Kitbag Conversations - Proto Kitbag 20: Spycraft 101
Episode Date: May 2, 2024Hey all, Spycraft 101 (@spycraft101) came on the podcast this week and we talked about: -History of espionage -The average person giving up their information for comfort -Famous spies -and... modern intelligence collection methods and threats P.s. I pulled a muscle in my neck the day I recorded this so there may be a few spots where I sound off cause I was playing through the pain.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone and welcome back to the podcast.
This week we are joined by a heavily requested guest, Spycraft101.
I'm sure you've seen him running around talking about history of espionage.
He's left some challenge coins in multiple places along the East Coast of the United
States.
He talks a lot about multiple intelligence agencies and how they impacted global operations to this day in the past and probably in the future as well.
But hey, man, how you doing today?
Hey, I'm great. Thank you for inviting me on. I appreciate it.
Oh, absolutely. So, I mean, SpyCraft, just to kind of give the listeners who may or may not know who you are, like, what is your reasoning background and for creating this type of platform?
Sure.
Well, it's, it's always been an interest of mine going back about 15 years or so.
It started with me back in about 2007.
I think I picked up a book off the bookshelf at Books A Million, if any of you still remember
that place.
And I honestly
picked it up because of the cover. It had a cool cover, and you're not supposed to
judge books on the cover, but I do it anyway. And this one was called The Killer Elite by
Michael Smith. And he is a British author, British historian, but the book itself was
about the Army Special Missions Unit known as the Activity now. And they've had a number
of different names over the years, but that's kind of the one that they're most known for. And I didn't really know anything back in 2007
about intelligence other than, you know, I like the James Bond and the Mission Impossible films.
And that book totally opened my eyes to a lot of things that I had never even heard of. Just as one
example, American service members and ex-service members going back into Vietnam
and Laos in the 1980s to search for POWs who were still remaining, you know, 10 years after
the war had ended.
I had no idea that that had actually happened.
I thought that was just the plot of a Rambo movie or, you know, a Gene Hackman movie or
something like that.
So I really dove into that book and I kept reading and reading and reading and I really
got deeply into that history and I kept reading and reading and reading and I really got deeply
into that history in a big way.
And then just a couple of years ago, the opportunity came up for me to kind of start to share some
of those stories that I had collected on social media, which of course didn't exist in 2007,
not in the way that we know it now.
And I've been very fortunate in that those stories have really blown up in a big way.
My degrees are in history and history related fields.
So I felt pretty comfortable with the research
and the writing aspects of all that.
But it's also been a real journey of learning for me
the past couple of years, because the more I get into it,
the more I learn.
And the more these little side notes turn into hours
and hours of research on a whole story,
a whole organization, a whole event, you know, that I was not familiar with
before. So it's been a lot of fun for me.
And it's really kind of drawn back the curtain on a lot of things that most
people, especially my, you know,
younger social media followers were not aware of at all.
Maybe the older guys 50, 60 years old, you know,
they kind of recall it from the news, but it's,
it's been a lot of fun kind of re uh, investigating a lot of things that have been forgotten by more recent generations.
So what would you say? I know you just said the book, but did you immediately just latch on to American intelligence operations or did you kind of pull the thread go to like British and Malaya or Chinese and against the Civil War there or kind of dip into the KGB like was
there a linear path or was there something more like kind of jumping
around? I have jumped around a little bit I mean you know as an American I have
that cultural bias where I knew already a fair amount about the Cold War and
World War II and those also have the added advantages, well two added
advantages number one that they've been written about enough by the participants that there's plenty of material to draw from.
And number two, most of that writing is in English language, which helps me, you
know, find that stuff a lot more quickly. I have dived into foreign language
sources frequently, now on a weekly basis, you know, I'm diving into foreign
language sources, but that always adds a huge amount of time and complexity. And
it's also, you know, treading into somewhat unfamiliar waters where I don't really know the background
of the authors or the sites and that sort of thing. So I'm a little bit less comfortable
trying to share those types of sources from a, I don't know if I call it expertise, but a position
of knowledge anyway. But at the same time, there's a absolute treasure trove
of information out there that is not really available in English language texts that I'm
trying to get into. So I've been getting into Korean peninsula stuff a lot lately, if you've
been following my page. And I've been doing that with the help of a Korean speaker as well who,
and just I'm not going to name this person yet. I don't know if they want me to but
This guy he kind of activated his family network back home in a way and he's actually had people
Paging through old bundles of newspapers for me to find the details and stuff that is not easily
You know accessible on YouTube or an English language book on my bookshelf or anything like that Which has really paid dividends and I certainly appreciate that kind of assistance
Especially when it comes to something as the Korean War, we call that America, the forgotten war.
Once you bring that up, somebody always goes, did we really fight the Koreans? Is that why we're still sending soldiers to South Korea and the DMZ?
And especially for you, I have been tracking what you've been up to. And yeah, the Korean War is definitely a highlight for anybody in the younger generations because that was definitely a three year long conflict.
And not only were Americans, but Brits, Turks, Australians, you know,
Pope, not Poles, Germans.
Everybody was there from NATO.
Like that was the first NATO push for a coalite or what do you call it?
A coalition of forces.
So, yeah, yeah.
I mean, the United Nations guys got in there in a big way. And they were still, you know, steamrolled initially by the Chinese, of course, and the
North Koreans. But I've been able to cover that the Korean War in a couple of episodes. And
lately, I've been getting more into what was going on in the 70s, 80s and 90s. And it was
truly wild stuff. It is still truly wild stuff that's going on between the two,
truly wild stuff. It is still truly wild stuff that's going on between the two, the North and the South, honestly. It's absolutely amazing the level of conflict
and murder and betrayal and espionage that's going on. It's kind of
similar to me. It's similar to the East Berlin and West Berlin before the wall
went up because Soviets could go back and forth pretty easily.
Soviets and East Germans could go back and forth pretty easily before the wall
went up. And even though the East Germans built it, it still kind of hampered
their operations a little bit in the other districts. So I see some real echoes of that
kind of stuff, like 1950s, early 1960s stuff in East Berlin happening for decades and decades
in the Korean peninsula with the easy crossing the border and the you know the submarines that go south a little mini subs and that sort of thing and ships all
over the place really fascinating stuff honestly and I'm going to continue to
dig into that well I do know that there was a what they call the second Korean
War or the DMZ conflict in the late 60s where there was open combat between the
north and the south and a few Americans got caught the crossfire and is that
something you're digging into?
Yeah, I mean, I still have tons of stories to tell.
I know that you're talking about that axe murder incident.
I'd have to pull up the name of it right now.
It kind of escapes me.
But that turned into very, very close to a World War III kind of situation, I think.
I mean, whole battalions of troops were deployed to the DMZ, all to cut down a single tree.
And if you guys who are listening,
if you don't know what I'm talking about,
check out the Axe Murder incident on the DMZ.
It's really fascinating stuff,
but a couple of Americans were bludgeoned to death
or chopped up on the border by some North Koreans.
And all they were doing was going out there
to chop down a tree that limited visibility over the DMZ,
which was a serious issue with all the saboteurs going back and forth and that sort of thing and
it very closely turned into a
Reignition of the entire ground conflict honestly, it's amazing stuff
You think the North Koreans would be happy that they cut down the tree like now I can see what's going on in the south
Yeah, yeah
I would agree and there's some interesting stuff that I would like to continue looking more into, but tremendous amount of psychological operations are happening right there on the DMZ, like with loudspeakers and propaganda posters on both sides and that sort of thing. That's a really fascinating thing. That's probably worth an entire episode by itself, honestly, but some of the stuff that I've read indicates that just broadcasting weather reports from the South across to the North
Gives them more accurate information than they're actually getting from their own government and and you know state-sponsored media
So it starts to slowly train the North Korean guards on the DMZ to trust
South Korean news broadcasts because when they say it's gonna rain it does rain the next day and that little nudge
You know starts to help.
Interesting.
Now I've always heard about the South Koreans blasting propaganda across the DMZ into the North, just essentially say, lay down your arms, you're not going
to win, you don't have any food, your government's corrupt, you know, the
standard cues, but I had no idea about weather reports that is like, if I was
an Intel analyst inside the North Korean army, I would say, We don't know what we're doing and or we have limited funds
Let's just trust the guys to the south who can power the entire country at night. So yeah
Well, I think that you can probably totally understand that the truth is a valuable commodity in North Korea
You know what I mean?
So if you start to get any element of that from elsewhere, you're gonna kind of I can see how it's someone anyway
We kind of grab onto that, you know what I mean? And start to wonder what else.
And certainly there's other propaganda broadcasts going on.
I'm sure it's not just the news that they're sending across the border with the loudspeakers.
But if that is accurate, then what else might be accurate?
You know, it's really cool stuff, honestly.
Exactly.
When it comes to a...
And I don't want to deviate too much from the central theme here.
But when it comes to, say, propaganda and or PsyOps,
have you ever thought about interviewing people from the America or say the West who have gone into North Korea willingly
and came back just to kind of honestly for touring, but like a great example is Henry
Rollins, the punk rock singer from the 1970s and 80s and 90s. And once North Korea just
because and no one in Korea knew who he was until they saw him on TV and all of their language barriers broke.
They're like, what are you doing here?
Is there a reason you're spying around in our country?
And they thought he was a spy and he's like, no, I'm just here to look around.
And then the North Korean started pushing out this propaganda that America was embedding
sleeper agents inside their own country to sway public opinion against the government.
So the crazy things like that.
Yeah, I would, I would love to talk to those people. to sway public opinion against the government. So the crazy things like that.
Yeah, I would love to talk to those people.
One thing I try to do is kind of niche down
in a big way with my show and with my content
because there's a lot more subjects out there.
There's a broad swath of subjects
that are fascinating to me,
but I'm also trying to give people
what I kind of say I'm giving them.
You know what I mean?
And not branch out too much because there are a lot of fantastic accounts
and publishers out there, including yourself, you know, guys that get into
current events kind of stuff.
And I try to kind of leave the floor to them in that.
And so I would love to talk to somebody who has been to, uh, North Korea or who
defected from North Korea, for example, it hasn't happened yet, but I also haven't made a huge effort to do that yet.
But if I do find the right person, I will definitely reach out and try to get them on.
Absolutely. There's a have you ever heard of the book Nothing to Envy?
Nothing to Envy. No, it's not ringing a bell right now. I don't think so. It's written by a North Korean defector in the early 2000s where
if you've ever read
the book A Knight by Eli Wessel, where he was a Jew occupied by the Germans and he escaped
concentration camps, it describes what happened during the Holocaust.
But then he writes a book here in the early mid 2000s about what goes on in North Korea.
And it's almost like the West brushed it off because number one, when North Koreans defect to the South, they're immediately
ostracized because they're not South Korean, they're traitors. And so they kind of congregate
together. And number two, he's like, North Korea is disgusting and it's very abusive, very intense.
And he's one of those individuals where he wrote everything he ever wanted to say about
very intense and he's one of those individuals where he wrote everything he ever wanted to say about
His timing North Korea. He's like never asked me ever again
But there's been a lot of people who have started mingling with him for Korean North Korean defectors. So
Interesting just be like I start a thread to pull or something but
Yeah, yeah, that's that's fascinating stuff I have read up on some of the defectors one of the most interesting subjects to me at all and it's it's
You know just be kind of kind of segue so much into like the military history that I get into is
some of the Americans that served on the DMZ and then defected and lived in North Korea for many years afterwards and
Those guys there's not many very many of them of course, but they have some wild stories to tell
One of those guys he just passed away a couple of years ago
And you know if I had started this thing a little bit earlier, I certainly would have made every effort to
get him, get an interview with him. I think he died in 2019. One of the guys who went
over in like 65, if I recall correctly, and lived there until about 2005. And he came
out.
Is he the one that had like a North Korean wife and like two or three kids and-
Well, he had two or three kids.
The Kim family kind of paraded him around like, look, they want to join us.
Yes. Yeah. Oh, he was definitely paraded around.
He acted in films as one of the evil Americans, you know, in propaganda films
they made. His wife, however, is not North Korean.
She was Japanese and she was also kidnapped.
I recall really. And she is still alive.
I'm not sure how good her English is.
I think she lives in Japan now with their children.
And I'm not sure I would, you you know certainly want to reach out and get a
Hold of them, but I'm not sure how willing they are to talk
But the you know the half-white half Japanese kids who grew up in North Korea
I mean, you know what a story they've got to tell if they're willing to tell it. Oh
Of course, I mean just look at North Korean propaganda today. It's
It's pretty insane and let's dial it back 30 years where it's pretty on the nose about who they like and who they don't like.
Absolutely.
So I guess pivoting away from the, I don't want to say pivoting away because I definitely want to come back to this one, but we have something like you mentioned the Berlin Wall, how it religious lines, be it politically active lines, anything west of the old Berlin Wall is very liberal, democratic, Christian, one of those things.
But I think what east of the old Berlin Wall or the old Eastern Germany is like very hardline pro-Russia atheist, nihilistic.
And it's like, I know that the Stasi were running around
back in the day, kind of rounding up political enemies,
guess is a good way to put it,
but just something like that where there was 50 or so years
of occupation in that region.
And then to see that to this day, 30 plus years later,
that East Germany is still kind of in this weird gray area.
Yeah, you know, that's a great point. And I think I just saw an infographic about that the other day.
So maybe you saw the same one that I did about how they are. There's like a very, very distinct line,
especially for religious beliefs, I think, huge amount of like atheism and agnosticism
in old East Berlin, excuse me, East Germany,
and West Berlin is significantly more, or maybe I've got to mix it up, sorry, but there's a
significant cultural demarcation line exactly where the border, the actual national border,
used to exist. And it's amazing how something like that, that geopolitical event leaves a scar
on the people in a very real way in their psyche in the
generations to come despite all the you know the money and the effort and the
diplomacy that went into reuniting the two Germanys into one and yet some
things have not you know been fully reunified very interesting stuff.
I'm not sure if you have been to East Berlin I certainly have not but I know a
lot of people who have and they always go if you're trying to buy property property in Germany, buy it in East Berlin, because it's really shitty. It's really cheap. It's really run down. It's still essentially.
What do they call it? A time capsule from 1970 where the plumbing is bad. It's too expensive to reinforce it, to replace it. So they just kind of keep running with that old Soviet architecture.
So they just kind of keep running with that old Soviet architecture. And in one way you can say Psyop where the East Germans essentially are kind of stuck
where, well, we've been integrated for 30 years and our governments doesn't really seem
to want to help us out.
And that's why we can see those pro Russia protests in Berlin today.
On the other hand, it's, and I don't know if you've seen these kinds of things.
I know you say kind of like pivot away from the more current events or anything, but there was a pro Russia protest in Berlin a few days ago where thousands of people came out waving Russian flags and the old Soviet flag.
And they were very gung ho, communist Russia was very atheist and agnostic.
Number two, they very much bred with the German people.
And number three, it's only been 30 years, one generation.
So a lot of the older folks probably really still like what the Russians are doing.
Right, right. Yeah, that's that's fascinating.
I had not seen specifically about that,
that protest, but that doesn't surprise me. I mean, you know, not everyone is going to be anti-Russian
anywhere. And it's funny, though, that people that lived in an area that so clearly had
some negative ramifications for being under Soviet control for many years, that they can
either overlook or explain away or, you know, just kind of continue to
focus on what they consider to be the positives of that experience or that, you know, political
system or whatever, because it's hard for me to see any positives for East Germany or
for everything, you know, east of the Iron Curtain. But clearly that's not true for some
of the people that actually live there. So, you know, I'm an outsider. I wasn't there
during that time period. So they must know something that I don't, at least a few of them.
Oh, yeah, of course. Like you and I could sit up and watch Christmas vacation all day long and think,
yeah, that's West Germany. But it's, it's, you know, one of those interesting situations where,
I mean, historically, if you dial the clock back, probably about 100 years,
about a third of Germany was very pro what happened in the
Soviet Union where they had the revolution against the old Tsar, the old government.
And it was a government of the people. And I'm not going to say it's a lingering thought within
the German psyche, but it's almost eerily similar to 30, 50 years of occupation. But then now this
is a hundred years later and they're still kind of leaning pretty pro-Russian.
Is Russia the answer for them?
No, it doesn't make any sense because I don't want to start talking about gas or anything
like that, but they've really put themselves in a corner and it's almost a completely divided
society.
Yeah.
With something like the remnants of the Stasi running around, like you're very familiar
with them.
I'm sure you are. Right.
They're still running around in East Germany,
probably West Germany too,
outside of American bases and like Ramstein
or something like that.
So it's...
Yeah, I agree.
That was one of the interesting things to me,
when you have to reunify,
well, this is practically one of the only cases
in modern history,
where a divided country is officially reunited by outside
forces in so many ways. But there has to be a level of forgiving and forgetting and moving on.
You can't punish every single person on the other side that did something because that's not
reunification, that's retribution. So a lot of people that were involved in the very heavy-handed
East German government in a wide variety of ways, they kind of people that were involved in the very heavy handed East German government in
a wide variety of ways, they kind of got away with it in some ways.
The Stajci guys, they maintained their pensions.
For example, they maintained their East German pensions that they had earned through the
East German and Soviet government.
And so there needs to be some moving on, but how do you move on from that kind of thing?
How do you move on from the kidnappings and the torture and the constant surveillance
and all of that?
They've had to try to do it and it's been an imperfect process to say the least.
It's one of those where you could just easily say, let's just round them up.
And that's absolutely not the answer.
And then number two, you can just say, let them go and we'll feel this in 25 years, 30
years. And then plus or minus, I'm sure they have. I'm not really super dialed into the German economic or political situation outside of Angela Merkel and all them.
But it's.
It's interesting, obviously, you know, Putin was stationed in East Germany.
Putin was stationed in East Germany. And I mean, we can go way into the weeds with that one because when he, or I guess for the listeners here, when East Germany started to collapse and they started to tear down the wall, the Soviet Union told the friends and told him to sit tight because he's coming back. And it's not a far-fetched idea to say that Putin said like, hey man, just wait like 10,
15 years, I'll give you a phone call, start doing PsyOps on some people, start collecting
information because I know the Americans are coming and nobody likes Yeltsin and we're
going to be in the same situation we are or we were five years ago.
So it's like Putin is that the ultimate outside of like probably what George Bush
senior of intelligence asset all the way to the top.
So, yeah, yeah, certainly.
He I mean, well, Russians play the long game in a way that the U.S.
In fact, I was just reading today and I'd seen it before, but it just
coincidentally came up in something I was reading today that, for example,
when they get an asset such as a U. a US asset, one of their people that they have
a handler that's attached, the handler and the asset stay together regardless of what
happens in their careers, like the handler will fly in to see the asset 10 years, 15
years later, something like that.
Whereas with US case officers and that sort of thing, they rotate out every three years,
four years, what have have you and a new handler
rotates in even for a long-term asset
So the Russians play that long game and I can I could totally see the idea that he still has people
That were either not caught or maybe they were caught now
They're out, you know of prison or out of the spotlight at the very least and they're still waiting for a call
Or maybe to take a maybe willing to take action. I think that I've read
Hickory. I believe he said in interviews in the past, I don't want to quote it directly because
I haven't looked at it in a while, but he said that basically his whole network was rolled up
at the time because of course they had access to all the Stasi files which were not destroyed.
Very famously, there's like mountains and mountains and mountains of Stasi files that were gone through after the
collapse of the East German government. So his whole network was pretty much rolled up all of his former co workers like his East
German contacts and all that they were, you know, arrested or they were defamed or what have you, I think his closest East German
liaison slash good friend committed suicide, like the same week that the Berlin Wall came down,
if I recall correctly. So really just kind of watched everything that he had built for years
crumble behind him. And that's not the kind of thing that you forget, assuming that he's telling
the truth in all these interviews, which, you know, is something that, you know, could be discussed,
but it seems to have left a lasting impression on him to say the very least.
So one thing I do want to touch on is Putin is fluent in German because he was an officer.
He had to go there and sit down with the government.
And if you watch interviews with Putin with German officials, he kind of holds his head
down.
He speaks fluent German with no whisper accent or anything, but he plays the very passive
reserved, I don't know what I'm doing
role.
And so I think that's why over the last 22 years or 21 or rather, he kind of worked his
way to the top because they thought, Oh, this German guy who's very passive and submissive.
Yeah, we could trust this guy.
Yeah, let's open a oil line or whatever.
But then we have something where he sits down in 2014 with
then Chancellor Angela Merkel, and he found out that she was afraid of dogs. So what he did is he found the biggest dog in Russia that he could find and brought it with him and made her terrified.
And so we're talking about economy. We're talking about the economy, right? Oh, Ukraine's not joining
NATO, right?
And I think it was two or three weeks after he invaded Crimea. He was like, this is what
we're talking about. And so it's like a night and day flip. And so it's, everyone always
goes back to that classic. He only swings, I want to say his right arm, not his left
arm because he would have his weapon on his left, left, but it's that is just KGB mindset at work and
It's really easy for people in the West to go. Oh, yeah, he's a KGB agent. He knows what he's doing
But then it's another thing to go. No, he knows what he's doing
Yeah, he is he's really something else and he I mean he's left a tremendous mark on on the world and we're gonna be talking
About him for 50 years after his death, at the very least. And I'm really curious how this current situation is going to play out as is everyone, of course, but it's the rubber has kind of met the road in a lot of ways. And so we are learning how far he can be pushed, and how far he's willing to push himself, I think, but he's given master classes on diplomacy
in the past and projecting strength and gaining the concessions that you want and all that.
He has really played a lot of world leaders in exactly the way that he wanted to.
And I'm certain that a lot of that goes back to his training as an experienced in the 70s
and 80s.
Of course.
I don't know if you ever heard the story of right after 9 11 Putin invited
George Bush Jr. To a fishing trip in the Black Sea. And George Bush Jr. Calls his dad and went, Hey,
can I go fishing with this guy? And his dad was like, No, I don't trust him. Because for the
listeners who don't know, George Bush, senior or George HW Bush was the director of the CIA, I believe.
And 100% did not trust the Russians.
And so he was very skeptical that his son wanted to invite, accept an invitation from an ex KGB agent who he definitely was tracking before the wall
came down and then knowing how the government works, they probably dropped
all their files and moved on to something else, but yeah, it makes you wonder what could have happened.
You know, what could have potentially spun off from that trip, whether a positive relationship formed or some sort of, you know, blackmail material gained or who knows what, honestly.
Oh, yes, of course. It's and I've talked about this in the podcast way before.
I think it was one of the first episodes, but the Soviet Soviets, the Russians came out and offered military aid to the Americans
to go into Afghanistan. But then knowing someone like Putin went, you guys are walking right
into a trap. Go ahead, go right ahead. Give you everything you need. Just you want some
planes? We'll give you some planes. You want some mafia material? We'll give us some of
that. It's so it's one of those where, again, like I just said, it's really easy to say
he's a KGB man. He knows what he's doing. But then it's another to realize, no, he knows what he's doing. He's not doing this because this is 20 plus years in the planning.
I guess pivoting away from the Russians.
Um, Masad always crazy. Everyone always asked me in Instagram DMs of if Israel is going to strike
Iran or Syria or Hamas or Hezbollah or something like that.
And I've read a few Masad books and especially those with like Munich
and whatnot focusing on that entire situation.
And if you want, you could elaborate on that one.
But it's someone like the Masada such a wild card when it comes to any operation because there's the West, there's the East.
And there's kind of like Israel who does whatever they want to kind of ask is for they ask for forgiveness instead of permission.
So it's kind of they really do.
No question. I mean, that's a country that divides people in a way that hardly any other does in the United States.
And there are plenty of people that are very, very pro-Israel on religious grounds or on political grounds,
or maybe they're just pro-Israel because they're anti all of Israel's enemies. You know what I mean?
And the Israel, number one, they will do whatever they want whenever they want.
I think they've proven that time and time again.
They won't always pull it off flawlessly, but they will do what they want.
And they will defy the United States while being, you know, one of our.
What sort I'm looking for beneficiaries, one of our biggest beneficiaries of
military spending and
defense equipment and all that. At the same time, they will, they're not just going to march to the
beat of our drum just because there's so much American equipment that heads over there one way
or the other over the past few years. So I would not put anything past them. I mean, they've been
killing Iranian scientists for years. I mean, every year, I think they kill at least one for as long as I can remember.
At least one. Yeah. It's I guess for the listeners, the so back in the day, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s,
the the West and the East were really killing it with putting satellites into space. And
for Iran, they're the yin to their yang essentially is Saudi Arabia.
And Saudi Arabia put a satellite into space and the Iranians didn't have the
technology, so they got a cannon and just blasted it into space.
They're like, Oh yeah, it's very primitive.
We'll just shoot this as high as we can.
Hope he catches orbit.
If it falls down, whatever, at least it's in the black sea or Turkey.
And then we'll just try it again.
And Israel went in there and smoke-checked every single
scientist assigned to that operation. And everyone knew it was them, but Israel played the,
I don't know anything about that. So.
Yes, I'm trying to think of his name right now. I've written about him in the past,
but it's been a while. So his name is escaping me at the moment, but it was the
Canadian scientist wasn't, or was he American? I wouldn't say he was American.
He was a Westerner that went over there and helped out the the Iranians.
Yeah, it was Gerald Bull.
Gerald Bull. That's what I had to look it up.
OK. But yeah, I talked about him and he was I mean, he was selling a lot of stuff
to Iraq as well, and they were getting big and trying to launch satellites
via cannon rather than rocket.
And in some ways it makes sense.
But it's also kind
of a crazy contraption in so many ways, but he was closer than anybody was to making that realistic.
But if you can launch a satellite into space, you can launch a projectile from Iraq over Jordan and
Syria and into Israel. You know what I mean? Which was what everybody's real fear was and probably
what Saddam was going to do with it anyway. And some of the other customers, of course, had some
what Saddam was going to do with it anyway. And some of the other customers, of course, had some non-satellite related goals for a giant cannon like that. So Israel, they tried
to warn him off. They were not in a diplomatic sense. I mean, they were calling his house
and calling his coworkers and threatening to kill them. And he didn't wave off. He continued
to support Iraq. And then one day he was shot multiple times in the head, either outside
of his office or outside of his apartment. I don't recall which, you know, which is a hallmark of theirs.
And I believe that they also took photos of his body and then they mailed those to everyone else
that was working on the project with him. And that was clear enough sign to everybody else.
And all right, we're not continuing. That is, so earlier mentioned, PSYOPs.
And there's something I've noticed that popped up a lot recently with the
American right is the, uh, the U S Liberty incident.
And are you familiar with that one?
Yeah, I am not, not all the details of it.
And I know that people have looked into it a lot more than I have.
I think there's a really good podcast episode now from Martyr Made.
Uh, and I, I like that guy, but I haven't listened to all of his
episodes, including that one.
So I am, I'm a little bit behind the curve on that.
But from what I understand, basically it does appear that the, that, you know,
Israel deliberately attacked a U S Navy ship, killed many sailors and pretty
much got away with it afterwards.
But beyond that, I couldn't really speak to the particulars of it right now.
So, uh, as the story goes, it was during the 67th Six Day War and the USS Liberty caught wind of essentially Israelis just attacking civilians and like being harsh to unarmed combatants.
And Israel got wind of the USS Liberty living learning about this and sunk it.
about this and sunk it. And so that's like a conspiracy theory. That's, I don't know who's propagating this kind of information, but it's really popped up a lot in the last few years where kind of those fringe groups of the American right just go like, because earlier you and I just said, like, some Americans, they're very divided, either they support Israel because religious beliefs, or they support Israel because they support every or they hate every enemy that we hate or something like that. But for some reason, this really fringe group of American right really latched on to the fact that Israel attacked us and got away with it.
Yeah, yeah, I have seen it pop. I would say probably the last 10 years, I would say I've
seen something about it. And it's one of those things that I've always got a million things
that I want to dive more into. And it's on the list, but I haven't gotten into it too
much yet. But I have seen it popping up a lot. want to dive more into and it's on the list, but I haven't gotten into it too much yet.
But I have seen it popping up a lot. And more and more lately. Yeah, you're right. But Israel is,
you know, it used to be,
I thought anyway of Israel as being more of a right centric favorite, favorite child, you know, especially because of like religious reasons.
And that seems to be
less the case
these days, certainly from what you're saying,
it's on the right, get louder.
Yeah, it's those fringe groups.
The other ones making the battle call for it.
But when it comes to and I'm not sure if you're in the military or not,
and if you don't want to disclose that it's completely fine.
But it's when it comes to like military jurisdiction over Europe, Africa, the Middle East,
you know, there's different co-coms. So there's U-Com, SecCom, Africom, Israel is qualified as Europe. And
so it kind of separates that. So it's a different way of thinking as for if you're an 18 year
old soldier, you join and go, oh, it's us with them. It's Israel's part of us. So it's is real part of us so it's me again that's that might have no idea why that it came down to that decision but.
I mean i don't want to spend too much time in israel or the middle east or anything but it's one of those issues where i mean yes really easy to get on that.
Yeah yeah i agree there's there's so many things and.
I agree. There's so many things and history, especially that history in the Middle East is so insanely complex that I don't believe that anybody has a total lock on it. Professors
of Middle Eastern studies who have been doing it for 30 years, not every single thing that
they think is accurate for that reason. So it's very hard to really get a lock on anything,
especially like the multi-ethnic, multi- multi religious conflicts that go back millennia.
But you know, people, nevertheless, they pick sides and they often see it in black and white
terms. And that's one thing I've certainly learned is that absolutely nothing is black
and white. You know, our our best allies try to take advantage of us in many ways and push
back against us in many ways. And we do the same things to them, oftentimes. And, you
know, for everything that, that you know for every negative that
you could find about Israel that you know someone there would point out
something negative about the United States some unprovoked attack or
something like that you know in our past and so it's it's tit-for-tat and it's
going to continue and there's a lot of truth to all of those accusations on all
sides I think so it's it's complex stuff and it's kind of what keeps me coming back to these stories over and over again
honestly
Which you know, I mean I was in the military and when you shoot a weapon it's and you miss it's you know, that's
That's anomaly. That's nothing crazy. But if you do it two or three times, like that's a pattern
there's definitely something going on here, so it's
For a rifleman you got to correct your fire and go like oh is it your reticle is your weapon
Is it you one of those things?
but I mean
especially when it comes to intelligence analysis reporting where you can't just have single source reporting of you know a bombing and I
Don't know Kabul. You're like there was one no one else talked about this. That's pretty crazy
But if there were seven they're like, alright, I probably have so
But I guess pivoting away from those guys, let's talk about China.
Have you done any, uh, and I haven't listened to anything if you have on China, if you have
any information about like the CCP in the way they kind of orchestrate their government
or intelligence assets.
Yeah, I've only done one episode so far.
And you know, that's another subject that's deserving of a lot more,
certainly. But the one that I did so far was primarily focused around their
infiltration of American universities and the tremendous amount of tech transfer that goes on
from west to east in that sense. And we talked about some other stuff as well during that
episode. So it was more university specific than China specific, but that was a big one certainly and they are certainly
Very very good at taking advantage of the West in that way
while they're building up continuing to build up militarily and they're using our own research and development dollars and man-hours and innovations
You know against us and I'm totally shocked that there are there is anybody out there who is blind
to that at this point.
But I guess that's what I get for focusing on all this stuff so much.
Yeah, man, when it comes to
how the Chinese infiltrate governments, I live in the D.C. area.
And people usually in Instagram ask me like, oh, where are the spies at?
I'm like taking selfies in front of the Pentagon.
They're right there.
They'll pose as a Hong Kong internship with Washington State or something.
But that's not it at all.
Or you'll get a...
You may have gotten them these random zero followers, zero following accounts created 14 minutes ago of a Bitcoin enthusiast based out of Hong Kong that really wants you to get involved with the whole program.
And you're like, yeah, I understand that you're from the CCP.
I understand that you're an Asian because they always go with Hong Kong because that's what everyone thinks.
Hong Kong, it's British, it's West, it's good.
But yeah, I've gotten a little bit of that.
I get so many scam followers.
Unfortunately, I would say it's a daily basis.
It's one type or another.
Unfortunately, I have I don't recall immediately seeing some specific like
Hong Kong based Bitcoin account.
But quite frankly, I'm certain that I've gotten a few of those at one point.
But usually I'm pretty good at this point of sniffing them out and not engaging
with them and getting rid of them if they
Of course problem, but yeah, they're everywhere and there's one dude running 150 counts at one time
I'm sure and there's a room full of those dudes out there somewhere probably a lot of rooms full of them actually
So yeah, they're everywhere. They have the manpower. They have the time and they have the
Experience and the and the willingness to do all of that
Do you follow laway86 on Instagram?
laoy86. It's not ringing a bell. No, I don't think so. Yeah. So he's a YouTuber who was an American in
China for 10 years, I want to say, and left in 2012 and the regime changed. And they really
started going against, they really got xenophobic. And he's the one
who starts doxing what Chinese PSIOPs look like where they'll message you on telegram
or WhatsApp or any of those other kind of like texting apps and say like, Oh, I'm a
Hong Kong based female who is moving to Melbourne, Australia, and I'm really jumping on this
Bitcoin or
some weird kind of cryptocurrency. And they're like, we really want you to get involved.
Can you give me your IP address? And it's, and you know, people follow it because they
use attractive, you know, Chinese women and the big target. And you just talked about
American universities is Australian universities where they have quotas. I want to say, I don't know if quota is the right
word, but because China is the largest country in that region, they just flood into Northern
Australia for education. But you and I both know that the only way you could leave China
willingly is if you're a government agent. So they just cozy up to the nearest guy
who seems like he knows what he's doing
or with a clean cut haircut and goes,
oh, you're in the Australian army.
Please tell me what you do.
They just get right back to the Chinese government.
Yeah, yeah, I can believe it certainly.
They are totally willing to do that.
I have gotten a couple of messages
that I think were going down that path,
but I'm so, I don't know if I'd use the word paranoid because it's actually real. It's not something figment of my imagination, but
you know, I'm so Alex Jones territory. It's like in your face. So yeah, exactly. I mean,
I've gotten a couple of messages like on what's up. I think you mentioned, and it was an attractive
female profile picture and it said, hi, how are you? And I was like block immediately. Just don't
even start. I mean, I know exactly what you're going to try to do. So let me just actually right there.
There's a few times that I've received just a random text from like Kansas,
like area code, Kansas or some Midwest region where it's like,
oh, I met you at a bar last night.
By the way, can I get, can we like continue the conversation?
And most American guys probably would because they'll probably send like a very
provocative picture with it. And then next thing you know you're especially in the DC area because everyone out here works for them it's
you know like yeah that's an easy way to start doxxing people and then
blackmailing and it gets really messy from there oh yeah yeah well they keep
doing that stuff because it works quite frankly guys are pretty dumb and let
all our defenses down when it comes to that sort of thing, unfortunately.
Yeah, that's why I always say, like, if you ever want to know what a spy looks like,
go to Pentagon City just across from the Pentagon.
They they flood there and they pretend they're tourists or students.
And they're like, I understand that you're 47 years old.
Like, you can't fool me, but it's going to fool somebody else.
Yeah. One thing I do want to talk about is, and we talked about this right before we started, is
Harold Kim Philby, the greatest defector from the British government. And for the listeners, he was a
correspondent for, was it BBC or something, in the 30ies and got picked up for MI5 against the Germans
and went to Spain to kind of root out like report on fascism there and then got recruited
in MI6 and worked his way all the way to the top.
And the reason that he got all the way to the top was he was the most British person
anyone met.
He loved the Queen.
He loved the King.
He loved everything about the Empire. He loved everything about the empire.
He loved everything about being English.
And everyone went, there's no way in hell
this guy could be a spy.
But then it turns out he was a Soviet Asian
for 30 years because he believed in communism.
And the only person to kind of figured it out
was a half Brit, half American, James Jesus Hangleton,
who was the first director of the CIA and
went there's something off about this guy. There's no way he should be so comfortable
about jokingly disclosing information. That's, that should be very on the nose. And all the
Brits went, Oh yeah, this, that's just who he is. So it's, he, he's one of those rare
cases where in America today we have a Kate like who's the big one.
Damn I just space for a second.
Defected Russia.
Worked the NSA Snowden so Edward Snowden is like the big one in the US and he was the Edward Snowden of the Cold War period where he was giving the Soviets everything and.
where he was giving the Soviets everything and
Yeah, man spycraft you wanna I know you said you're not super educated on this guy, but if you want to like
Talk about a little bit. I mean, I really like that. Certainly certainly well that that's true I have books about him, but I've been in talks actually with his granddaughter for quite some time now
her name is Charlotte Philby, and I've been trying to get her onto the podcast for a while now because she has
When she was a little girl she went and visited him in Russia.
You know, they got like the familial kind of a dispensation to go to Soviet Russia,
to Moscow and visit her grandfather.
So she has a couple of pictures of her sitting on Kim's lap as a baby.
And she wrote a book about him recently.
So I've been trying to get her on the podcast, but we haven't actually gotten it recorded
yet.
So hopefully that's coming soon.
But I want to hear the story from her, certainly because she lived a portion of it and her
family knows it better than anybody else.
It's amazing because Kim Philby was for a long time, he and James Engleton were actually
great friends.
They were very serious drinking buddies in the US for a number of years. I mean the couple of like serious hardcore alcoholic workaholic
types and when it finally was when he finally defected I think he hopped on a
ship in like 1961 if I'm recalling correctly and he some kind of escaped to
the Soviet Union that kind of broke Angleton in a big way, like mentally broke him because if his own best friend from
England, if that guy who he trusted more than any other foreigner could be one of the greatest
spies all along, then absolutely anybody could. And so it really hampered the agency and him as
a person for many years because he never ever would never ever doubted the existence of giant
Soviet conspiracies that went all the way to the top because he had firsthand seen the evidence
of those in the past. So quite an amazing story and it did tremendous damage not just to the
British government but to the American CIA in that way because Angleton hampered so many operations
until like 73 when he was finally pushed out because Because he was the, uh, I was going to say he was the Herbert Hoover of the
CIA. He was there for a long time.
And it's like you just said where 20 years as the head of counterintelligence.
And he never, as an example, like he never believed any of the Soviet defectors
after that. He always thought that they were dangles, and the more believable they became,
he said, well, that's just how good the Soviets are,
that they can send us this believable guy,
and they'll sacrifice this many agents
to convince us of his bona fides,
and they will give up this amount of damaging information
just so this guy wins our trust,
and he never believed the defectors,
and the majority of them were legit,
although some of them were dangles, as a matter of fact.
So he was
In some ways partially right at least but quite a story quite a story
Yeah, there's a john lecarie's tinker tale of soldier spy which could probably largely be attributed to
Philby's defection and in that book or in that movie if you've seen it, it's
Just six brits sitting in a room together. You're like, these guys love the queen.
They love the empire.
They love what they do.
Someone's a spy and it really hurts us to point them out.
And so, but, uh, what I really want to point out is there's the book called
a spy among friends with, uh, written by Ben McIntyre, which is number one, my
referral for any book, if anyone asked me for one,
because it's about.
Kim Philby, Guy Burgess, James Jesus Angleton, all these guys where it's all these different
spies working in different parts of the world who are.
He probably takes some liberal liberties with that, where he's like, they made him all seem
like they were skeptical of each other.
But the greatest line in that is from Kim Philby,
where he says, to betray you must first belong. And I remember when I was a young intelligence
analyst in the Marine Corps, that that was a phrase thrown on us. Like, that is, it's a real
thing. It's the guy who seems the most there is not. So yeah, absolutely. I have several events,
McIntyre's books here. I'm looking on my shelf actually right now as we speak to see if I have that one or not.
He's in zigzags, a good one. It's about World War II.
Yep. Yep. Let me see. I've got the Spy and the Traitor. I've got that one there.
Solid. Yep.
A couple. But I have to walk away from the microphone to look at them all, unfortunately.
But yeah, he's another guy I want to have on the podcast one day.
He's one of the best, most award-winning, most popular espionage history authors out there.
So hopefully I can kind of wrangle an interview with him one day as well.
Yeah, he really writes his work like it's a James Bond spy novel by 1950 standards.
And you're like, no, this is an actual, this is a biography essentially.
I deployed a few years ago and read agent six ag and a spy among friends
and probably four or five days.
It was insane that it reads like a bullet train and it'll just blow you away about how
intricate spy life is.
And one more time about Ken Philby is he said the most lonely person on the planet is a
spy because your only friends is your handler and he doesn't care about you unless you give
him something. So it's.
Yeah. Yeah, that makes sense. You cannot think that your true self. Once you pick up that
mantle, you cannot be your true self with anyone ever again. Exactly. In your life,
you know, which is amazing. And the same thing goes for the defectors. You know, they might
be escaping a terribly difficult situation. They might be, you know, on paper, improving
everything for themselves and for their families, but they're also leaving their entire life behind and their culture and their greater familial ties
and all that. And that's a very, very difficult road to walk for a lot of those guys, even
if they've done it for the right reasons.
Who was it? And this is a shot in the dark. I want to say it was Julius Caesar who said,
I love spies. I don't trust them was Julius Caesar who said, I love spies.
I don't trust them.
And he was like, you can give me all the information you want, but it will never tell you anything
ever again.
And I mean, it's true.
I don't know why you would want to trust a spy.
I mean, it's why would you confide in him if he just defected and gave out so that all
of his friends?
But it's I want to say it
was Julie Caesar. You know, this might actually be wrong. I don't know. But
it's it was one of those big hats from the last 3000 years. And
I'll have to look that one up. Yeah, that one's not coming to me
immediately either.
Yeah. It was I want to say it was during the Gallic Wars and local chieftains were giving
information about Versant Getrix, who was the opponent to Julius Caesar. And he went,
great. I love it. I love spies. I also hate them. It's like I will never trust them a
day in my life. Good job. But goddamn. But yeah, yeah, absolutely. So, um, oh, go
right ahead. I was gonna say there's there's a tremendous amount of psychology that goes
into their motivations and their reasons for doing what they do. So some of them, you know,
in some ways, there are some that are, I think, very trustworthy for a lot of reasons, but
they have the right reasons for doing it. But at the same time, there's they're still
willing to, you know, betray an organization that put
bestowed trust in them for one reason or another. One of the guys that comes to mind immediately, for me, was this
Russian engineer named Adolf Tokachev. And I've spoken about him several times in the past and done an episode on him.
him several times in the past and done an episode on him. He was a Soviet engineer that provided a tremendous amount of valuable information, technical information like military R&D stuff during the late 1970s and mid 80s. And he's been
called the billion dollar spy if you've ever heard that phrase before. But his motivation was because he was an older
guy, you know, he was in his 40s, I think, and his wife's family
had mostly been either killed or imprisoned by Stalin's regime back in
the 1930s and the 40s. Really? And because that was, they were not his family at the
time, but his, basically his, all of his in-laws were disappeared by Stalin, so he
decided, you know, many years later that, you know, any government that could do
that was not worth supporting
and you had to support whoever was opposing them and that was the United States.
So from that perspective, I think his handlers in the US, once they understood his motivations,
that's a guy that you can trust in many ways because his family has suffered so significantly
at the hands of this government that he is betraying.
So he has kind of the right reasons for doing it.
But at the same time, how can you trust a person that you don't
have eyes on at all times? Because eventually he could, and he did in this case, he did
get snatched back up by the KGB and interrogated. And so anything that you tell them can be
drawn out of them later on, regardless of their desire to keep it to themselves. So
yeah, it is boy talk about walking a fine line in so many ways in this in this field.
Oh, of course. So I want to pivot to more like current events in the last like 30 years or so, especially American focus. And so it's a huge topic. And I really hesitate to say it. But Oklahoma City bombing, you know, Timothy McVeigh, a lot of guys said he was an inside job.
A lot of guys say he was a spy.
He was, you know, sympathetic to foreign nationals.
He came back from the Gulf War, maybe disillusioned.
Well, in your own words, how would you interpret someone who, I guess, comes back from a conflict
and they get very interwoven with the culture that they are fighting and they come back
and do something like Oklahoma City bombing. Is that espionage or is that just kind of like,
you know, they're they have a little PTSD? Yeah, I mean, I wouldn't, I don't know that either of
those terms fit perfectly. You know what I mean? And I haven't looked at Timothy McVeigh's case
very closely at all, because you know, it's a terrorism. It's a homegrown terrorism kind of case, rather than specifically espionage.
But at the same time, yeah, there are people that come back and they're deeply affected by that.
And they search for some kind of meaning in what they've done.
And they find maybe the wrong type of meaning.
You know what I mean? They kind of they kind of are drawn in the opposite direction
of what we would hope for and what probably they should have been as well.
So I would have to look at him a lot more closely.
I've definitely heard people say that, you know, he had a lot more help than is let on.
And it was really curious that I think like all the federal agents were out of the Mura building
at the time of the explosion. People point to that as a real bizarre anomaly.
But beyond that, honestly, I just don't know a whole lot about that particular case.
Okay, so taking away from that one, we have someone like Edward Snowden, or that recently
within the last two weeks, I guess is a big one. There was that trigger word, I don't
know, like first openly transgender army officer who was caught selling secrets and medical
training to the Russians.
Yeah, I did a lot of articles about that.
You spend a lot of time reading about espionage and how it works.
What is the right and left these days? Because back in the day, it was us versus them,
but now today it's very gray. And so it's because we have the extreme right who wants to go condemn this transgender officer for, you know, like, oh, you want to be inclusive and this is what you get.
But then you also ask someone who is like Edward Snowden, who is very patriotic and goes, no, this is wrong in his own words.
And then again, defects and divulges information to the Russians.
So where's the fine line?
How do you
see this kind of situation going forward? I mean, that's such a broad question. It's kind of hard
to give a succinct answer. Yeah, I'm sorry, I kind of overloaded you there.
That's all right. I mean, in some ways, espionage will never change because primarily it exploits
human weaknesses. and those are,
you know, they might shift a little bit, but they're not going to change fundamentally,
like you know, sex, blackmail, bribery, all of those things are going to be human weaknesses,
exploitable human weaknesses for, you know, millennia to come, certainly. So that comes
up. But I think that I don't know a whole lot about this case with the transgender officer
that you talked about. And one of the reasons that I stay away from current events stuff is because there's such
limited release initially, you know, five years from now, we'll be able to read the entire case
online. After all that stuff is released, and there'll be a lot of insight there.
But until that happens, you know, we're not going to know everything. And not only that,
what if this person is found not guilty afterwards? You know what I mean?
Exactly. Exactly. And the way it was painted as soon as and, you know, the first article that comes up is
the Washington Free Beacon. And I can almost assume that that's a far right and or center
rights publication going, this is what you get for, you know, inclusivity or something like that.
But it's when and I'm thinking back, shit, seven, eight years where
when I was just running the military and you know, everyone goes, do you think stones a
hero or do you think he's a criminal? And then everyone's kind of like, you know, hesitant,
they don't know what to do. And they're like, well, the reason you're getting phone calls
from Chinese people is because he gave up the phone number. So take your pick.
So it's, right.
Yeah.
It's one of those interesting situations where we have someone like Kim
Philby who just is sympathetic.
But then now today we have people who are not sympathetic to a foreign government
based on the last like seven or eight cases for the last 20 years, but it's more
of a, I don't like what my country's doing. And so I think that's very strange in terms of espionage. I don't
know if strange is the right word, but it's, there's definitely a pivot. I see. I see.
Yeah. I'll tell you what I think about, or one of my thoughts about Edward Snowden is
that he is someone who, regardless of what he released, what he took, where he went,
any of that, he has proved to be unbelievably media savvy in a way that basically nobody
before him, or really since him, has been because he can present himself in a very,
very reasonable way. And so that I think he's able to explain away things that are clearly,
you know, felonies that are clearly, you know,
that's tremendous damage to the organizations that, you know, gave him pay benefits,
a security clearance, gave him a mission, uh, that sort of thing.
And he's able to explain those away while minimizing some of the other
significant questions that have come up about it. But at the same time, you know, he hasn't been arrested or charged or
convicted with anything. So I think even more will come out in the in any trial if he's
ever, you know, brought back to the United States in any way, shape or form, which is
probably not going to happen. But so most of what we know, yeah, I don't I don't know.
I mean, I think that, you know, whether you think what he did was right or wrong,
I do think that he's gotten away with it at this point.
And I think that, you know,
the majority of what we know about it
has come from him telling us his perspective on it,
because the US government, the NSA, you know,
they have not fully released, as far as I know,
everything that he released.
You know, they haven't given a full explanation
of all the stuff and they probably will never do that, at
least not for 50 years at a minimum. So we're getting a somewhat myopic view on
all of that. But at the same time, he is an extremely convincing guy when you
listen to his interviews. At the same time, you're like, wow, you know, this is,
oh man, this guy's making some good points. And he's clearly shifted a lot of
people toward his point of view because there's not, but there's also not a very significant or toward his point of view, because there's not,
but there's also not a very significant
or convincing other point of view from anybody
because government spokespeople are not gonna get
into the weeds with this kind of stuff.
Well, then he also goes on stage, Joe Rogan
and states his case and Joe Rogan goes,
yeah, I can see where you're coming from.
So it's, and there's a lot of guys that listen to Joe Rogan. So it's, I mean, the other day he just had a Tulsi Gabbard who ran for president
in 2020 lost and now is coming out guns blazing against the democratic party of the United
States. And let's be honest, man, like most center right guys are gonna listen to Joe Rogan and it's they're gonna see someone like
Snowen is a hero or plus or minus like yeah, I can see where he's coming from and like you're saying
The government will not disclose this information because that was the NSA that is the number one top secretive organization on the planet
and it's I
hate to use the term catch 22, but it's,
it's such a difficult situation to be in where we have. So I guess I'll like
disclose a little bit, like you join the military, you go over and you get really
dialed into the culture of another country, but then you really want
to read about the local customs and they're like, no, because we don't want you getting
indoctrinated. You're like, all right, thanks, man. But then you have something like ISIS
who really bases their entire doctrine on a certain textbook called the management of savagery.
And you're not allowed to look that up on a US computer
unless you're on a watch list.
So it's like, I don't know, man, it's,
can you do your job?
Can you not?
And then I'm sure a lot of young guys go,
well, you're hiding this from me for a reason.
Let me look into it.
And then I don't know.
Yes, the forbidden fruit.
If you've told somebody not to look at something, they just want to look even more. Yeah, exactly. So then you have like, I don't yes the forbidden fruit somebody not to look at
something they just want to look even more yeah exactly so then you have like
I don't like Timothy McVeigh is such a anomaly but it's yeah man it's the world
of espionage it's crazy yeah yeah I don't see it getting any less gray anytime
soon so not all not all I mean that's kind of one of the catch phrases or that's in the introduction of every episode is I talk about we're going to explore the moral and ethical gray zones.
Because there's not a lot of it. Yeah, yeah, there's not a lot of happy endings. There's not a lot of, you know, two dimensional black white, you know, good versus bad guy stuff. There's a lot of deeply flawed human beings. There's a lot of malevolent human beings
who are also extremely good at their jobs on both sides.
It's really complicated stuff.
And I hate to say it also, but trying to be,
I consider myself like an amateur historian
because I'm not getting paid for this
unless somebody buys something from my advertisers
on the podcast or something.
But I picked a topic that is
unbelievably difficult to get to the truth of even no matter how much is written about it, you can't always trust the
sources. You can't even trust the original source documents because they're coming from a, a very deeply partisan
intelligence organization that is choosing very carefully what it releases even a half century later. So that kind of, it makes my job tough.
You know what I mean?
It's a lot of fun, it's very rewarding,
but it's very, very tough to say,
okay, this is what really happened
and this is why it happened.
Like I can't hardly confidently say that about anything
no matter how many sources I look up
and how much time I spend on any particular subject.
Yeah, of course, especially when it comes to something
like Vietnam War-era
intelligence because in Indochina, no one talks about anything besides Vietnam. And it's, was
there a war in Laos? Oh, yes. Was there a war in Cambodia? Oh, yes. Was that all CIA driven? Oh, yes.
But no one really talks about that.
And occasionally there's a book written about it of old CIA guys
who are willing to actually like spill the beans before they die or something.
But it's. Yeah, man, you're in such a lucrative area
where you're only presenting the most correct information you're provided.
And like, God love you for not
reading one book and saying, I want to review this book. No, it's, I want to know everything
about this topic before I talk about it. And as an intelligence analyst myself, like you can't make
an assessment based off single source reporting where, like I said earlier,
if there was an explosion in Kabul, doesn like I said earlier, if there was an
explosion in Kabul, doesn't really mean anything, but if there was seven people saying that,
all right, probably half. So it's, it's interesting things like that. And I really appreciate
what you're doing because yeah, I definitely listened to the podcast and it's very informative.
Okay, great. I appreciate it, man. Yeah. And since you mentioned the secret war in Laos,
I've been very, very fortunate to get connected to a number of the guys
that were there over the years and I can call them up or email them now.
Yeah, I've had a couple of episodes about it and I'm hoping to do more as well.
There's a lot of stuff there that went on that these guys are now
willing to talk about, because just like you said, they're, you know,
in the the final years of their life and they don't owe anybody anything anymore. So they've either
written their books or they're going to, or they'll just talk about it. Um, one of my,
one of my favorite ones recently was with, um, Toby Scott, Randolph Toby Scott. That
was just a few episodes ago. I think maybe 60, I'll have to look at what number, but,
uh, he was in Laos, he was in Vietnam for about six years altogether. And he will burn some bridges like he burned some
bridges during our interview. As a matter of fact, he doesn't care at all. So really,
really fascinating talk. And yeah, and he's willing to talk a lot more as well. So I might
have to have him back on one of these days. He's a he's a quite a character. I would definitely
love to listen to that.
Yep, check it out.
We talked mostly about his best friend who passed away in 1982
under very, very mysterious circumstances.
But Toby was there. He was in Laos. He was in Vietnam.
He was a smoke jumper in Montana with all the guys.
He went to the Arctic.
He flew over the Arctic Circle for Operation Cold Feet,
you know, with the sky hook, the the Fulton Skyhook system.
I mean, he did everything back then, man,
and he is willing to talk about all of it.
So I have one last question before we cut out.
Sure.
What is your opinion on modern intelligence?
Do you believe it? Do you not?
Because there's so much gray area of Twitter really getting in the way of what's true, what's not.
We have something like a voice article says that Elon Musk provides communications to Ukraine,
but it's negotiating with Putin, which is very much an intelligence asset.
And then, not Zelensky, Elon Musk says, no, it no it's not like this is not true but then all of ukraine
turns against musk like what is your opinion on modern intelligence because it's not like i said
earlier it's super gray anymore it's black essentially it's just everything in one little
room man yeah i mean that's that's another big question that's it's really hard to, it's just everything in one little room.
Man, yeah, I mean, that's that's another big question. That's really hard to get. It's huge.
And I know that's probably a question for a whole podcast, but it's
well, if you're talking about open source intelligence and it sounds like you are,
you know, when you mentioned Twitter and Elon Musk and that sort of thing,
just understand that every time you log on to social media
and anytime you listen to a news report or read an article anything you are, you are entering a battlefield.
You are entering a 21st century battlefield and you need to think very, very carefully about what kind of media you're consuming and what are the motivations of the person that is writing that article.
Was it even written by a human being or was it AI generated, you know, which is becoming increasingly more
common these days. And there are hallmarks there. And if you are deeply concerned about that, you know, I suggest that
you probably spend less time looking at current events, not you personally, of course, but the casual listener, if you
don't know who to trust or what to trust, I mean, think hard about how much time that you want to spend with that,
because it is extremely hard to know what's going on. I'm really concerned about stuff. You remember a couple of years ago,
everybody was talking about deepfakes. And, you know, I haven't heard anything about deepfakes in a while now. Like, I
mean, they didn't go away, for example. So it's deepfakes.
Oh, really? Yes, yes, yes.
I mean, I think it's hard to trust any kind of media at this point. That doesn't mean that true things aren't
reported. But, reported, but man,
you've just got to be so careful about everything that you consume these days and all of the analysis
that you read from just about any source. Yeah, there was a deep fake that came out right before
the war in Ukraine of Vladimir Putin opening up a briefcase full of red buttons and one was a red
cupcake and he ate it.
I haven't seen that yet.
And you're like, actually that's kind of funny.
But then there's a deep fake coming out of Russia of like Gwyneth Paltrow, Bruce Willis and Keanu Reeves in a movie together.
But they're not those actors.
It's a deep fake and the Russians are very good at making deep fakes of,
oh yeah, we're just gonna pretend
that these guys are in the movie and...
Interesting, I haven't seen that one either.
Silly Russians are gonna sit down and go,
yeah, it's probably a Keanu Reeves.
This is a speed three, but it's, yeah, man, it's,
the world of espionage today is so insane and it's yeah, man, it's the world of espionage today is so insane.
And it's. And damn, we're going really long in this one, I really don't care.
It's. I'm sure if you've ever sat down and say you want a red briefcase,
you're going to get an ad on your phone that says red briefcase. It's.
Yeah, yeah, actually, that that kind of takes us back to a point I was going to make a
few minutes ago before we moved on.
But, you know, we talked about Snowden, for example, and Stone is actually that's
2013. That's close to 10 years ago.
When you think about it.
Oh, yeah, it was nine years ago, basically, that he left and he revealed all that
stuff publicly.
Well, people were deeply upset and correctly upset, you know, right,
justifiably upset about these mass surveillance programs that were revealed.
And yet think about how much mass surveillance you're willingly participating in right now.
If a lot of people are probably listening to this on their phone right now, how many times have you hit
check the block? Yes. For terms and conditions on everything, every app that you've downloaded, every, you know,
Wi-Fi hotspot.
You know, I can imagine everyone who listens to this, maybe 90%.
It's in their phone connection to their car.
Yeah.
And cars have batteries now where someone like Subaru could shut up the
battery because he didn't pay rent or something like that.
It's crazy things.
Yep.
Buckle up everybody literally and figuratively buckle up.
Literally buckle up.
I'm going to get there.
But I mean, you know, my point is that everything that he said that so
deeply upset everyone, we're willingly giving it away on a daily basis. I mean,
you and I, like you and I talking right now and all the listeners were willingly
giving away the stuff that the NSA was very secretly connect collecting at that
time and that upset all of us so much. I mean, now they can probably just buy it.
I assume they don't have to collect it with their own programs. They can just
buy it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, we've, we've
decided that privacy isn't as important to the majority of us as convenience is. And
you've really got to make drastic changes in your life if you don't want to be a participant
in all of that. And most of us are not willing to make those totally drastic changes.
Because we have something, especially in the US,
there's something like January 6th,
and that is such a pressure point on a lot of people,
but it's, even if you joke about that, brother,
it's, your phone's probably listening to what's going on.
So, right?
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
It's, I mean, whatever you
talk about, like maybe whatever gym or whatever clothing brand is going to show up on your
Facebook recommended ads. And that's, that's where it's someone like Snowden who 10 years
ago, like you just said, said this was gonna happen. And it did. And so but I think Snowden who 10 years ago, like he just said, said this was going to happen and it
did. And so, but I think Snowden might be out of the loop. It's been 10 years. He's
been out of the game. Yeah. And the draft just came out for every single Russian living
in the country, including Snowden. And there's all these memes about Snowden getting sent
to Ukraine and which is very funny.
You wanted to fight a war in 2006? Buckle up, because you are now.
Oh, man. Yeah, boy, that would be quite a turnabout for that guy if that happened.
But hey, man, I really appreciate you coming on.
Like, damn, dude, we've had a really good conversation. Yeah, it was awesome.
What I want to do is give you a second to plug your podcast, your page, all those things
will kind of cut out.
Oh, sure.
Absolutely.
I appreciate it.
So basically everything that I run is called SpyCraft 101.
So my kind of flagship account is on Instagram and I have a podcast as well.
I think we've recorded about 67 episodes so far. So if
you enjoy podcasts, we generally go more into the older history, Cold War, World War II and earlier
than that. It's not really a current events kind of show like this is, but I've been blessed to get
some really, really amazing guests in the past. Like I mentioned, you know, participants in The
Secret War in Laos had several Pulitzer Prize winning journalists and authors on I've had several CIA case officers
I've had a KGB agent come on in the past and I've got some really cool guests lined up in the near future as well
So if you want to hear from either the people that actively
Participated or the people that have spent years and years researching all of this stuff then check it out sometime. I
appreciate it. It's a weekly podcast as well and find me on instagram at spycraft101.
Brother, I really appreciate it. This is a very good conversation. Definitely want to reach out
to you here in the next few weeks and get another one going because I mean the way espionage runs it goes at a mile a minute and I
mean there's no you can't just wake up today and go why did this happen it's
been years in the planet so it yeah so yeah I'm gonna cut out and if you can
hold on for a few seconds, I really appreciate it. Sure thing.
All right, great, thank you. So Thanks for watching!