, 10 seconds

It was getting Massie. The thing about Apac is if you are not 100% pro-Israel, they will primary you. They’ll they’ll

48 minutes, 19 seconds

primary you with somebody who is 100% pro-Israel. And sometimes, you know, the perfect is the enemy of the good. Where

48 minutes, 27 seconds

um does that mean uh where you’ve got, for example, there was an incumbent Democrat in New Jersey who voted pro-Israel 90% of the time. They ran a

48 minutes, 37 seconds

primary opponent against him um and uh who was 100% pro-Israel and he lost, but

48 minutes, 45 seconds

so did she. And the one that won was the one that’s pro Palestinian.

48 minutes, 49 seconds

Ah, I see. So sometimes by taking out by by aiming for one, you might let another through. You end up hurting your own cause. Got it. Yeah.

48 minutes, 56 seconds

Yeah. Well, I think I mean I can understand people’s uh angst with this sort of thing. I mean the the biggest thing is just like if Israel is involved

49 minutes, 3 seconds

in a genocide, right? They’re genociding people. It’s almost like why would you let Nazi Germany invest in your in your

49 minutes, 12 seconds

people who are going to be running congressmen or senators in your country?

49 minutes, 17 seconds

It’s crazy. I don’t see how there’s not a law. Like, why isn’t there a law if there’s some if a country’s doing like a like a holocaust or like a genocide that

49 minutes, 26 seconds

they’re not allowed to invest in um that they’re not allowed to have a lobby in in in our elections? See, was there ever a law about that?

49 minutes, 35 seconds

No. And and they would lose their over the use of the word genocide. You used it. I use it. It’s a genocide. It

49 minutes, 44 seconds

meets We’ve been using it on here for years.

49 minutes, 45 seconds

Oh, yeah. It meets all the international legal requirements of a genocide.

49 minutes, 49 seconds

Yeah. Well, I think the UN is has voted that it is. Yeah. Um I don’t know if the vote passed because I think there was maybe some groups that were that

49 minutes, 57 seconds

wouldn’t agree to it. Um Well, it didn’t pass the Security Council, but it passed by 90 something% in the general assembly.

50 minutes, 5 seconds

Yeah, but I just I don’t understand why that seems fair. And also, I’m amazed that I don’t understand why people that made like movies and wrote books about

50 minutes, 13 seconds

the Holocaust, why they don’t speak up and say, “Hey, yeah, this is the same thing that I wrote about.” You know what I’m saying?

50 minutes, 20 seconds

You can show picture to picture that makes it exactly killing is wrong.

50 minutes, 23 seconds

It’s wrong. No matter who’s doing the killing or who’s being killed, it’s just wrong.

50 minutes, 27 seconds

But I don’t see why some of those people don’t speak up, you know.

50 minutes, 31 seconds

Well, there there is an increasingly large number of Jewish Americans who are speaking out. There’s a big group called

50 minutes, 38 seconds

Jewish Voices for Peace. Um the Orthodox Jewish community in New York has been very vocal. Just this week, uh there was

50 minutes, 47 seconds

um protest annual Israel Day parade and and a lot of the Orthodox Jews from

50 minutes, 54 seconds

Brooklyn showed up with Palestinian and Iranian flags and it caused violence. Yeah.

51 minutes, 1 second

Yeah. I guess I just don’t understand why. What are like what is America afraid of?

51 minutes, 6 seconds

Like like what have you seen like in the CIA? Because it does you hear a lot that like that that the Israeli influence like has taken over our CIA and our FBI.

51 minutes, 18 seconds

Do you think that that’s true or not?

51 minutes, 19 seconds

Well, I can’t speak to the FBI and my my CIA information is dated. I left the CIA more than 20 years ago, but when I was

51 minutes, 26 seconds

there, we kept the Israelis at arms length. Like seriously so. Um, the very

51 minutes, 33 seconds

first intelligence liaison intelligence briefing I ever gave was to the Israelis. I had been only on the job six weeks and my boss said, “Listen, you’re

51 minutes, 41 seconds

going to give a liazison briefing. It’s going to be a whole big group of people, so you’re going to be the last one to talk because you’re the most junior, but

51 minutes, 49 seconds

you need to know some of the ground rules.” He said, “We do not meet with the Israelis in the building. We used

51 minutes, 56 seconds

to, but every time they’d come, they’d bring us gifts. And the gifts are always packed with listening devices and batteries. Is that true?

52 minutes, 3 seconds

Yes. 100% true.

52 minutes, 4 seconds

Would you guys find them? How do you even know that that’s true?

52 minutes, 7 seconds

Because you have to x-ray everything that comes into the building. You can’t just wantingly walk in off the street with, you know, boxes of gifts and say, “Here, this is for you.” And what they do to sew a couple

52 minutes, 15 seconds

Palestinian ears from the rubble and they’re like, “Oh, we’re just joking.” Oh, it’s like joking stuff. Yeah, it’s not joking.

52 minutes, 23 seconds

Right. So, that happened during your time. Was that with other countries too?

52 minutes, 26 seconds

So I’m sure there’s other countries that like Oh, there are other countries we don’t even have liaison with. Got it.

52 minutes, 30 seconds

But with the Israelis, we had to we had to rent a place and we would meet with them in the place. Um on my very first day at the CIA, you you meet in the

52 minutes, 39 seconds

auditorium called the bubble and the head of HR comes out and the director comes and says, “Welcome to the CIA.” And then the head of security, it’s just

52 minutes, 47 seconds

a parade of important people come to welcome you. So the head of security said, he said a couple things. One was funny. He said, “The gravest threat

52 minutes, 56 seconds

facing America today is the threat of Soviet communism.” And I said to the guy next to me, “Does this guy not read the

53 minutes, 3 seconds

papers? There is no Soviet Union anymore.” Anyway, he went on to say that the Israelis have two declared

53 minutes, 11 seconds

intelligence officers in the United States, one Mossad and one Shinbet. So CIA and FBI equivalents. They’re at the Israeli embassy in Washington. But the

53 minutes, 20 seconds

FBI has identified 187 additional undeclared Israeli intelligence officers spread out all

53 minutes, 29 seconds

over America stealing secrets from defense contractors.

53 minutes, 34 seconds

So the the lesson was don’t ever talk about work outside the building. Don’t ever eat at the restaurants in MLAN, Virginia, because they’re all Russian

53 minutes, 43 seconds

KGB and back then it was the KGB and Israeli Mossad agents eating there to hear what the CIA people are saying afterward.

53 minutes, 51 seconds

Wow. Yeah.

53 minutes, 52 seconds

It sounds exciting though. At least it was kind of exciting.

53 minutes, 55 seconds

I bet it was it was like a real who done it.

53 minutes, 57 seconds

I I loved it. I really did. I loved it until I didn’t love it. You know, in after 911, everybody went nuts and just wanted to kill everyone. I was

54 minutes, 4 seconds

getting ready to go to Pakistan and so I stopped by the office on my way to the airport just to say goodbye because Kofheer said on 911 he stood up on his desk.

54 minutes, 12 seconds

Kofheer Black, you said Kofer Black. Yeah. He stood up on his desk and he said, “Today we’re at war.

54 minutes, 18 seconds

All of us are going to have to do our part. Not all of us are going to be able to come home.” So he said, “If you if you want to walk now, walk and nobody will think less of

54 minutes, 26 seconds

you.” Nobody budged. So I stopped by the office cuz I wanted to say goodbye. I don’t know. Am I going to get shot? Am I going to get blown up? Am I going to get

54 minutes, 35 seconds

killed? I I don’t know. So, I just wanted to say goodbye. Say goodbye to Kofheer. No. To Kofheer. To my boss, excuse me. And to the people I was working with.

54 minutes, 43 seconds

Well, why would you have gotten shot?

54 minutes, 44 seconds

I’m I was the chief of counterterrorism operations. That’s the job I’m going out to. I’m busting down doors three nights a week. And um and I worked for this guy. Lovely, lovely guy. Nice suits.

54 minutes, 57 seconds

Just a really like like very professorial.

55 minutes, 1 second

And he gives me a hug and he leans in and he says, “Kill them all.” And I said, “Really? Have we gotten there already?” Wow.

55 minutes, 8 seconds

And he says, “Kill them all.” And then I went to the airport. I was like, “Am I the only guy who thinks we should do this by the book?” God.

55 minutes, 16 seconds

Apparently I was.

55 minutes, 19 seconds

I said, “That’s crazy, man. It was ugly.” You should see some of the pictures I have on my phone. Those make your hair stand up.

55 minutes, 26 seconds

I don’t know. I’m already There’s already a lot of stuff I’m not allowed to look at. Um, I have blockers on my phone. So, uh, yeah, I’m just going to

55 minutes, 34 seconds

donate my eyes to charity, I think, soon. Um, this episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.

55 minutes, 42 seconds

For some, summer is their favorite season. Travel picks up and the kids are out of school and adventure is the focus.

55 minutes, 52 seconds

For others, juggling it all can be tough and and they’re just counting down the minutes until the kids are back in school. If you’re feeling off, this is a

56 minutes, 2 seconds

reminder to check in with yourself. Hey self, what’s going on? BetterHelp can

56 minutes, 9 seconds

help. With over 30,000 therapists, BetterHelp is the world’s largest online therapy platform, having served over 6 million people globally. And it works.

56 minutes, 21 seconds

With an average rating of 4.9 out of five for a live session based on over 1.7 million client reviews, you don’t

56 minutes, 30 seconds

have to say yes to everything this summer. Find support in therapy. Sign up and get 10% off at betterhelp.com/theo.

56 minutes, 40 seconds

That’s betterhp.com/to.

56 minutes, 45 seconds

I’ve been wondering if there was ever a time when you were with your family and your car broke down because I’ve been

56 minutes, 52 seconds

there and I remember my the car was broke down and I stood off. I walked off from that thing. I said, “I ain’t even

57 minutes

being with y’all anymore. Just just didn’t even want to be by my family.

57 minutes, 4 seconds

Dang it.” Just out of shame. Car Shield could have fixed that. Car Shield offers month-to-month vehicle protection plans

57 minutes, 13 seconds

designed to protect drivers from expensive car repair bills.

57 minutes, 19 seconds

Car Shield contracts have low deductibles to prevent stress to your wallet at a critical time, and they

57 minutes, 26 seconds

partner with certified mechanics and repair shops around the country for when you’re in a bind. Make a decision your

57 minutes, 33 seconds

wallet will love with Car Shield. Right now, CarShield is offering our listeners 20% off with the code theo at carshield.com.

57 minutes, 44 seconds

Visit carshield.com to lock in your 2026 protection today and protect yourself

57 minutes, 51 seconds

from expensive car repairs. Again, go to carshield.com and use code Theo for 20% off.

57 minutes, 59 seconds

So when you get involved like how bad did it get after 9/11 where the rules of

58 minutes, 6 seconds

like um interrogating and that sort of thing changed?

58 minutes, 10 seconds

Ah that’s a good question. You know the the dirty little secret was literally not one single CIA officer was trained in interrogation techniques.

58 minutes, 21 seconds

Wow. So I as soon as we started catching these guys, I mean I’d only been there but a week we started catching them and my boss is like interrogate them. I’m

58 minutes, 29 seconds

like I’m I don’t know how to interrogate people. I can interview them. And what do you even wear? Sneakers, man. What do you even put on to do something like that?

58 minutes, 36 seconds

Yeah, I wore sneakers most days. Uh polo shirt, jeans.

58 minutes, 40 seconds

Bro, you can’t interrogate somebody in a polo shirt.

58 minutes, 44 seconds

That’s all I brought with me. That and sweatshirts cuz it was cold when I arrived.

58 minutes, 47 seconds

You got to put on a Chicago Bears jersey or something. Oh my god, it was so weird. See, in one of the early raids,

58 minutes, 53 seconds

we had also confiscated the al-Qaeda training manual.

58 minutes, 58 seconds

Well, I I Do you still have one of those or not? You think? No, no, no. I turned everything in.

59 minutes, 2 seconds

Uh, but you know what? It might be online. It might be out there now. I one.

59 minutes, 7 seconds

So, I was uh I spoke and and read Arabic and so we’re going through the training manual and I and I’m translating it to the guys in my branch as I’m reading it.

59 minutes, 17 seconds

Well, everything that was in the manual, these prisoners would do as we would catch them. So, I say, “What’s your name?” The guy goes, “Oh, like he’s

59 minutes, 26 seconds

having a ruptured appendix.” Oh, what’s your name? And he like pretends to faint and falls off the chair and then he just kind of opens one eye to look at you.

59 minutes, 33 seconds

And I’m like, “Get the up and get back in the chair. What’s your name?” And then like, “Do you do you hit him?

59 minutes, 40 seconds

Do you not hit him? Do you grab him by the shirt and shake?” I mean, I didn’t know what the rules were.

59 minutes, 45 seconds

There were no rules. And so what kind of environ I mean what did you end up having to do? Like what do you do in those sort of situations? Like are you

59 minutes, 53 seconds

responsible to garner information? Do you even feel like the people you’re catching have real information? The sounds kind of vague.

1 hour, 1 second

Everybody has something. It’s called the mosaic concept where everybody’s got a little tile in his brain and if you collect enough tiles you can put the

1 hour, 10 seconds

whole picture together. So I mean some of it sounds comical now. Um, I would say to the Pakistani lieutenant

1 hour, 19 seconds

colonel that I was working with on a daily basis, I’d say, “You want to be the good cop today? I’ll be the bad cop or you want to be the the bad cop again.

1 hour, 26 seconds

I’ll be the good cop.” And then we decide in advance. Then I go in, you know, we start talking to these guys.

1 hour, 30 seconds

The first guy we captured, he was a Jordanian. And they bring him in, he’s shackled at the ankles, shackled at the waist, and then they undo the waist

1 hour, 39 seconds

shackle and they they chain him to an eyebolt in the in the table.

1 hour, 44 seconds

So, you have to know the answers to all the questions that you’re asking, right?

1 hour, 49 seconds

So, I’m like, “What’s your name?” He tells me his name. “Uh, how where did you come from?” I came from Tora Bora.

1 hour, 56 seconds

“And what happened in Tora?” The Americans began bombing us. And then, where did you go? He said, “I tried to escape. So, I went into a cave and then

1 hour, 1 minute, 4 seconds

the Americans bombed the cave and the guy like had blood squirted out of his ears and he had brain damage and finally

1 hour, 1 minute, 11 seconds

made it across the border. I lay out a map. Tell me exactly how you got across the border. We knew what the rat lines were. And he told the truth. This is the way we came through this pass.

1 hour, 1 minute, 22 seconds

Everything he told me was true. And so I I said to him, he said, “What’s going to happen to me?” And I said, “Honestly, I don’t know. You’re probably going to

1 hour, 1 minute, 31 seconds

spend some time in jail here, and then we’re going to send you to Jordan, and I don’t know what the Jordanians are going to do to you.” Because he was Jordanian.

1 hour, 1 minute, 37 seconds

Yeah. So I said to him, “But let me ask you something. I know that what you told me was true.

1 hour, 1 minute, 45 seconds

Why did you tell me the truth? And he goes, I’m your prisoner. What good would it do me to lie to you? He said, I know

1 hour, 1 minute, 53 seconds

how these things work. I know that you knew the answers to these questions. It doesn’t help me in any way to lie to you.

1 hour, 2 minutes

And then I said, okay, thank you. And then he says, let me ask you something now. He said, I assume you’re Christian.

1 hour, 2 minutes, 6 seconds

And I said, yes. And he says, I would like to invite you into the embrace of Islam. and I’ll be your godfather.

1 hour, 2 minutes, 14 seconds

I said, “Well, thank you very much.” And what is that? It’s almost like the Boy Scouts or something or he like there’s a scout leader kind of like like he’ll like Yeah. be like your sponsor.

1 hour, 2 minutes, 22 seconds

Yeah. Like my sponsor. He’s going to convert me to Islam and I’m going to say which is Muslim. Yeah.

1 hour, 2 minutes, 26 seconds

Yeah. Yeah. And um and uh I said, “Yeah, thanks, but no thanks. And I wish you the best.” And I remember saying to a

1 hour, 2 minutes, 34 seconds

colleague of mine, “My god, if everyone goes like that, it’s going to be incredible.” The next raid we did,

1 hour, 2 minutes, 41 seconds

we bust down the door 2:00 in the morning and it’s two kids. They’re 19 years old from Tunisia and they both just burst into tears. Oh.

1 hour, 2 minutes, 50 seconds

And so we cuff them and one kid is just heaving, sobbing, and the other one is begging me to let him call his mother.

1 hour, 2 minutes, 58 seconds

And I’m like, “No, I’m sorry. You can’t call your mother.” What they do? They They were Arabs without passports or

1 hour, 3 minutes, 6 seconds

visas in an al-Qaeda safe house. And that was good enough for me. Got it.

1 hour, 3 minutes, 10 seconds

So we got to the point where we had literally filled the Rahul Pindi jail in in Rahul Pindi Pakistan. It’s it’s this

1 hour, 3 minutes, 19 seconds

gigantic city that’s kind of attached to Islamabad. Islamabad is the capital but it’s very very small.

1 hour, 3 minutes, 24 seconds

Rahul Pindi is where the military is located and it’s like five, six, seven million people there. So uh Raul Pendi jail. There it is. That’s it.

1 hour, 3 minutes, 36 seconds

My god, I haven’t I haven’t been to the Royal Pendy jail in 24 years. And I tell you what, I don’t remember it looking that good either. I never been.

1 hour, 3 minutes, 45 seconds

Well, yeah. Thank your lucky stars. Really?

1 hour, 3 minutes, 47 seconds

Yeah. It’s not good. So So the the packs called me and they said, “Look, we’ve we’ve literally filled the jail. You got to do something with these

1 hour, 3 minutes, 55 seconds

guys.” I said, “Okay.” So I call headquarters. I said, “The packs are telling me that the jail’s full. What do you want to do with them?” They said, “Put them on a C12 and send them to Guantanamo.” I said, “Guantamo, Cuba?

1 hour, 4 minutes, 7 seconds

Why would we send them to Cuba?” And they said, ‘We came up with this idea.

1 hour, 4 minutes, 12 seconds

We’re going to send everybody to Cuba and then we’re going to divide them up after we figure out what federal

1 hour, 4 minutes, 19 seconds

district court to charge them with because 911 was an open criminal investigation at the time. And the crimes were committed in the Eastern

1 hour, 4 minutes, 27 seconds

District of Massachusetts, hijacking, the Western District of Pennsylvania, hijacking, the Eastern District of

1 hour, 4 minutes, 35 seconds

Virginia, the Pentagon, and the Southern District of New York. I said, “That’s a great idea.” So, we just started loading these guys on an endless, you know,

1 hour, 4 minutes, 43 seconds

parade of C12 transport planes and sending them to Guantanamo. And then somebody in Dick Cheny’s office,

1 hour, 4 minutes, 51 seconds

probably David Addington, although he’s never admitted it, somebody said, “You know what? These guys don’t have any

1 hour, 4 minutes, 58 seconds

rights in Cuba. Why don’t we just leave them there like forever?” And here we are 24 years later.

1 hour, 5 minutes, 7 seconds

Some of them are still there. And they’re still there. Most of them, you think?

1 hour, 5 minutes, 9 seconds

34 of them. at the height we had like 770 I think was when it was at its most full.

1 hour, 5 minutes, 17 seconds

I went there one time as a to perform as a comedian. Yeah.

1 hour, 5 minutes, 20 seconds

Went down there and was performing for some of the troops there and stuff and you got to see some of the uh just the way you would fly in it. See it in the distance.

1 hour, 5 minutes, 27 seconds

Oh yeah. When you the way you would fly in at night uh they would fly in like this kind of crazy pattern and um Yeah, they do.

1 hour, 5 minutes, 33 seconds

And it was lit up. It almost looked like a big wedding ring in the distance because they had like just these bright bright lights. um on the fences

1 hour, 5 minutes, 42 seconds

surrounding the uh the base. And so you come in like at this crazy kind of pattern and uh and you kind of had to go

1 hour, 5 minutes, 50 seconds

around. We went from I think you can’t cross Cuban airspace. You have to go around and come up from the south.

1 hour, 5 minutes, 56 seconds

We went from somewhere in Florida and went around. It was pretty intense. I mean it was definitely it was interesting. Uh, and then we got to go right up by the by the detainee centers

1 hour, 6 minutes, 4 seconds

and I think we even saw some guys playing volleyball and stuff, but um to were there tortures where people lost their lives? Were you that you were involved in?

1 hour, 6 minutes, 13 seconds

Not that I was involved in, thank God.

1 hour, 6 minutes, 16 seconds

There were, you know, but like at what point do you call like one office getting out of hand? Like have you been in one that was getting out of hand?

1 hour, 6 minutes, 22 seconds

No, because when we were catching guys, we had not yet implemented the torture program. So, the torture program was was conceived and approved in October of 2001.

1 hour, 6 minutes, 32 seconds

Okay.

1 hour, 6 minutes, 33 seconds

I got to Pakistan in January of 2002 and we’re like, what do we do with these guys? We the FBI’s there with us there.

1 hour, 6 minutes, 41 seconds

You can’t you can’t like hit him or you can’t do anything to them. If they don’t talk, then okay, we just send them to Guantanamo.

1 hour, 6 minutes, 48 seconds

And because you you ended up coming out and talking speaking out about Yeah. Uh torture that was happening, right? But how would they let you do that if you weren’t aware of it firsthand though?

1 hour, 6 minutes, 57 seconds

Well, because remember I became the executive assistant to the deputy director.

1 hour, 7 minutes

Oh, so you would see the reports coming back. You see all the cables coming back in? Yeah, exactly. Huh. Mhm.

1 hour, 7 minutes, 6 seconds

Was some of it pretty intense. Do you feel like Oh, it was bad. You know, I most most of the news outlets that I talked to, they make the biggest deal out of water

1 hour, 7 minutes, 14 seconds

boarding. There’s water boarding right there.

1 hour, 7 minutes, 16 seconds

Um I think that there were there were techniques that were worse than water boarding. Sleep deprivation.

1 hour, 7 minutes, 23 seconds

Yeah. Yeah, is one. Um, and in terms of causing death, uh, the cold cell, you see,

1 hour, 7 minutes, 30 seconds

sensory deprivation, that was also a terrible one. What is that like?

1 hour, 7 minutes, 33 seconds

Sensory deprivation, they put you in in like an isolation tank. Mhm.

1 hour, 7 minutes, 38 seconds

And you’re surrounded by water and you literally go crazy from the silence. So, you’re in like a like one of those uh

1 hour, 7 minutes, 46 seconds

like kind of one of those places you can go pay to do and it’s like quiet in there, but instead of being in there for an hour or two hours, you’re in there for 3 weeks.

1 hour, 7 minutes, 54 seconds

Is there are they playing music or No, it’s it’s complete silence and darkness. Complete and total like you’re dead. Wow.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 2 seconds

Yeah. I think Aaron Rogers does that.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 4 seconds

I think that’s nuts. But there were a couple that were worse than than uh waterboarding. The cold cell. Mhm. We strip the prisoner naked.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 13 seconds

You chain him to an eyebolt in the ceiling so he can’t lay or sit or get comfortable in you. You keep your underpants on you.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 20 seconds

No, no, no, no. Because the idea is to humiliate them.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 23 seconds

Remember in their religion Oh. Uh nakedness is shameful. Yeah. Right. Nakedness in front of a woman.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 31 seconds

And we would have women interrogators stripped them naked just to humiliate them.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 35 seconds

Yeah. You see this rectal feeding? Um rectal feeding.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 39 seconds

Yeah. What we did is we forced tubes up their asses and then with a pump pumped hummus up there just to insult their culture.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 47 seconds

No way.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 49 seconds

Who was coming up with these ideas? I’m sure there were two contract psychologists at the CIA. Um James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 57 seconds

Is that true? They came up with these plans.

1 hour, 8 minutes, 59 seconds

Yeah. And we paid them $108 million of the taxpayers money for it.

1 hour, 9 minutes, 3 seconds

Wow. But when you look at were these people criminals? I see. This is what’s in That’s the thing. That’s the thing, Theo. They’ve never been charged with a

1 hour, 9 minutes, 11 seconds

crime, right?

1 hour, 9 minutes, 12 seconds

So, charge them. If these guys are as bad as we say they are, charge them with a crime. If they’re as bad as we say they are, find them guilty, sentence

1 hour, 9 minutes, 21 seconds

them to death, and execute them. We won’t even charge people in our country who are committing a crime. A crime. No.

1 hour, 9 minutes, 27 seconds

So, I think that it’s like that’s like a problem that’s been across the board is like what is the crime? Charge somebody with a crime.

1 hour, 9 minutes, 35 seconds

Yeah. It’s not happening in our own country because this is so wild to hear about because it’s like you know it’s really it’s interesting like just as a person right you’re like

1 hour, 9 minutes, 44 seconds

okay did these guys do something really bad to kill people in our country right were they doing really harmful stuff or they like and they were

1 hour, 9 minutes, 52 seconds

right but but they confessed through torture so none of it’s admissible none of it right okay so but then it’s like yeah

1 hour, 10 minutes, 1 second

it’s like how do you solve something like that you know with war crime. Well, there was a there was a deal that was made during the Biden administration.

1 hour, 10 minutes, 10 seconds

So, it was it was like the top three or four um Khales, Muhammad, uh Amar Al Baluch, Ramsey, Benib and somebody else.

1 hour, 10 minutes, 22 seconds

Um, they agreed to plead guilty to terrorism and what they got in exchange was life

1 hour, 10 minutes, 32 seconds

without parole and a promise not to send them to SuperMax in Colorado because they they said they couldn’t deal with the cold.

1 hour, 10 minutes, 39 seconds

They wanted to stay in Cuba because it’s warm.

1 hour, 10 minutes, 41 seconds

So, life without parole. And Biden’s uh secretary of defense um vacated the deal and he says, “You can’t make a deal like

1 hour, 10 minutes, 50 seconds

that. I have to make that deal because I’m the Secretary of Defense. And it went through the courts. And then the Biden administration, there it is right there.

1 hour, 11 minutes

The Biden administration, Department of Defense. Um, and who were these four guys? They were the men accused of Muhammad Wii bin Mustafa.

1 hour, 11 minutes, 9 seconds

They were accused of plotting the September 11 terrorist attacks, right?

1 hour, 11 minutes, 13 seconds

The Biden administration Department of Defense reached plea agreements with uh three prominent al-Qaeda figures whom you just mentioned accused applauding the September 11th terrorist attacks.

1 hour, 11 minutes, 22 seconds

However, following intense political and public backlash, the administration moved to block the agreement and the courts later threw it out. So, what happened to the guys? They’re just still

1 hour, 11 minutes, 29 seconds

in being still there. You see right there the terms they they agreed to plead guilty to murdering 2,976

1 hour, 11 minutes, 37 seconds

people in exchange for life without parole.

1 hour, 11 minutes, 41 seconds

Okay. So the deal was thrown out. So now what do they have?

1 hour, 11 minutes, 45 seconds

Why they have life without parole? They that that’s the deal, right? Same thing.

1 hour, 11 minutes, 50 seconds

It’s the same thing. They’re never going to be released.

1 hour, 11 minutes, 53 seconds

But why didn’t we what was the reason why there? Oh, because the reaction from people.

1 hour, 11 minutes, 58 seconds

It was it was really reaction from the Biden administ from the Biden defense department. It says 911 families too. I guess the 911 families just want to chop everybody’s head off. And I understand.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 9 seconds

I get it. I really do. It makes sense.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 11 seconds

I get it. But that’s never going to happen. It’s never going to happen.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 15 seconds

We’re a country of laws. We can’t just pretend that we’re a country of laws except when the laws aren’t convenient for us.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 22 seconds

But if you kill enough people, it seems like you would face the death penalty.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 25 seconds

Yes. But this you have the you have to blame the CIA for that. If the CIA hadn’t tortured these guys, they would all be have inadmissible.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 33 seconds

It’s all inadmissible. Got it.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 35 seconds

They confessed everything. But it was all under torture. And so you can’t do anything with it. Now there’s no evidence against them. None.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 43 seconds

What a I can’t even imagine what it’s like to be some of those families and like and just the drawn out of all of that.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 49 seconds

It’s been 24 years 25 years in in September. Um let’s get a little bit more current.

1 hour, 12 minutes, 56 seconds

Did you Oh, did you see that they just had the like they have those flatillas that are going to Gaza? Did you see that the prime minister of Ireland’s sister was on one of them?

1 hour, 13 minutes, 8 seconds

I’ll tell you, the Irish hate the Israelis and the Israelis hate the Irish. Has that always been the case, you think? No, only in the last eight or 10 years.

1 hour, 13 minutes, 16 seconds

Let me see this. Gaza aid flotillaa activist home after torture ship nightmare. Scroll a little. Uh, Irish activists have claimed they were

1 hour, 13 minutes, 24 seconds

kidnapped and beaten by Israeli forces after their aid flotilla to Gaza was intercepted in international waters.

1 hour, 13 minutes, 30 seconds

Margaret Connelly, the sister of President Connelly, was among the emotional arrivals at Dublin airport on Saturday. They wanted us to suffer, she said. None of them could look us in the

1 hour, 13 minutes, 38 seconds

eye. What a dehumanizing thing to do to men and women aged from 22 to 75. That’s just wild. Imagine if like Obama’s

1 hour, 13 minutes, 46 seconds

sister or Can you imagine?

1 hour, 13 minutes, 49 seconds

Can’t even imagine. I want to interview Greta Thurberg. Oh, that would be fun. It’d be cool, huh? Yeah.

1 hour, 13 minutes, 54 seconds

I just would like to get to see what she’s like.

1 hour, 13 minutes, 56 seconds

You know, I never been around her. I just see you just see like bits and clips of people, right?

1 hour, 14 minutes

Um, so it’d be pretty fascinating. The Irish detainees were among hundreds of part participants from other countries who were also detained when the latest

1 hour, 14 minutes, 8 seconds

iteration of the global sum sim flotillaa flotillaa was stopped by Israeli forces in international waters

1 hour, 14 minutes, 15 seconds

and a lot of these groups were trying to get there to bring aid to the people in Gaza and then also I think to just document what was going on there. Um,

1 hour, 14 minutes, 24 seconds

they’ve had the largest killing of journalists. Yeah. In the history of time of the world. In the history of the world.

1 hour, 14 minutes, 32 seconds

Yeah. How are people not outraged? Have you heard of um I don’t know if people have any feelings anymore. I don’t know what’s going on. Have you heard of Shireen Abu Akla?

1 hour, 14 minutes, 40 seconds

No. I couldn’t even hear that. I don’t even know how to, you know, I couldn’t I couldn’t do it if I Yeah.

1 hour, 14 minutes, 46 seconds

Shireina Abu Akla was an American citizen and she was the top journalist on Al Jazzer. So, um, bring her up.

1 hour, 14 minutes, 55 seconds

Shireen. Shireen Abu Akla. Abu Akla.

1 hour, 14 minutes, 59 seconds

So, again, American citizen. She goes to Israel and she’s covering the uh the fighting between the Israelis and the Palestinians. I think it was in the in the West Bank. There she is.

1 hour, 15 minutes, 9 seconds

Yeah. In the West Bank.

1 hour, 15 minutes, 11 seconds

So, she’s wearing a bulletproof vest that says press and she’s wearing a helmet that says press. And she’s she’s taking cover behind a tree and an

1 hour, 15 minutes, 19 seconds

Israeli sniper shot her in the face. and killed her. Killed her instantly. So, her funeral is held a couple days later in a Greek Orthodox church in the West

1 hour, 15 minutes, 28 seconds

Bank. The IDF raids the church, beats the pawbearers, and they drop the the coffin. You’re lying. Isn’t that awful?

1 hour, 15 minutes, 39 seconds

Let me see. The manner of her death and the subsequent violent disruption of her funeral drew widespread international condemnation of Israel. During her

1 hour, 15 minutes, 47 seconds

funeral procession, the Israel police attacked the Paulbears at the St.

1 hour, 15 minutes, 51 seconds

Joseph’s Hospital in East Jerusalem with batons and stun grenades. The hospital itself was also stormed by Israeli police officers who assaulted patients

1 hour, 15 minutes, 58 seconds

and threw stun grenades. What is an American citizen? Unbelievable. And we and we didn’t say anything.

1 hour, 16 minutes, 6 seconds

We didn’t say anything. Our Well, most of our media won’t say a lot of stuff about this. No.

1 hour, 16 minutes, 11 seconds

What do you think’s going on? It feels like this is almost like It almost feels like um like the Twilight Zone. Does that make any sense to you?

1 hour, 16 minutes, 19 seconds

Yes, very much. Well, as someone who’s seen like a lot of like SCOPs and things that go on, what’s going on here? Like like does Israel have like an end goal?

1 hour, 16 minutes, 28 seconds

Like I like I have a lot of Jewish friends that are great people and stuff like that, right?

1 hour, 16 minutes, 32 seconds

And one of my best friends is an IDF special forces veteran. No way.

1 hour, 16 minutes, 37 seconds

Yeah. How does he feel about this sort of He’s ashamed. He’s ashamed. He’s like, “We didn’t used to be like this.” I just

1 hour, 16 minutes, 43 seconds

don’t under like Is there some goal of Israel that’s is a bigger goal? Do you think? Do you think so? Well, the goal

1 hour, 16 minutes, 50 seconds

might be in the 2027 National Defense Authorization Act, it integrates for the first time ever the Israeli and American militaries.

1 hour, 17 minutes, 1 second

So, they become like one military. It’s like, who’s who thought of that?

1 hour, 17 minutes, 6 seconds

Oh, my friend Roana actually is putting together Wow.

1 hour, 17 minutes, 11 seconds

He’s trying to put together a bill, I think, to challenge this. I’m not And I don’t know if the term is a bill. I’m not sure. So, you know, I’m more of an em emotional guy than I am.

1 hour, 17 minutes, 22 seconds

I like and respect Roana. I hope he runs for president.

1 hour, 17 minutes, 25 seconds

He’s a neat guy. We had him on here and it was it was cool. I think he’s a I think he’s a really interesting guy. I think he’s brave. Um I like the stuff

1 hour, 17 minutes, 33 seconds

that he’s brave enough to do. Um see, and I say the same thing about Tucker Carlson.

1 hour, 17 minutes, 38 seconds

I think I think Tucker the I’ll tell you something about Tucker is the Tucker that you see on the screen, that’s Tucker in real life.

1 hour, 17 minutes, 46 seconds

I agree. He’s he’s the sweetest guy. He means exactly what he says. He doesn’t hold anything back. Totally honest.

1 hour, 17 minutes, 55 seconds

Well, I think it’s like you’re just a human being who lives in a country and you’re supposed to have these like things of what means something and then

1 hour, 18 minutes, 3 seconds

you start to see all this stuff that you’re like, well, this goes against everything that I’ve learned. This goes against like especially like you grow up like you see

1 hour, 18 minutes, 11 seconds

like every other book at the airport is about the Holocaust for my entire life.

1 hour, 18 minutes, 15 seconds

So, it’s like every time you’re getting on a plane, you’re grabbing one and you’re learning about it and you’re like you you see these things that are wrong

1 hour, 18 minutes, 22 seconds

or that are like, you know, and then you see this thing happening like how is this? And then if

1 hour, 18 minutes, 28 seconds

you mention like and people act like I I don’t know. It’s almost like you feel like you’re being just gas lit and then your media won’t cover a lot of it.

1 hour, 18 minutes, 37 seconds

That’s right.

1 hour, 18 minutes, 38 seconds

So, I don’t know what’s going I don’t know. And I don’t know what’s going on.

1 hour, 18 minutes, 40 seconds

I was on I was on the Pierce Morgan show not too long ago. I I go on every couple of months and I never been on his show. What’s that guy like?

1 hour, 18 minutes, 48 seconds

Oh, he’s he’s a good guy, too. And I have to Is he tall or not? I haven’t met him in person, actually. Only on Zoom. Always wondered how tall he was.

1 hour, 18 minutes, 55 seconds

Somebody said he was like 5’5, dude. What?

1 hour, 18 minutes, 58 seconds

Yeah, that would surprise. 61. 61. Okay, that makes more sense.

1 hour, 19 minutes, 3 seconds

Maybe the exchange rate on him or something.

1 hour, 19 minutes, 5 seconds

Yeah, it’s the exchange rate. So, um, I was on his show and I was with, um, Scott Horton, who’s one of the most

1 hour, 19 minutes, 12 seconds

brilliant people I I’ve ever met. Um, and Alan Dersawitz and, uh, Danny Ayalon, General Danny Ayalon, um, for

1 hour, 19 minutes, 21 seconds

former Israeli general. And when there we are, there we are. So, uh,

1 hour, 19 minutes, 29 seconds

so when you’re on with Duritz, Duritz never shuts his mouth.

1 hour, 19 minutes, 34 seconds

That’s it. That was what I was going to say.

1 hour, 19 minutes, 35 seconds

Let me see. former C agent John Kira who uh believes Jeffrey No, that wasn’t it.

1 hour, 19 minutes, 40 seconds

That’s Jeffrey Epstein. Uh no, it was about it was about Hamas and Gaza. And he asked me cuz I had said the least on

1 hour, 19 minutes, 47 seconds

this episode and he said, “Do you believe that Hamas is a terrorist organization?” And I said I said, “Yes,

1 hour, 19 minutes, 53 seconds

if the point was on October 7th was to attack civilians, the definition of terrorism is the act of using violence

1 hour, 20 minutes, 2 seconds

to instill terror in a a civilian population.” So that’s the definition of terrorism. So yes, Hamas is a terrorist organization. He said, “Uh, do you

1 hour, 20 minutes, 11 seconds

believe October 7th was a terrorist attack?” And I said, “Yes.” He said, “Then what are you doing on this show?” I was supposed to be in the like

1 hour, 20 minutes, 18 seconds

anti-Israel, I guess, or whatever. And I said, “Pice, you can’t have as a policy.

1 hour, 20 minutes, 23 seconds

Just kill everybody. Women, children, the elderly, wipe out every hospital, every school, every apartment block.

1 hour, 20 minutes, 30 seconds

That’s genocide.” Yeah. Somebody’s got to say it. Yeah.

1 hour, 20 minutes, 37 seconds

I mean, it’s scary. And then and then and then to think, how would our country be okay right now with us joining military forces with a group that’s doing that?

1 hour, 20 minutes, 45 seconds

I’m sure not okay. And then then you have to ask, what about these people like Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham?

1 hour, 20 minutes, 51 seconds

Lindsey Graham said the other day, a week ago, that until I breathe my last breath, I will stand with Israel. Why?

1 hour, 21 minutes, 1 second

Why? Oh, that dude’s just a n Rochnney of Oh my god. And Cruz is just as bad. And these clowns from Florida that that wear

1 hour, 21 minutes, 8 seconds

IDF uniforms under the floor of the house. They should be arrested. I didn’t even see that. It was Congressman.

1 hour, 21 minutes, 15 seconds

You’re fine. But you’re like an a you’re supposed to have like a read on these types of things. Like what do you think’s going on?

1 hour, 21 minutes, 23 seconds

I think it’s Apex money. I think it’s two things. It’s Apex money. millions upon millions and millions of dollars in

1 hour, 21 minutes, 30 seconds

American politics. So they have an inordinate influence on our political system. And Apac is the only group of

1 hour, 21 minutes, 39 seconds

its kind that does not have to register as a foreign agent. Right?

1 hour, 21 minutes, 43 seconds

You know, I’ve made a I’ve made a point on a couple of podcasts. back in 200 like8 I got a very small contract just I

1 hour, 21 minutes, 52 seconds

don’t know five six thousand bucks to write four op-eds in support of the Abu Dhabi Chamber of Commerce. So I wrote

1 hour, 22 minutes, 1 second

these op-eds. Oh, you should do business in Abu Dhabi. It’s really businessfriendly. They love Americans. Everybody makes money. All right, send.

1 hour, 22 minutes, 8 seconds

I had to register as a foreign agent because I was uh I was I was publishing in support of a foreign entity.

1 hour, 22 minutes, 17 seconds

Interesting. What the heck is Apac doing 24/7?

1 hour, 22 minutes, 20 seconds

How come they don’t have to register as foreign agents?

1 hour, 22 minutes, 22 seconds

Yeah. And I I get I think it seems like we have our our uh our pe our government officials are afraid to stand up to them. I don’t know why.

1 hour, 22 minutes, 29 seconds

Very afraid. And then you have these morons.

1 hour, 22 minutes, 31 seconds

Why do you think they’re afraid? But why do you think they’re afraid? want to be primar like even if you get primary but like you would eventually somebody will

1 hour, 22 minutes, 39 seconds

win right like yes but but who among them has the courage to be the first I mean Massie stood up

1 hour, 22 minutes, 47 seconds

Massie took it I I saw him about a week before the election but he can’t be the only person in there well Marjorie Taylor Green but she

1 hour, 22 minutes, 55 seconds

didn’t have the guts she quit she quit halfway through what are they what do you think they’re compromising these people like what are they saying to them are they saying like

1 hour, 23 minutes, 3 seconds

something bad is going to h like what are you suggesting you will never work in politics ever again we will hound you

1 hour, 23 minutes, 11 seconds

for the rest of your career then if you lose then what do you have any you have nothing to lose then that’s what you and I say you and I would say would stand up you know bring up the

1 hour, 23 minutes, 20 seconds

thing about the just the government just like the government’s being interacted those two artic right uh the house armed services committee has unveiled its

1 hour, 23 minutes, 27 seconds

proposed 2027 national defense authorization act which would see a record shattering 1.15 5 trillion spent on the US military over the next fiscal

1 hour, 23 minutes, 35 seconds

year. Among the bill’s many provisions is section 224 entitled the United States Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative. Uh the provision

1 hour, 23 minutes, 44 seconds

would bring the US and Israel into an unprecedented partnership covering technology sharing the co-production of weapon systems and bilateral research

1 hour, 23 minutes, 52 seconds

and development across multiple domains of warfare including biotech, autonomous systems, AI, cyber warfare, and more.

1 hour, 23 minutes, 59 seconds

Well, this could just mean that we are uh we’re employing technology that they have, right? Is there any more specifics about this?

1 hour, 24 minutes, 8 seconds

Looks closer than that. I’ll tell you what, if and I’m not saying it isn’t. Look, it definitely scares me. I mean, I don’t want to be involved with a country that’s doing something like that. And I

1 hour, 24 minutes, 16 seconds

don’t think that’s crazy for me to say that either.

1 hour, 24 minutes, 18 seconds

Even if it’s just this um that means they’re not going to have to steal the 2% of defense technology that we don’t give them. I’ll give you an example.

1 hour, 24 minutes, 27 seconds

When I was still there, we were developing the F-35. So, they came to us and they said, “We want the F-35. We want want to be the first ones to have the F-35.” We said, “Great. We’re going

1 hour, 24 minutes, 36 seconds

to have we’re going to give you the F-35. We’re going to call it the F-35I for Israel and it’s going to have just a

1 hour, 24 minutes, 42 seconds

barely slightly degraded um avionics system just in case, god forbid, you

1 hour, 24 minutes, 50 seconds

know, it doesn’t get shot down and then the Chinese and the Russians get it and then they can steal the avionics.” They said, “No, not good enough. We want the

1 hour, 24 minutes, 57 seconds

We want the F-35, the same one that you guys fly. In the meantime, the Emirates came to us and they said, “We want the F-35.” We said, “Great. We’re going to give you the F-35E.

1 hour, 25 minutes, 6 seconds

We’re going to call it for Emirates and it’s going to have just a slightly degraded avionics package. Same thing we’re giving the Israelis.” They said, “Fine, we’ll take it.” The Israelis

1 hour, 25 minutes, 16 seconds

then tasked their spies with stealing whatever the downgrade was in the in the avionics so that they could re-upgrade it once they took delivery of the F-35.

1 hour, 25 minutes, 25 seconds

Well, now we’re just gonna share everything with them. Well, just give me the F35.

1 hour, 25 minutes, 29 seconds

But can you like can you fault a country? Like it’s kind of interesting because I think if you if you think that we’re

1 hour, 25 minutes, 36 seconds

playing like that the I I guess I always felt like we were out of the colonization era. I know. I’m with you.

1 hour, 25 minutes, 42 seconds

And and and I know what you’re getting at.

1 hour, 25 minutes, 44 seconds

And so it’s like you can’t fault a country really for just trying to survive.

1 hour, 25 minutes, 49 seconds

I don’t I don’t And I’m not saying you are. I’m think I’m thinking out loud. Let me finish the sentence real quick. Sorry, John.

1 hour, 25 minutes, 56 seconds

But yeah, you can’t f like, you know, if a country is just trying to survive and they’re good at it and better at it than others, then it’s like that has to be respected in in some senses, for sure.

1 hour, 26 minutes, 7 seconds

Agreed. I don’t fault the Israelis for doing this. If I were the prime minister of Israel, I would do the same thing when it comes to acquiring defense technology. I fault the US government.

1 hour, 26 minutes, 17 seconds

And it makes not one wit of difference if there’s a Democrat in the White House or a Republican in the White House. We don’t stand up to the Israelis.

1 hour, 26 minutes, 26 seconds

Yeah.

1 hour, 26 minutes, 26 seconds

You know, I will say Reagan did in the so-called Year of the Spy when Jonathan Pard was uh No, actually it wasn’t

1 hour, 26 minutes, 34 seconds

Reagan by then. It was Clinton, wasn’t it?

1 hour, 26 minutes, 38 seconds

Clinton stood up and said, “We’re going to prosecute this guy.” Pard peaked in 84.

1 hour, 26 minutes, 50 seconds

When was he arrested?

1 hour, 26 minutes, 51 seconds

85. Okay. So, it was Reagan. It was Reagan. He did every single day of the 30 years. And um then when he got out of

1 hour, 27 minutes, 1 second

prison, Miriam Adlesen or not Mary Mson, her husband, it was uh what’s his name? Aden

1 hour, 27 minutes, 8 seconds

uh the the king of Las Vegas sent his private jet. The jet took Pard to Israel. Netanyahu met him at the

1 hour, 27 minutes, 17 seconds

airport. He kissed the ground. And in an interview, Sheldon Eden, in an

1 hour, 27 minutes, 24 seconds

interview, he urged American Jews to take up arms against the American government.

1 hour, 27 minutes, 32 seconds

And then Huckabe meets with him and welcomes him into the American embassy.

1 hour, 27 minutes, 37 seconds

I would have shot him if he had come into the American embassy and I were the ambassador.

1 hour, 27 minutes, 41 seconds

Yeah. I just don’t understand. I think it makes it like I don’t know. I think a lot of people are looking for guidance right now.

1 hour, 27 minutes, 47 seconds

I think you’re right. If you’re a regular person who we’re just trying to get through the week, we want to believe in our country. We get scared that our taxes are going towards like Yes.

1 hour, 27 minutes, 56 seconds

violent things and evil things. That’s the thing. It starts to feel like there’s something evil going on. Um Yeah. And it’s not like

1 hour, 28 minutes, 3 seconds

we’re right and everybody else in the rest of the world is wrong. You know, you look at these votes.

1 hour, 28 minutes, 8 seconds

I don’t know if I’m right about anything. You you look at these votes at the UN General Assembly and it’s everybody in the world voting yes and

1 hour, 28 minutes, 17 seconds

voting no is the United States. I’m serious about this because I served at the UN. It’s the United States, Israel, Costa Rica, and Palao.

1 hour, 28 minutes, 25 seconds

A little island with 30,000 people in the Pacific. That’s it. And the whole rest of the world is voting the other way.

1 hour, 28 minutes, 33 seconds

You’ve talked a like you’ve worked on counterterrorism.

1 hour, 28 minutes, 36 seconds

Is it weird? Like terrorism is such an interesting term because it’s like at a certain point it feels like we’re

1 hour, 28 minutes, 45 seconds

chasing the tail of the dog we let loose kind of. Does that make any sense even? Yeah, I like that. I might steal that.

1 hour, 28 minutes, 52 seconds

Yeah, steal it. I don’t even know exactly what it means, but um you know they just had a they I saw something the other day. It was like uh $300 billion

1 hour, 29 minutes, 1 second

to rebuild um parts of I don’t think it’s Iran, but I think it’s Libya.

1 hour, 29 minutes, 8 seconds

Can you look that up? 300 billion to rebuild parts of Libya that we that we just that we just blew up. Yeah. Yeah.

1 hour, 29 minutes, 16 seconds

So, right here it says a truce $300 billion investment plan in Hormuz.

1 hour, 29 minutes, 20 seconds

What’s in the deal draft that can end US Iran war? US and Iran mediators are now engaged in high stakes negotiations

1 hour, 29 minutes, 27 seconds

aimed at ending the conflict despite a fragile ceasefire in the place and months of turmoil in the Middle East.

1 hour, 29 minutes, 33 seconds

The possible truce plan includes key bargaining points between these two two sides including a $300 billion

1 hour, 29 minutes, 39 seconds

investment package uh and the crucial straight of hormonal issue making the agreement extremely closely watched for.

1 hour, 29 minutes, 47 seconds

However, one of the biggest developments emerging from the discussions is a proposed multi-billion dollar reconstruction and investment package that could fundamentally reshape Iran’s

1 hour, 29 minutes, 56 seconds

economy if a final deal is reached. So, it’s just w it’s like we just went there and got involved in this. I don’t know if this is a taxpayer thing.

1 hour, 30 minutes, 6 seconds

God, I hope not.

1 hour, 30 minutes, 7 seconds

But just the whole thing is like uh I don’t know. You start to feel so defeated sometimes. Yeah. Isn’t that the truth?

1 hour, 30 minutes, 14 seconds

And you start to feel like your vote isn’t going to do anything. Um, that’s the scary part. And then part of this feels like a long-term SCOP. like it’s a

1 hour, 30 minutes, 22 seconds

slow weakening of the values like okay let’s put things in this society over time that’ll like you know tear apart

1 hour, 30 minutes, 29 seconds

the American family and like that’ll like poison people and let’s do you think there like there’s big scops like

1 hour, 30 minutes, 37 seconds

that going on like let’s put co out there so that uh people are separate from each other and um and that people can’t go to meetings and meet up and so

1 hour, 30 minutes, 45 seconds

you start to deteriorate the value of human connection and uh let’s p let’s make food so that it’s just poisoning people and that it’s um you know that

1 hour, 30 minutes, 54 seconds

it’s it’s just going to you know it’s going to make people sick or let’s make health care so it’s not there’s no real way uh besides extreme stress that you

1 hour, 31 minutes, 3 seconds

have to go through if you even have to make a claim like you know do you think that some of that is just corporate greed and stuff or do you think some of

1 hour, 31 minutes, 11 seconds

that’s a longer term sigh up by like bigger powers out there?

1 hour, 31 minutes, 14 seconds

I I don’t I I don’t think it’s a part of a bigger SCOP. Okay. Um, but I do believe firmly that it’s mostly

1 hour, 31 minutes, 23 seconds

corporate greed. You just reminded me of something I Excuse me, I saw recently.

1 hour, 31 minutes, 28 seconds

Um, and it was this experiment that I don’t know, somebody did. I saw it on YouTube where they put a they they put a

1 hour, 31 minutes, 37 seconds

homemade um hamburger on the ground and they put a a McDonald’s quarter pounder on the ground and then they photographed

1 hour, 31 minutes, 45 seconds

it, you know, over the course of days and then weeks and then months.

1 hour, 31 minutes, 51 seconds

Bugs come, ants come, they they go to the to the hamburger, they tear the bun down. Mostly they went for the meat, but

1 hour, 31 minutes, 59 seconds

they end up, you know, a week later it’s just a spot on the sidewalk. Even bugs won’t touch a McDonald’s hamburger.

1 hour, 32 minutes, 6 seconds

And then months later it’s it looks like it just came out of the package. Yeah.

1 hour, 32 minutes, 11 seconds

And Europeans can’t understand how we eat like that. Yeah. Like the their laws are different.

1 hour, 32 minutes, 17 seconds

McDonald’s can’t do that in in European countries.

1 hour, 32 minutes, 20 seconds

Yeah. Let’s look at the ingredients right here. The difference between uh McDonald’s Europe and um McDonald’s America. 10 plus ingredients versus four ingredients.

1 hour, 32 minutes, 29 seconds

Wow. So, the US has 10 plus ingredients and yeah, Europe has four uh ingredients in the US. Potatoes, vegetable oil, uh

1 hour, 32 minutes, 37 seconds

hydrogenated soybean oil, natural beef flavor, wheat and milk derivatives, dextrose, sodium acid, f pyroso, pyroate, pyro, and salt.

1 hour, 32 minutes, 48 seconds

Pyrophosphate.

1 hour, 32 minutes, 49 seconds

Pyrophosphate. Thank you. And then Europe has potatoes, non-hydrogenated oil, uh, rape, seedar, sunflower, and dextrose.

1 hour, 32 minutes, 57 seconds

And look below that, contains hydrogenated oils, beef flavoring, and TBHQ, which are banned restricted in EU.

1 hour, 33 minutes, 6 seconds

These are for the French fries. It says contains hydrogenated oils, beef flavoring, TBHQ.

1 hour, 33 minutes, 13 seconds

Uh, and then it says for Europe that those are those exactly things are banned and restricted in the EU. Um,

1 hour, 33 minutes, 21 seconds

what about the burger? Yeah. What does it say?

1 hour, 33 minutes, 25 seconds

The US beef is 100% pure beef. The additives several hundred additives.

1 hour, 33 minutes, 30 seconds

Several hundred additives prohibited in the EU.

1 hour, 33 minutes, 35 seconds

And uh, let me see. Europe says 100% beef from British Irish farmers. No hormone treated beef. And then uh, the

1 hour, 33 minutes, 43 seconds

additives are stricter quality control and fewer additives.

1 hour, 33 minutes, 46 seconds

Look at look at the big big mac. The special sauce on the Big Mac contains HFCS, zantham gum, propyline, glycol, algenate, and caramel color.

1 hour, 33 minutes, 58 seconds

What the Why? I I just like at some at some point you have to be like, what happened? You know, um and while the Europe uh Big Mac sauce contains

1 hour, 34 minutes, 7 seconds

simpler ingredients list uh and 40 fewer calories, it says um the differences are EU food regulations

1 hour, 34 minutes, 15 seconds

are much stricter. Uh customer preferences and local supply chains vary. Um and the US fries would likely be illegal to sell in Europe due to ingredient restrictions.

1 hour, 34 minutes, 24 seconds

Have you ever seen what’s in the McRib? I tell you what, I I loved those McRibs.

1 hour, 34 minutes, 30 seconds

Well, the black community goes bonkers when they come back. I know that you rush to McDonald’s for McRib, but then when you see what’s in it, you’re like, “Oh my god.” Well, yeah, dude.

1 hour, 34 minutes, 38 seconds

Anybody thinking it has anything to do with a animal, the McRib? But at a certain point, we are also guilty.

1 hour, 34 minutes, 45 seconds

Yeah, we are. It’s like if I Yeah.

1 hour, 34 minutes, 48 seconds

It’s our own laziness and we give in and we just go do it.

1 hour, 34 minutes, 52 seconds

That’s a big part of it. So that’s what’s interesting too right now. It’s like there’s a real test of like what do I you know how much do I want to

1 hour, 34 minutes, 59 seconds

stand up for myself and but then also how much can I some people are trapped financially by certain abilities and restrictions deserts. Yeah.

1 hour, 35 minutes, 7 seconds

So it’s just kind of interesting and it’s tough. Um, and I don’t want to get all super dower. Um, what uh do you feel

1 hour, 35 minutes, 14 seconds

like there are a lot of uh foreign agents in America right now?

1 hour, 35 minutes, 19 seconds

Oh, yeah. In fact, there’s an advertisement that you see on the sides of buses around Washington saying that

1 hour, 35 minutes, 26 seconds

and and it’s the the advertisement is to visit the spy museum that there are between 10 and 15,000

1 hour, 35 minutes, 34 seconds

foreign intelligence officers in Washington DC.

1 hour, 35 minutes, 37 seconds

In Washington DC. more than anywhere else on the planet. Wow. Do you think that’s real? There’s a spy on this bus.

1 hour, 35 minutes, 44 seconds

Oh, that’s what that advertisement says.

1 hour, 35 minutes, 46 seconds

It’s part of the Thank you, Edward Snowden. Um, it’s part of the advertising campaign. Yeah.

1 hour, 35 minutes, 52 seconds

And is a campaign to to what? To hire more of them.

1 hour, 35 minutes, 55 seconds

No, no. To get people to go to the spy museum.

1 hour, 35 minutes, 58 seconds

Oh, it’s to get them to go to the spy museum. Dude, I’ve been to the spy museum before. It’s awesome. It’s great. Spy museum’s so good.

1 hour, 36 minutes, 4 seconds

Yeah, it’s really great. I agree. Times were different back in the day when it was like you’d like be like using a secret pen or like you’d have a homing pigeon with like a little backpack on.

1 hour, 36 minutes, 13 seconds

No, now it’s all so crazy sophisticated.

1 hour, 36 minutes, 16 seconds

I was just telling somebody the other day um about uh the the uh CIA trained

1 hour, 36 minutes, 24 seconds

cats to wander onto the Soviet embassy compound with collars that had listening devices on them just to see what the

1 hour, 36 minutes, 32 seconds

Russians were saying when they come out of the embassy. But that didn’t work because you can’t train the cats. So they trained pigeons and they put little

1 hour, 36 minutes, 39 seconds

listening devices around their pigeon little pigeon feet um and they would land on the window sills. But the thing is that the Russians had double pane

1 hour, 36 minutes, 47 seconds

glass and they were piping music in between the two panes of glass so the pigeons couldn’t hear anything.

1 hour, 36 minutes, 52 seconds

No way. What a game. Like what a game of like uh espionage, huh? That’s so much fun.

1 hour, 36 minutes, 58 seconds

That’s so See, that kind of stuff is so exciting. Now it feels like um I don’t know. It feels like we’re entering sometimes like a surveillance state or

1 hour, 37 minutes, 7 seconds

we are. We are. It’s not like the old days. You know, one of the best recruitments I ever made, Theo, I was doing surveillance on this guy for a week. I I thought, you know, this guy

1 hour, 37 minutes, 15 seconds

would be an interesting target. He doesn’t have he doesn’t make much money.

1 hour, 37 minutes, 19 seconds

Um Oh, you were doing surveillance on a guy? On a guy.

1 hour, 37 minutes, 23 seconds

And what does that mean? You’re doing surveillance. You’re like you’re wandering around in the distance. Yes, that’s exactly what it means. Yeah.

1 hour, 37 minutes, 27 seconds

You’re just wandering around the distance. Watch him every day. see where he goes, what he does, where he hangs out, who he talks to. His his wife had

1 hour, 37 minutes, 34 seconds

left him. But I noticed he walked his dog every morning at 6:30. Dang.

1 hour, 37 minutes, 39 seconds

Every morning he’d leave the house at 6:30 and he would walk across the park.

1 hour, 37 minutes, 42 seconds

The dog would do his business and then he’d walk back. So I asked in the office, I said, “Hey, does anybody have a dog?” And one of the women’s like, “Yeah, I have a dog.” I said, “Can I

1 hour, 37 minutes, 51 seconds

borrow your dog for a week?” She says, “For what?” I said, ‘I want to I want to accidentally bump into this guy and

1 hour, 37 minutes, 58 seconds

while he’s walking his dog, I want to walk your dog and then I meet him and I’m going to say hello and then the next day I’m going to say hello again. Then the third day I’m going to invite him to

1 hour, 38 minutes, 6 seconds

lunch and whatever. It was the best recruitment I ever made in my entire career and we bonded over the dogs and it wasn’t even my dog. At the end of the week I just gave her a dog back.

1 hour, 38 minutes, 15 seconds

And did you learn something from the guy? Oh my god.

1 hour, 38 minutes, 20 seconds

This guy was like every case officer’s dream recruitment.

1 hour, 38 minutes, 24 seconds

And what recruitment means? Somebody that you’re just you’re get trying to gain intel from the the person you you pitch him. You say, “Look, I’m with the CIA.” Oh, you’re pay you told him that.

1 hour, 38 minutes, 33 seconds

Oh, yeah. I’m with the CIA. I know who you are. I know what you do. And I’m willing to pay you very handsomely to give it to me. And he’s like, “How

1 hour, 38 minutes, 42 seconds

handsome is handsome?” And I gave him a number. What’s that number, ballpark?

1 hour, 38 minutes, 48 seconds

Well, this is 25 years ago and then it was $5,000 a month. It would probably be 20,000 a month now. And um it’s good money.

1 hour, 38 minutes, 58 seconds

And he wanted all of his expenses. I said, “What expenses do you think you’re going to have?” Yeah. What dog shots for the dog?

1 hour, 39 minutes, 4 seconds

I know, right? So, oh, he nickel and dime me the expenses. And my boss would always say, “Just just give it to him.

1 hour, 39 minutes, 10 seconds

Just give it to him.” Because the information was so great. So we had information about what? His country. Oh. He worked in the embassy.

1 hour, 39 minutes, 18 seconds

Got it.

1 hour, 39 minutes, 18 seconds

Of his country. And uh I gave him a disposable cell phone. And back then you had to buy these little cards at the

1 hour, 39 minutes, 26 seconds

convenience store and you scratch them off and you put the number in your phone and it gives you units. You know, I remember that.

1 hour, 39 minutes, 31 seconds

And um so the phone was only supposed to be used to call me. He used it for everything. He’d give me like $800 phone

1 hour, 39 minutes, 39 seconds

bills at the end of the month. And I’m like, “Come on, man. Come on. That’s awesome. Five grand already.

1 hour, 39 minutes, 46 seconds

That dude’s a freaking snake. I love that.” Yeah, my boss. Just Just pay it. Just pay it. Acoustic Kitty.

1 hour, 39 minutes, 54 seconds

Oh my gosh. Oh, it’s an Oh, Acoustic Kitty was a Central Intelligence Agency project launched by the Directorate of

1 hour, 40 minutes, 2 seconds

Science and Technology in the 1960s. It was intended to use cats to spy on the Kremlin and Soviet embassies. In an hour-long procedure, a veterinary

1 hour, 40 minutes, 10 seconds

surgeon implanted a microphone in the cat’s ear canal, a small radio transmitter at the base of its skull.

1 hour, 40 minutes, 16 seconds

Dear God, and a thin wire into its fur.

1 hour, 40 minutes, 20 seconds

This would allow the cat to innocuously record and transmit sound from its surroundings. Due to problems with distraction, the cat’s sense of hunger.

1 hour, 40 minutes, 30 seconds

It sees a bird had to be addressed in another operation.

1 hour, 40 minutes, 35 seconds

$20 million. $20 million, dude. And that’s your Somali fraud right there.

1 hour, 40 minutes, 41 seconds

The first acoustic hitting mission was to eve drop on two men in a park outside the Soviet embassy in Washington, DC.

1 hour, 40 minutes, 46 seconds

The cat was released nearby, but was hit and allegedly killed by a taxi almost immediately.

1 hour, 40 minutes, 52 seconds

However, this was disputed. Uh, the equipment was taken out of the cat. The cat was resone for a second time and lived a long and happy life afterwards.

1 hour, 41 minutes, 3 seconds

That sounds like a cover up.

1 hour, 41 minutes, 4 seconds

Nothing to see here, folks. Yeah, just a cat that has coal waiting, you know? That’s a insane dude.

1 hour, 41 minutes, 10 seconds

I worked with this one guy who was going to a denied area. A denied area is a place where CIA people just can’t go,

1 hour, 41 minutes, 18 seconds

right? But he looked kind of ethnic and he could fit into, you know, whatever the culture. And so I said, “Buddy, aren’t you afraid of uh like being

1 hour, 41 minutes, 27 seconds

kidnapped and then we just never see you again?” And he said, “Yeah, they offered to implant a a a a chip, a beacon that a

1 hour, 41 minutes, 35 seconds

ping in my butt crack,” he says. And I said, “No, leave my butt crack alone.” Yeah. Yeah, that’s Yeah,

1 hour, 41 minutes, 43 seconds

that’s fair. I think that should be our national anthem.

1 hour, 41 minutes, 48 seconds

Um, how weary do people have to be of uh being spied upon today? Do you think like there’s a lot of these new like

1 hour, 41 minutes, 55 seconds

data center projects and stuff like that that’s going on with that? Um, first let’s talk Yeah. real quick about the data centers. What do you think is

1 hour, 42 minutes, 3 seconds

really going on? Because if you look at the the size of these places like we don’t need that much data. Like we’re already using our phones. We’re

1 hour, 42 minutes, 11 seconds

already have like um televisions like that, you know, there’s already like a lot of stuff being stored um on servers.

1 hour, 42 minutes, 17 seconds

How are we jumping to a level where we need that? That’s what I want to know.

1 hour, 42 minutes, 21 seconds

Oh, I have to agree. And besides the fact that they use massive amounts of water, and oddly enough, they’re located in a lot of states that don’t have a ton

1 hour, 42 minutes, 29 seconds

of water, like Texas. Yeah. Or you go out to uh Lowden County, Virginia. Okay, we have enough water. But Lowden County,

1 hour, 42 minutes, 36 seconds

Virginia, you drive for miles and miles and they’re just these neverending gigantic complexes of data centers. The

1 hour, 42 minutes, 44 seconds

proposed Stratos project in Utah is a massive 40,000.

1 hour, 42 minutes, 48 seconds

There’s no water in Utah. a 40,000 acre AI data center campus. Um, two and a half times larger than Manhattan.

1 hour, 42 minutes, 57 seconds

Yeah.

1 hour, 42 minutes, 59 seconds

I wonder how long the actual data how big and and just the data center requires more than double the current energy consumption of the entire state of Utah.

1 hour, 43 minutes, 8 seconds

Yeah. Come on.

1 hour, 43 minutes, 9 seconds

I mean, that’s unbelievable. What do you think’s really going on there? Do you have any intel about it?

1 hour, 43 minutes, 13 seconds

You have to assume that this is Intel related because look at the the companies that are involved. We’re talking about Palunteer and Nvidia and

1 hour, 43 minutes, 22 seconds

Arais and all these these big companies that either took CIA investments to get started as seed money or um or are staffed by retired senior CIA officers.

1 hour, 43 minutes, 34 seconds

They’re not doing it for their health.

1 hour, 43 minutes, 36 seconds

Why is the C so is the CIA now is spying on our own people. Oh yeah, that’s what Ed Snowden warned us about. Yeah.

1 hour, 43 minutes, 44 seconds

Without Ed Snowden’s revelations, we wouldn’t have any idea that NSA and CIA were spying on Americans, which is not just illegal, it’s a part of NSA’s

1 hour, 43 minutes, 53 seconds

charter that it may not spy on Americans.

1 hour, 43 minutes, 58 seconds

And this place in Utah, um, he and Julian Assange told us about Utah. This new compound in Utah that NSA

1 hour, 44 minutes, 6 seconds

has built has enough memory storage space for every phone call, every email, and every text message from every American for the next 500 years.

1 hour, 44 minutes, 18 seconds

Wow. Why? Just that building. Uhhuh.

1 hour, 44 minutes, 20 seconds

Then why do they need all these buildings?

1 hour, 44 minutes, 22 seconds

Yeah. Why? They’re everywhere. What are they collecting?

1 hour, 44 minutes, 25 seconds

I’m not sure. And that’s like what it must be. It’s got to be all of our information.

1 hour, 44 minutes, 32 seconds

What would you do right now? Is there any way that people can protect themselves? Do you know?

1 hour, 44 minutes, 37 seconds

It’s almost impossible now. I I wrote a series of books during COVID for Skyers Publishing, the CIA Insiders Guides to

1 hour, 44 minutes, 46 seconds

surveillance and surveillance detection, uh, lying and lie detection and disappearing and living off the grid.

1 hour, 44 minutes, 52 seconds

They put them together and they’re republishing them in the next month, I guess, um, as one volume. CIA skills, tactics,

1 hour, 45 minutes, 1 second

and the ultimate guide to CIA skills, tactics, and techniques. There we go.

1 hour, 45 minutes, 5 seconds

But when it comes to protecting yourself from from, you know, the data state, you got to go Eric Rudolph or Uni Bomber and

1 hour, 45 minutes, 14 seconds

just own no technology at all. It’s the only way to protect yourself. Otherwise, you’re going to be scooped up in all

1 hour, 45 minutes, 21 seconds

this. Now, the odd thing is according to Ed Snowden, uh, NSA, CIA,

1 hour, 45 minutes, 30 seconds

other governmental organizations are scooping up all this data and they’re just holding it.

1 hour, 45 minutes, 35 seconds

Why? Why are they holding it? Now, time was really until the immediate post 911 uh period where if the government wanted

1 hour, 45 minutes, 45 seconds

your information, they had to go to a federal judge and say, “We want Theo’s information, and this is the reason we want it.” And the judge had to say,

1 hour, 45 minutes, 52 seconds

“Okay, that’s a legitimate reason. I’ll sign the warrant.” Now, they just write something called a national security letter. They give it to your provider

1 hour, 46 minutes, 2 seconds

and they say, “Give us everything you have on Theoon.” And they just turn it over. or they go to these new data centers and uh and just put your name

1 hour, 46 minutes, 11 seconds

in, your information, and everything pops up. They don’t even you don’t have any legal protections. They just take whatever they want. And that’s legal now. They can do that.

1 hour, 46 minutes, 19 seconds

And it’s legal now. How’d that become legal? In the National Defense Act of of 2016.

1 hour, 46 minutes, 25 seconds

National Defense Authorization Act of 2016. Wow.

1 hour, 46 minutes, 28 seconds

Yeah. Which also, this is a a pet peeve of mine that nobody knows about. It also

1 hour, 46 minutes, 36 seconds

for the first time in American history allowed the American government to propagandize the American people. It was always illegal for our government to propagandize us.

1 hour, 46 minutes, 44 seconds

What does it mean?

1 hour, 46 minutes, 46 seconds

Well, for example, the Voice of America, that’s our government’s propaganda news outlet and we beam it overseas so

1 hour, 46 minutes, 53 seconds

everybody gets the official US point of view. Okay.

1 hour, 46 minutes, 58 seconds

Back in the in the 80s, the Reagan administration came up with with these two broadcasters called uh Radio Marty and TV Marty to beam at Cuba.

1 hour, 47 minutes, 10 seconds

The Cubans try to jam them all the time.

1 hour, 47 minutes, 13 seconds

But what they mostly are used for is uh to broadcast baseball games in Spanish, which the Cubans love.

1 hour, 47 minutes, 19 seconds

Got it. I flew down to Cuba to to do a study. I did a study for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee when I was the chief investigator there. And um

1 hour, 47 minutes, 29 seconds

nobody watches TV Marty. You can only actually get it in the waiting room of the US consulate. Got it. So if you’re

1 hour, 47 minutes, 38 seconds

there to apply for a visa, you can watch a soap opera in Spanish. That’s American propaganda. Nobody cares. The radio people like listening in baseball.

1 hour, 47 minutes, 48 seconds

So, Dish Network when it began when it began selling um services in

1 hour, 47 minutes, 57 seconds

Florida found that there was this just narrow swath along the shore on the on the west coast of Florida where you could pick up TV Marti. That’s illegal.

1 hour, 48 minutes, 9 seconds

You can’t propagandize the American people. Got it.

1 hour, 48 minutes, 11 seconds

As Americans, we’re not allowed to watch our own government’s propaganda.

1 hour, 48 minutes, 16 seconds

So instead of telling Dish Network, well, you’re going to have to like move your satellite or do something or pixelate it or whatever, said, “No, no,

1 hour, 48 minutes, 25 seconds

no. We’ll change the law.” And so in the National Defense Authorization Act of 2016, the Obama administration said,

1 hour, 48 minutes, 33 seconds

“No, no, we can propagandize Americans now.” Wow. And so now radio, TV are no problem. Wow. Yeah.

1 hour, 48 minutes, 40 seconds

But I mean, we’re always propagandizing.

1 hour, 48 minutes, 43 seconds

I mean, people put out propaganda all the time.

1 hour, 48 minutes, 45 seconds

Yeah. I went to Yemen in 2011 uh when I was with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. My fifth trip to Yemen. Every time I’d go to Yemen, it’s worse than

1 hour, 48 minutes, 53 seconds

the previous time. So, I have a meeting with the defense atache. And he was so proud of this thing that he was doing,

1 hour, 49 minutes

this scop. I hate that word scop. I said, “Sure, what’s your what’s your scop?” And he goes, “We’re funding a

1 hour, 49 minutes, 8 seconds

radio station here modeled on NPR and it plays American jazz.” And then it

1 hour, 49 minutes, 16 seconds

has a call-in show so young Yemen guys can call in and talk about the jazz. I’m like, “What the are you talking

1 hour, 49 minutes, 24 seconds

about? That’s a terrible idea. Nobody’s going to listen to that.” And nobody did. And they shut it down after a year.

1 hour, 49 minutes, 31 seconds

But that’s that’s what we’re doing. But what was the goal of it even?

1 hour, 49 minutes, 34 seconds

To make people pro-American because they would be like, “Oh, Americans have jazz.” Oh, I see. So, I’m going to be pro-American now.

1 hour, 49 minutes, 40 seconds

It’s like, what are you thinking? You you sit there. That sounds like moneyaundering.

1 hour, 49 minutes, 43 seconds

Yeah. Seriously, that’s what it sounds like. Um, how do I know I can believe you about anything?

1 hour, 49 minutes, 48 seconds

Kind of. People ask you that all the time. Oh, yeah. People ask me all the time.

1 hour, 49 minutes, 52 seconds

Um, cuz who would believe anybody that is XCIA? Who would even, you know what I’m saying? Oh, that’s such a thing with me.

1 hour, 49 minutes, 58 seconds

You know, generally I don’t read the chats anywhere, right?

1 hour, 50 minutes, 3 seconds

Everybody I talk to at your level, you Tucker Carlson, you know, Patrick BD David Rogan, whomever, they never read the chats.

1 hour, 50 minutes, 13 seconds

Sometimes I can’t help it and I’ll scan them. The only time I ever respond is

1 hour, 50 minutes, 19 seconds

when people say, “Once CIA, always CIA, You thought you thought all of that all up on your own, huh?

1 hour, 50 minutes, 28 seconds

That’s true. That’s true.” So I said I said to one guy, I said, “You know what? Let me call Ed Snowden and the sons of Philip Ag and Ray

1 hour, 50 minutes, 37 seconds

McGovern and tell them that you think they’re all still in the CIA.

1 hour, 50 minutes, 43 seconds

So, I went to prison for telling the truth. And I would I would do it again in a heartbeat. In a heartbeat. Nobody

1 hour, 50 minutes, 52 seconds

else has gone to prison for ratting out the CIA and its illegal, you know, programs. I was proud to do it. That’s a

1 hour, 50 minutes, 59 seconds

good answer. Thank you. It’s a really good answer. If you look, here it is. I can say this. If you really went to jail

1 hour, 51 minutes, 7 seconds

and everything, then it’s a great answer. And if you did, I believe you. I believe you. But also, there’s a little part of me that’s like, if he didn’t, then that’s even

1 hour, 51 minutes, 16 seconds

colder that he’s making it up and living it. That’s the most CIA That would be pretty intense. But that’s what I’m saying.

1 hour, 51 minutes, 22 seconds

Yeah. Yeah. No, nobody in the world hates me as much as my ex-wife does from spending all that time in the CIA or in jail. At least jail. You have a good excuse.

1 hour, 51 minutes, 30 seconds

Came after. But she came every month with the kids and visited me in jail for two years. Yeah. And so why does she hate you then?

1 hour, 51 minutes, 37 seconds

Oh, no. That’s that’s all Yeah. Post post. Yeah. I’m actually prohibited by court order from answering that question.

1 hour, 51 minutes, 45 seconds

Well, that’s I think that’s amazing that she did that and brought your kids. She was she was great. She was great.

1 hour, 51 minutes, 50 seconds

A lot of wives I mean I think that’s I can’t even imagine it’s a tough thing for families especially if you had young children. Um kudos to her for that.

1 hour, 51 minutes, 59 seconds

Yeah.

1 hour, 52 minutes

Um was being in prison kind of fun? Um fun.

1 hour, 52 minutes, 10 seconds

No, I wouldn’t say fun. Like what was kind of cool about it? I’ve always wanted to go to jail.

1 hour, 52 minutes, 14 seconds

You know, there there’s this old saying that you don’t go to jail to make friends. And I made some lifelong friends in jail.

1 hour, 52 minutes, 22 seconds

Um, mostly named Gambino, Lucesy, Banano. Yeah. Okay. Genevese.

1 hour, 52 minutes, 28 seconds

So, a lot of good storytellers in there, I bet. Listen, those guys were so honorable.

1 hour, 52 minutes, 36 seconds

I learned so much from those guys in just 23 months. Wow. Uh lessons I’ll carry with me forever.

1 hour, 52 minutes, 43 seconds

Real honor. It’s funny. The Italians were the smallest they call them gangs in prison. The Italians weren’t a gang.

1 hour, 52 minutes, 50 seconds

There’s I’ll I’ll use the word gang just for the purpose of this response. They were the smallest gang in the prison yet commanded the highest level of respect.

1 hour, 52 minutes, 59 seconds

Really? More than the blacks and the Latinos. the blacks and the Latinos were always at at each other’s throats and they had like for example it was Crips

1 hour, 53 minutes, 7 seconds

and Bloods and there was this uneasy piece between them just because it’s not worth upsetting the apple cart and

1 hour, 53 minutes, 14 seconds

everybody goes to solitary and then gets spread out all over the country. For the Latinos, it was far more complicated

1 hour, 53 minutes, 21 seconds

because it was Burachos, Nortenos, Latin Kings, MS13, um, Mexican mafia, and then the individual cartels.

1 hour, 53 minutes, 32 seconds

So, overall, there’s one gigantic Hispanic prison gang called Pisces, and then within Pisces are all the different divisions.

1 hour, 53 minutes, 41 seconds

Gosh.

1 hour, 53 minutes, 42 seconds

Yeah. And the Pisces, if you were Hispanic, you were automatically in Pisces, whether you liked it or not. And you had to work out every single day.

1 hour, 53 minutes, 51 seconds

Oh, that’s pretty good.

1 hour, 53 minutes, 52 seconds

For the coming race war with the blacks, right? And the whites are like, uh, we have nothing to do with this.

1 hour, 53 minutes, 58 seconds

Yeah. I just want I would just want to do it just to get in shape. But yeah. Yeah. Sometimes you need motivation. We had we had Aryan Brotherhood.

1 hour, 54 minutes, 6 seconds

What’s that? What are they doing? What are they up to?

1 hour, 54 minutes, 8 seconds

You know, Aryan Brotherhood of Texas is far more violent than Aryan Brotherhood.

1 hour, 54 minutes, 13 seconds

And they’re not It says that right there. They’re not connected. Um, I never met anybody from the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas. Aryan Brotherhood

1 hour, 54 minutes, 20 seconds

at a low security prison just wants to sort of, you know, go along to get along. Yeah.

1 hour, 54 minutes, 27 seconds

Yeah. You stay out of my way, I’ll stay out of yours. my very first day in prison, my very first hour in prison when the when the guard dropped me off

1 hour, 54 minutes, 35 seconds

in my cell, the only thing he said to me the whole time I was, you know, checking in and getting processed was, “If

1 hour, 54 minutes, 44 seconds

somebody comes into your cell uninvited, that’s an act of aggression.” And I said, “Great. Thank you. I’ve been here 40 minutes. I’m going to get my ass

1 hour, 54 minutes, 52 seconds

kicked now.” Sure enough, as soon as he left, these two guys walked into my cell, just walked right in. One of them had a

1 hour, 54 minutes, 59 seconds

swastika that took up his entire neck and then came up onto his face. And the other one had you tattooed on his eyelids.

1 hour, 55 minutes, 7 seconds

Oh yeah, that check. I mean, that’s Yeah.

1 hour, 55 minutes, 9 seconds

And so I jump up. I go, “What do you want?” Cuz I thought, you know, if I’m going down, I’m taking one of them down with me at least. What do you want?

1 hour, 55 minutes, 17 seconds

And the the one with the swastika guy says, “You the new guy?” I go, “Yeah.” So this is like a This sounds like a story from like the 1940s.

1 hour, 55 minutes, 27 seconds

Awful. It it was I said in my second book, prison is a combination of seventh grade, the Lord of the Flies and a

1 hour, 55 minutes, 35 seconds

mental institution. And it’s set in the 1950s. That’s hilarious.

1 hour, 55 minutes, 39 seconds

So I go, “What do you want?” He’s He goes, “You the new guy?” I said, “Yeah, so.” And he goes, “I’m standing there like this.” He goes, “You a” And I go,

1 hour, 55 minutes, 47 seconds

“No, I’m not a He says, and they were bummed out. You a rat?” “No, no, no gays allowed.” “You a rat.”

1 hour, 55 minutes, 54 seconds

And I said, “No, I’m not a rat. you a chomo? I go, I don’t know what that word means.

1 hour, 56 minutes, 1 second

He goes, chomo, child molester. I said, no, I’m not a child molester. That’s good.

1 hour, 56 minutes, 6 seconds

And then he says, you can sit with the Aryans in the cafeteria. And I was like, oh well, I guess I’m I’m with the Aryans

1 hour, 56 minutes, 14 seconds

now. But then a couple of months later, simple rules.

1 hour, 56 minutes, 16 seconds

I was across the hall from from a captain in the Banano family and he said to me one day, he goes, “Let me ask you a question.

1 hour, 56 minutes, 24 seconds

Why do you sit with those Nazi retards every day? And I said, I don’t know. I said, my first day here, they just told me to sit with them. And he goes, from today, you are with the Italians.

1 hour, 56 minutes, 36 seconds

I said, it’s about time. That was it. Yeah. Took you long enough. You got drafted. Yeah. But they were the best. Yeah. I bet a lot of good stories, dude.

1 hour, 56 minutes, 45 seconds

Any good story come to mind from somebody you like a good story you heard in uh in prison?

1 hour, 56 minutes, 49 seconds

Yeah, there’s there’s one. I’m actually You’re going to think less of me and I don’t care.

1 hour, 56 minutes, 54 seconds

That’s fine. I could tell you some stuff that would probably make it even.

1 hour, 57 minutes

There was a guy in my housing unit who was a serial killer. He was called truck because he drove long-distance trucks from the east coast to the west coast

1 hour, 57 minutes, 9 seconds

and he would pick up prostitutes at uh truck stops and he would rape them and murder them, drive them a couple of hundred miles down the highway and then

1 hour, 57 minutes, 17 seconds

dump the bodies out. So the cops estimated that he killed 14. It was probably more than that. But um he

1 hour, 57 minutes, 24 seconds

strangled one and she survived and she was able to give the cops the license number. Now this was in the days before DNA training. Did DNA testing.

1 hour, 57 minutes, 32 seconds

So this guy before DNA testing. Yeah. This was in the 70s. Oh, he’d been for a long time. He was doing life. Got it.

1 hour, 57 minutes, 38 seconds

So um for reasons that were never clear to me, this guy constantly sought my approval. He was full of He would

1 hour, 57 minutes, 47 seconds

come up. He had the worst breath because he had just these blackened rotten nubs where his that used to be his teeth. And he was saying dicks all day. Oh,

1 hour, 57 minutes, 55 seconds

it was awful. Awful. He goes, “You CIA?” And I said, “Yeah, I used to be.” He goes, “I did work for the CIA. I ran a shrimp

1 hour, 58 minutes, 4 seconds

boat full of weapons to Angola.” I go, “Get the out of here.” I didn’t know he was a serial killer. I go, “Get the out of here. Shrimp boat to

1 hour, 58 minutes, 12 seconds

Angola. Have you ever been on a shrimp boat?” and I walked away. People are looking at me like, “Are you crazy? Do you know who that is?” Well, I didn’t

1 hour, 58 minutes, 20 seconds

know who it was. So, um, instead of making him mad, it just made him more actively seek my approval.

1 hour, 58 minutes, 28 seconds

So, I’m a big Pittsburgh Steelers fan. Oh, yeah.

1 hour, 58 minutes, 32 seconds

And, um, he would say, “Hey, John, the Steelers are the game of the featured game of the week. I saved you a seat in the TV room.” I’m like, “Ah, thanks,

1 hour, 58 minutes, 40 seconds

Truck.” Like, okay, John, uh, I I know you listen to classic rock. There’s a new classic rock station 1600 A.M. You

1 hour, 58 minutes, 48 seconds

should check it out. I’m like, okay, thanks, Truck. In the meantime, there’s this guy we called Cat in the Hat.

1 hour, 58 minutes, 54 seconds

Because he had this oddly elongated head, like a birth defect, kind of giant Cat in the Hat head, and he comes up to me one day and he

1 hour, 59 minutes, 3 seconds

said, “Hey, I heard you had a an empty bunk in your in your cell. I want to move into your cell. I heard it’s a good cell.” And I said, “Well, not so fast, buddy.” I said, “We don’t allow any

1 hour, 59 minutes, 10 seconds

pedophiles in our cell and no rats.” I said, ‘What’s your crime? He goes, “Murder for hire and no.” I don’t even care about that.

1 hour, 59 minutes, 18 seconds

Yeah, but the other guy I can’t speak for the other guys.

1 hour, 59 minutes, 21 seconds

Yeah, I was just trying to like I was trying to be a part of the group, you know, like go on, go on.

1 hour, 59 minutes, 27 seconds

So, uh, so he says, uh, I murder for hire. I said, I don’t think I like that any better than the pedophiles of the rats.

1 hour, 59 minutes, 35 seconds

What were the circumstances? And he said, I owed the mob a lot of money, hundred,000 in gambling. I couldn’t pay it. So, I took out a life insurance

1 hour, 59 minutes, 44 seconds

policy on my business partner and I hired a hitman to kill him and uh and the hitman got uh got caught. I said,

1 hour, 59 minutes, 51 seconds

“Let me think about it.” Well, think about it. I went straight to the law library and I looked up his case. And that wasn’t it at all. It was true. He owed the mob,000. He took out the life insurance policy. He hired the hitman.

2 hours, 3 seconds

He got caught because of course he’s going to get caught. Where the where’s the first place the cops are going to go?

2 hours, 8 seconds

Where the money went. and he ratted out the hitman so that he wouldn’t get the federal death penalty. Instead, he got 20 years. So, I said, “No rats in the

2 hours, 17 seconds

room.” So, he was mad at me. Anyway, one day Jake Tapper comes up to the prison to

2 hours, 26 seconds

interview me and I get called down to the lieutenant’s office. Normally, if you’re called down the lieutenant’s office, it’s to go to solitary. If you

2 hours, 34 seconds

come back, usually it’s because you ratted somebody out. Well, I went down there to sign the the waiver so I could give Jake Tapper the interview.

2 hours, 42 seconds

So, I’m sitting in the TV room next to Truck. Truck was very, very sensitive about being called a Chomo cuz that girl that he strangled was 16, which technically made him a cho. Right.

2 hours, 52 seconds

Right. So, Truck’s sitting here. I’m sitting here. Right here is Cat in the Hat with his back toward me. He’s on the

2 hours, 1 minute

computer. There’s like this internal internet, not internet, internal email system. He doesn’t see me. I’m sitting 18 in away from him and then he says to the guy next to him, “Do you hear?

2 hours, 1 minute, 11 seconds

Kiryaku got called down to the lieutenants office.” He goes, “That guy’s a rat. He went down there to rat us out.” And I just sat there

2 hours, 1 minute, 19 seconds

watching the game. And then Truck says, “That guy just called you a rat.” And I said, “An hour ago, I heard him call you a cho.” Which was a total lie.

2 hours, 1 minute, 30 seconds

I just made it up. He didn’t say a single word. He just stood up, walked over here, and beat this guy almost to death.

2 hours, 1 minute, 40 seconds

They had to land a helicopter in the yard to lifellight Cat in the Hat to Pittsburgh.

2 hours, 1 minute, 46 seconds

They gave truck five more years and Cat Scan in the Hat, huh? Yeah. Yeah, it’s Cat Scan in the Hat.

2 hours, 1 minute, 52 seconds

Yeah. Now, how come I didn’t think of that? Cuz I’m not a comedian. I should have put that in my book.

2 hours, 1 minute, 56 seconds

I don’t know. Is there any real value in me thinking of that? That’s a good question. I don’t 6 weeks later, Cat in the Hat is finally released from the hospital. He comes, he’s all up still. And um and he’s like this.

2 hours, 2 minutes, 8 seconds

Somebody had told him what had happened.

2 hours, 2 minutes, 9 seconds

He he goes, “I I wanted to say I’m sorry for calling you a rat. I should never have said that.” And everybody is stops to look to see what I’m going to say.

2 hours, 2 minutes, 20 seconds

Well, what am I going to say? Ah, forget it. It’s all water under the bridge. I go, “Listen, look at me. Look at me.” And he lifts his head up and I said, “So

2 hours, 2 minutes, 28 seconds

help me God. If I ever hear my name cross your lips ever again, you’re dead and there won’t even find you.”

2 hours, 2 minutes, 37 seconds

I’m sorry. I’m sorry. So everybody’s like, “Ah, the CIA guy’s tough after all.” But I

2 hours, 2 minutes, 45 seconds

said in the book, one of my rules that I learned at the CIA, let others do your dirty work. And then I get called down to the lieutenant’s office again because as he’s beating him, I sat back down.

2 hours, 2 minutes, 55 seconds

I’m watching the game. Everybody else runs. As soon as there’s a fight, everybody just runs like cockroaches. Insane, though, man.

2 hours, 3 minutes, 1 second

Right. So, I’m watching the game. Kyaku, lieutenants office immediately. They always do it the same way. It’s like a they’re caricatures of themselves.

2 hours, 3 minutes, 11 seconds

So, I go down there and the one of the lieutenants, there are two of them, and he says, “So, tell us about this fight.”

2 hours, 3 minutes, 19 seconds

I go, “What fight? What fight? You’re going to be a smart guy now.” I said, “I don’t know what the you’re talking

2 hours, 3 minutes, 25 seconds

about.” The fight. We had four cameras showing you saying something

2 hours, 3 minutes, 32 seconds

to that crazy person and then he got up and beat the other guy. I said, “I was watching the Steelers game. I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

2 hours, 3 minutes, 40 seconds

“Oh, you’re not going to tell us about the fight.” I said, “You know what? Maybe I will tell you about the fight. Maybe it was you that started the fight.

2 hours, 3 minutes, 45 seconds

Did you ever think of that? Maybe it wasn’t me. I was an innocent bystander.

2 hours, 3 minutes, 50 seconds

Maybe you put them up to fight each other. I think I might make a complaint against you. He goes, “Get the out of my office.” And I wrote in my book,

2 hours, 3 minutes, 58 seconds

“Rule number one, admit nothing. Deny everything. Make counter accusations.” And as I was walking out, I just said, “Exactly.

2 hours, 4 minutes, 9 seconds

Dang, bro. I don’t even know what to think anymore.” You know, I think sometimes that’s where you get people to that point. you’re like this, you know,

2 hours, 4 minutes, 17 seconds

they pushed me and pushed me and pushed me and at sentencing, the judge sentenced me to a minimum security work camp and the CIA was furious that I got

2 hours, 4 minutes, 27 seconds

such a light sentence and I was going to a minimum security camp. So, the CIA intervened to send me to a media uh sorry, a low security prison, which is

2 hours, 4 minutes, 36 seconds

an actual prison with the double, you know, walls.

2 hours, 4 minutes, 40 seconds

They were furious that I Yeah, it was. When I was first charged, I mean, this is a potential death penalty case. Three counts of espionage

2 hours, 4 minutes, 49 seconds

for talking to ABC News and the New York Times because you were talking to them about about uh torture, right? Mhm.

2 hours, 4 minutes, 56 seconds

What cases specifically were you talking to him about? Abu Zuba.

2 hours, 5 minutes

And they were furious because nobody had ever confirmed that there was a torture program. And I said it was illegal.

2 hours, 5 minutes, 8 seconds

Besides being immoral and unethical, it’s illegal. You want to torture people, God bless, but you got to change the law first. We’re a nation of laws.

2 hours, 5 minutes, 16 seconds

Which countries do you think had the mo the like the toughest torture programs over the years? Or do you even know?

2 hours, 5 minutes, 23 seconds

Over the years, like let’s go back a hundred years. The Chinese, the Vietnamese, and the Belgians. the

2 hours, 5 minutes, 31 seconds

Belgians, if you can imagine the the horrors that they perpetrated in Congo of epic proportions.

2 hours, 5 minutes, 40 seconds

Um, yeah, the Russians, the Iranians, the Israelis, the United States.

2 hours, 5 minutes, 48 seconds

Is it weird? Like, we talked about the term terrorism now, but it’s like it definitely feels like when we talked about it a few a little bit earlier, it’s like it feels sometimes it’s like

2 hours, 5 minutes, 56 seconds

how much is America like a terrorist state in the world? And I hate to say that because this is the country that we live in. But it’s like I think at a

2 hours, 6 minutes, 3 seconds

certain point if you use, you know, I don’t know. I don’t know.

2 hours, 6 minutes, 8 seconds

You know, it’s got to be hard to figure that out. But it’s like um you know, it’s like when do you use like

2 hours, 6 minutes, 15 seconds

fear tactics and and that sort of thing to make sure that everything’s okay, you know? Um

2 hours, 6 minutes, 22 seconds

yeah. I don’t know. It’s like do you Here’s my question. Do you think it’s possible for America to get to a place

2 hours, 6 minutes, 28 seconds

uh where we’re an actual peacekeeper or do you think it’s possible to keep peace without terror?

2 hours, 6 minutes, 36 seconds

It make any sense or not? Yeah, that’s a hard question. Good.

2 hours, 6 minutes, 40 seconds

You know, and and I think my answer has changed over the years. I believed for a very long time that we were the good

2 hours, 6 minutes, 48 seconds

guys. I was a true believer. That’s why I worked there. We were the good guys.

2 hours, 6 minutes, 53 seconds

And we still I think as people we still are as citizens we still are.

2 hours, 6 minutes, 56 seconds

Agreed. Agreed. We still are. Somebody commented on a Facebook post that I made the other day like uh I heard you say

2 hours, 7 minutes, 4 seconds

that the United States is the best country in the world. You should be ashamed of yourself. I was like I believe that the United States is the

2 hours, 7 minutes, 12 seconds

best country in the world. That’s why I live here. Yeah.

2 hours, 7 minutes, 14 seconds

I could go live in some other country if I wanted to. But this is the best country in the world. We have problems.

2 hours, 7 minutes, 20 seconds

Every country has problems. But the reason why I’m as active and as vocal as I am is because I want to change the

2 hours, 7 minutes, 27 seconds

things that I disagree with. I don’t think we should be a nation that tortures people or murders people

2 hours, 7 minutes, 35 seconds

without trial. If somebody is a clear and present danger, which is the language that’s used in the amendment to 1233,

2 hours, 7 minutes, 43 seconds

okay, clear and present danger. They’re getting ready to, you know, deliver the dirty bomb or, you know, whatever. Okay.

2 hours, 7 minutes, 51 seconds

Sometimes we have to work in the shadows. Awful. But it but it’s a fact of life. But if you just send teams around the world to kill people whose

2 hours, 7 minutes, 59 seconds

politics you don’t like, people who have never been charged with a crime, then shame on us. That’s not what the founding fathers gave us. So if you want

2 hours, 8 minutes, 9 seconds

to torture people, you got to change the law. Ronald Reagan said, “We were a shining city on a hill, right? We’re a a

2 hours, 8 minutes, 17 seconds

beacon of hope for human rights and civil rights and civil liberties. That’s the country I want to be.

2 hours, 8 minutes, 23 seconds

Same. That’s what most people want to be. Exactly.

2 hours, 8 minutes, 28 seconds

Do you think we can get back to that place or what do you think? I think it’s possible. You do?

2 hours, 8 minutes, 32 seconds

I think it’s going to take a very long time, but I think it’s possible.

2 hours, 8 minutes, 37 seconds

And I think we have to start by by trying to snap out of this mindset that we have to be the world’s policemen.

2 hours, 8 minutes, 45 seconds

Yeah. Like why?

2 hours, 8 minutes, 47 seconds

I have relatives in Greece and friends all over Europe and they ask me the same question all the time. Why are you guys doing this?

2 hours, 8 minutes, 54 seconds

Like like did we really need to overthrow Libya? Uh Gaddafi rather in Libya.

2 hours, 9 minutes

I think a lot of people are don’t know what’s going on. They just want their families to be okay. They don’t want data centers. A lot of people do not want AI. They don’t give a about it. It’s not going to benefit them.

2 hours, 9 minutes, 9 seconds

Genuinely frightened.

2 hours, 9 minutes, 10 seconds

Oh, the Pope is frightened. I’m trying to get the pope to come and I I offered that I would go to the Vatican and talk with the pope. I just want to wonder I want to learn about what he thinks. Yeah.

2 hours, 9 minutes, 18 seconds

Um the Archbishop of the Greek Orthodox Church just issued an encyclical 100% supporting everything the pope said on this. Wow.

2 hours, 9 minutes, 26 seconds

Mhm.

2 hours, 9 minutes, 27 seconds

Yeah. I mean it would be a blessing to get to talk with him and just learn. I just want to like be able to like, you know, share a message, be a part of

2 hours, 9 minutes, 34 seconds

Nike. Not me share it, but just be like, you know, just part of the telephone game of of helping or being a part of the message getting out if I can.

2 hours, 9 minutes, 44 seconds

Yeah.

2 hours, 9 minutes, 44 seconds

Cuz I do think it’s important. We don’t want that. Nobody wants it. 30 people want it. 100 people want it with a lot of power. Exactly.

2 hours, 9 minutes, 52 seconds

We don’t want it. Exactly. Yes. Nobody wants it. I Nobody wants it. Yeah. There it is right there. cyclical.

2 hours, 10 minutes

Yeah, I read about this. I’ve read part of the popes, but I haven’t seen this new one. This is from the um Orthodox church. Yeah, the Greek Orthodox Archbishop.

2 hours, 10 minutes, 8 seconds

It’s uh Elpoto is his name endorsing everything the pope said about AI. Um you have a new podcast. Thanks, Sean,

2 hours, 10 minutes, 16 seconds

for hanging out. Sorry if I haven’t had the best questions at certain point.

2 hours, 10 minutes, 19 seconds

No, your questions were great and they cut right to the heart of things.

2 hours, 10 minutes, 22 seconds

Trying to get my brain back on track a little bit. It’s just been like a long month. But um before you do leave, I know you have a podcast that you’re starting your own. Finally. Thank you.

2 hours, 10 minutes, 31 seconds

Finally.

2 hours, 10 minutes, 32 seconds

You’ve been on you’ve been on all of them, so you have to start your own. And it’s called the briefing room. Yeah. John Kuryaku’s Briefing Room. John Kuryaku’s Briefing Room.

2 hours, 10 minutes, 40 seconds

We’re going to launch it in about four weeks. Um if you go to real John Kuryaku on YouTube,

2 hours, 10 minutes, 48 seconds

it’ll pop up saying coming soon. Please, please, please subscribe. And I have another one too called John Kuryaku’s Dead Drop that’s on Apple Podcast and

2 hours, 10 minutes, 57 seconds

Spotify. It’s just story after story after story and it’s it’s been actually very popular. Been very lucky. We’ve gone up to number five in the history category worldwide.

2 hours, 11 minutes, 7 seconds

Oh, it’s exciting. It’s really Yeah, very exciting.

2 hours, 11 minutes, 10 seconds

Yeah, it’s an exciting time. I mean that’s one thing that we also have to remember is like sure things seem this way and that way but also it is an ex

2 hours, 11 minutes, 18 seconds

like if you can see excitement as like being of all things and not just things that seem positive but things that could

2 hours, 11 minutes, 26 seconds

seem um to be decided then there is a lot of excitement and so that’s like a nice way

2 hours, 11 minutes, 34 seconds

to think about things agreed um and you book the ultimate god of CIA skills tactics and techniques. Is there

2 hours, 11 minutes, 42 seconds

a basic one you can give us out of the book, man, that’s just something that you can notice about people when you Yeah. The one the the part that I’m proudest of in this book is the section

2 hours, 11 minutes, 50 seconds

on surveillance and surveillance detection. I took it so seriously that I actually became a surveillance instructor at the CIA for the last uh

2 hours, 11 minutes, 59 seconds

two years that I was at headquarters. Um I’ll tell you something that happened to me when I was in Pakistan. I was always

2 hours, 12 minutes, 6 seconds

very very very careful about my own personal security.

2 hours, 12 minutes, 10 seconds

And um I noticed one day I was staying at a at a guest house, a little 14 room guest house.

2 hours, 12 minutes, 19 seconds

And uh I noticed one day there’s a guy in a motorcycle. He’s trying really hard to stay in my blind spot. And the only reason I even noticed him was he had a

2 hours, 12 minutes, 27 seconds

red motorcycle helmet on. And nobody in Pakistan wore motorcycle helmets. I don’t even know where you would buy a motorcycle helmet. So I was like, “Huh, that’s funny. I speed up, he speeds up.

2 hours, 12 minutes, 37 seconds

I slow down, he slows down. I change lanes. He changes lanes. I’m like, “Uh, this this isn’t good.” I get to the entrance to the diplomatic quarter,

2 hours, 12 minutes, 45 seconds

which was the part of town where all the embassies were, and he breaks off. Well, I work like 14, 15, 16 hours every single day. I get to work when it’s

2 hours, 12 minutes, 53 seconds

dark. I leave work when it’s dark. And so, I pull out of the diplomatic quarter, and the guy’s on me again. And

2 hours, 13 minutes

I was like, “Oh, this is definitely not good.” I was worried about it all night.

2 hours, 13 minutes, 6 seconds

So the next morning I get up at 5:00 in the morning and I’m taking a different route to work every day. I’m leaving at a different time every day. My routes to work don’t make any sense

2 hours, 13 minutes, 14 seconds

just to make sure I’m not being followed. And now twice I am being followed. There’s a definition of surveillance at the CIA. It’s multiple

2 hours, 13 minutes, 21 seconds

sightings at time and distance. So you see the person more than once at different times of the day and at different places.

2 hours, 13 minutes, 30 seconds

So we have a database. So I put in the database when I first arrive. I think I’m under surveillance. It’s a motorcycle. Here’s the license number.

2 hours, 13 minutes, 37 seconds

This is a description of the guy. He’s wearing a red helmet.

2 hours, 13 minutes, 41 seconds

Next day, I get up at 5:00 in the morning. I just open the door, a crack.

2 hours, 13 minutes, 45 seconds

I look up and down the street. I don’t see anybody. So, they they had assigned us these like poles, these retracting poles with a mirror on the bottom. So, I

2 hours, 13 minutes, 53 seconds

look under my car. I don’t see any explosives or tracking devices or anything. So, you got to be careful, you know.

2 hours, 13 minutes, 59 seconds

So, I get in the car. I go like two blocks and the guy’s on me again.

2 hours, 14 minutes, 5 seconds

So, I finally get to the office and um I waited for the security officer to come in and I said, “Listen, I’m under

2 hours, 14 minutes, 12 seconds

surveillance. I’m 100% sure I’m under surveillance.” I told him about the three sightings. He’s like, “Oo, this isn’t good.” I said, “I know.” He said, “We have to wait until the chief comes

2 hours, 14 minutes, 21 seconds

in.” So, finally the chief comes in around 7 and I said, “I’m under surveillance 100% certain.” So I

2 hours, 14 minutes, 30 seconds

explained to him the three different sightings and he’s like well you know what you have to do. And I said, “I I

2 hours, 14 minutes, 39 seconds

know.” He goes, “You never popped your cherry that way, did you? Let’s shoot somebody.” Uhhuh. And I said, “Nope. Never needed

2 hours, 14 minutes, 46 seconds

to.” He’s like, “Well, we’re going to have we’re going to have teams out there. Don’t worry. We’re going to have guys all around you. You’re not going to be alone.” I’m like, “Okay, all right.”

2 hours, 14 minutes, 55 seconds

I was very worried. So I get back to my office. My office, it was me. I was the only staff officer and six retirees who

2 hours, 15 minutes, 2 seconds

had all been in the senior intelligence service. Every one of the six had either been the chief or deputy chief of Neareastern operations. One had been the

2 hours, 15 minutes, 11 seconds

assistant deputy director of the CIA, but they all came back after 9/11 for patriotic reasons. But if you’re a

2 hours, 15 minutes, 18 seconds

contractor, you can’t be the chief. So they all worked for me, right? And word got around. They’re like, “Don’t worry, buddy. We’re all going to be out there.

2 hours, 15 minutes, 27 seconds

Don’t worry about a thing.” I’m like, I’m very worried.

2 hours, 15 minutes, 30 seconds

That afternoon, I have a meeting at a safe house that we shared with the Pakistani intelligence service. We interrogated a prisoner and I get up to

2 hours, 15 minutes, 40 seconds

leave and I don’t know what possessed me to stop. And I turned and I said, “General Muhammad, are you following

2 hours, 15 minutes, 48 seconds

me?” And he says, “No. Why?” I said, “Because I’m under surveillance. I’m 100% sure that I’m under surveillance

2 hours, 15 minutes, 56 seconds

and I’m going to kill the guy this afternoon. And he’s like, “No, it’s not us. I never saw him again.”

2 hours, 16 minutes, 3 seconds

So weeks later, we heard that a bunch of them were sitting around the table and one of them said, “The new guy, Kiryaku,

2 hours, 16 minutes, 11 seconds

he’s a nice guy.” And everybody’s like, “Yeah, he’s a very nice guy.” And then one of them said, “You know what?

2 hours, 16 minutes, 18 seconds

Nobody’s that nice. He’s probably being nice just to to trick us into a sense of

2 hours, 16 minutes, 25 seconds

complacency. We don’t know what he’s doing when he’s not here. He’s probably spying on us. I wasn’t.

2 hours, 16 minutes, 34 seconds

But they put the worst surveillance officer in the entire Pakistani intelligence service on me. So instead

2 hours, 16 minutes, 41 seconds

of two blocks back, he’s right there in my blind spot. And it was only because I stopped before I got to the door that

2 hours, 16 minutes, 49 seconds

afternoon. and asked General Muhammad if they were following me if that’s the only reason that guy’s not in the ground today.

2 hours, 16 minutes, 56 seconds

I was going to kill him that afternoon. Were you? Oh, yes I was. Dang. John about to pop off. I was convinced he was going to kill me. That big guy. Mhm.

2 hours, 17 minutes, 4 seconds

That’s crazy, bro.

2 hours, 17 minutes, 7 seconds

Dang, dude. I think everybody wants to shoot somebody, but they don’t let you.

2 hours, 17 minutes, 11 seconds

I worked with a guy, great friend, go to the same church, from the same men’s group. They don’t let you. And he’s a psychiatrist.

2 hours, 17 minutes, 17 seconds

Sorry, you made me laugh. He’s a psychiatrist and he said to me, “I find it fascinating that you don’t have

2 hours, 17 minutes, 26 seconds

PTSD.” And I said, “Is that good or bad?” He said, “From a psychiatric point of view?” And I said, “Yeah.” He goes, “Not good.”

2 hours, 17 minutes, 34 seconds

I said, “I wasn’t afraid of those people, Steve. I was not afraid of them.” Yeah. It is interesting, man. The things that we hold, what’s going on inside of

2 hours, 17 minutes, 42 seconds

us, you know, how it comes out, what gets figured out. You know, you just never know. You never know what’s going to bother you. You never know what’s going to stick in your mind

2 hours, 17 minutes, 51 seconds

and bother you and fester for years. It happens. Yeah.

2 hours, 17 minutes, 56 seconds

The stories, man. Ain’t about just making a story, you know? I mean, you seem like a kind of guy that likes to make a story, you know?

2 hours, 18 minutes, 3 seconds

I like telling these stories. And people say and living a story, though. I mean, oh, yeah. Yeah. Oh, listen. I’m an adrenaline junkie. I don’t know what I would do if I didn’t have these stories

2 hours, 18 minutes, 11 seconds

in my past. I’d be like, oh my god. My first wife, she’s like, “I want to move back to Ohio and I want you to sell car insurance with my cousin Dean.” I said,

2 hours, 18 minutes, 18 seconds

“I would rather cut my throat than move to Ohio and sell insurance with your cousin.

2 hours, 18 minutes, 24 seconds

I’d rather join the Aryan Brotherhood in prison.” Seriously. Seriously.

2 hours, 18 minutes, 28 seconds

And you did. And I did. So I take insurance next time. Yeah. Next life. John, tell your son I said what’s up.

2 hours, 18 minutes, 36 seconds

That you mentioned on the way in. Thank you, Max.

2 hours, 18 minutes, 38 seconds

Max, tell him I said what’s up. And uh is Kuryaku is it Greek? Greek.

2 hours, 18 minutes, 42 seconds

Greek. I was thinking about that. Um, you have the new book, you have the new podcast. Thank you so much for your time, brother. Thank you. Thanks for the invitation. It’s great to meet you. You too, man.

2 hours, 18 minutes, 50 seconds

It’s a pleasure. Thank you. Thanks.

2 hours, 18 minutes, 51 seconds

Now, I’m just floating on the breeze and I feel I’m falling like these leaves. I must be corner stone.

2 hours, 19 minutes, 2 seconds

Oh, but when I reach that ground, I’ll share this piece of mind I found. I can feel it in my bones,

2 hours, 19 minutes, 12 seconds

but it’s going to take

Sync to video time

Scroll to Top