Lex Fridman Podcast - #310 – Andrew Bustamante: CIA Spy
Episode Date: August 8, 2022Andrew Bustamante is a former CIA covert intelligence officer. Check out his work and podcast at https://everydayspy.com Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Wealthfront: https:...//wealthfront.com/LEX to get $50 sign-up bonus - LMNT: https://drinkLMNT.com/lex to get free sample pack - BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod to get 3 months free - MasterClass: https://masterclass.com/lex to get 15% off EPISODE LINKS: Everyday Spy: https://everydayspy.com/quiz Everyday Spy Podcast: https://everydayspy.com/podcast Andrew's Twitter: https://twitter.com/everydayspy Andrew's Instagram: https://instagram.com/everydayspy PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:10) - CIA and the President (18:47) - War in Ukraine (59:44) - Most powerful intelligence agencies (1:06:54) - David Petraeus (1:16:31) - Undercover disguises (1:29:30) - Human nature (1:38:49) - CIA recruitment process (1:55:33) - CIA and secrecy (2:02:06) - Cyber security (2:12:47) - Sexpionage (2:19:22) - Private intelligence (2:32:48) - NSA and Snowden (3:00:48) - Conspiracy theories (3:21:55) - CIA and UFOs (3:36:41) - Spy tricks (3:53:23) - Advice for young people
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The following is a conversation with Andrew Boost-A-Monte, former CIA covert intelligence officer
and US Air Force combat veteran, including the job of operational targeting,
encrypted communications, and launch operations for 200 nuclear intercontinental ballistic missiles.
Andrews, over seven years as a CIA spy, have given him a skill set and a perspective on the world
that is fascinating to explore.
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And now dear friends, here's Andrew, Pustamante. The Central Intelligence Agency was formed almost 75 years ago.
What is the mission of the CIA?
How does it work?
The mission of the CIA is to collect intelligence from around the world that supports a national
security mission and be the central
repository for all other intelligence agencies so that it's one collective source where all
intelligence can be synthesized and then passed forward to the decision makers.
That doesn't include domestic intelligence. It's primarily looking outward outside the United States. Correct. CIA is the foreign intelligence collection,
King spoke, if you will.
FBI does domestic, and then Department of Homeland Security
does domestic law enforcement,
essentially handles all things domestic.
Intelligence is not law enforcement,
so we technically cannot work inside the United States.
Is there clear lines to be drawn between like you just said the FBI,
CIA, FBI, and the other US intelligence agencies like the DIA, Defense Intelligence Agency,
Department of Homeland Security, NSA, National Security Agency. And there's a list.
There's a list of about 33 different intelligence organizations. The Army, the Navy has all the different organizations have their own intelligence groups.
So is there clear lines here to be drawn or is the CIA the giant integrator of all of these?
It's a little bit of both, to be honest. So yes, there are absolutely lines. And more so than
the lines, there are lines that divide what our primary mission is. Everything's got to be prioritized.
That's one of the benefits and the superpowers of the United States is we prioritize everything.
So different intelligence organizations are prioritized to collect certain types of intelligence.
And then within the confines of how they collect, they're also given unique authorities.
Authorities are a term that's directed by the executive branch. Different agencies have different
authorities to execute missions in different ways. FBI can't execute the same way
CIA executes and CIA can't execute the same way NGA executes. But then at the
end, excuse me when it's all collected, then yes, CIA still acts as a final synthesizing
repository to create what's known as the president's daily brief, the PDB. The only way CIA can
create the PDB is by being the single source of all source intelligence from around the
IC, the intern, the intelligence community, which are those 30 some odd and always changing
organizations that are sponsored for intelligence operations. What is the PDB the president's daily
brief look like? How long is it? What does it contain? So first of all, it looks like the most
expensive book report you can ever imagine. It's got its own binder. It's all very high-end. It feels important. It looks important.
It's not like a cheap trapper keeper.
It's somewhere between, I would give it probably between 50 and 125 pages a day.
It's produced every day around two o'clock in the morning by a dedicated group of analysts.
And each page is essentially a short paragraph to a few paragraphs about a priority happening
that affects national security from around the world.
The president rarely gets to the entire briefing in a day.
He relies on a briefer instead to prioritize what inside the briefing needs to be shared
with the president.
Because some days the PDB will get briefed in 10 minutes and some days it will be briefed
over the course of two hours.
It depends on the president's schedule.
How much competition is there for the first page?
And so how much jockeying there is for attention?
For, I imagine for all the different intelligence agencies
and within the CIA, there's probably different groups
that are modular and they're all
care about different nations or different
cases. And is there, do you understand how much competition there is for the attention, for the limited attention of the president? You're 100% correct in how the agency and how officers
and managers at the agency handle the PDB. There's a ton of competition. Everybody wants to be the first on the radar,
or everybody wants to be on the first page.
The thing that we're not baking into the equation
is the president's interests.
The president dictates what's on the first page of his PDB,
and he will tell them usually the day before,
I wanna see this on the first page tomorrow.
Bring this to me in the beginning.
I don't wanna hear about what's happening in Mozambique.
I don't really care about what's happening in Saudi Arabia.
I wanna see one, two, three.
And regardless of whether or not those are the three biggest things in the world,
the president's the executive, he's the one.
He's the ultimate customer.
So we do what the customer says.
That has backbired in the past.
If you haven't already started seeing how that could go wrong, that is backbired in the past.
But that is essentially what happens when you serve in the executive branch. You serve the executive.
So what's the role, the director of the CIA versus the president? What's that dance
like? So the president really leads the focus of the CIA. The president is the commander
in chief for the military, but the executive, the president
is also the executive for the entirety of the intelligence community.
So he's the ultimate customer.
If you look at it like a business, the customer, the person spending the money is the president
and the director is the CEO.
So if the director doesn't create what the president wants, there's going to be a new director. That's why the director of CIA is a presidential appointed position. Sometimes
they're extremely qualified intelligence professionals. Sometimes they're just professional
politicians or soldiers that could put into that seat because the president trusts them
to do what he wants them to do. Another gaping area that causes problems, but that's still the way it is.
So you think this is a problematic configuration of the whole system?
Massive flaw in the system.
It is a massive flaw in the system because if you're essentially appointing a director
to do what you want them to do, then you're assigning a crony, and that's what we define
corruption as within the United States.
And inside the United States, we say, if you pick somebody outside of merits for any other
reason other than merit, then it's cronyism or it's nepotism.
Here, that's exactly what our structure is built on.
All presidential appointees are appointed on something other than merit.
So for an intelligence agency to be effective, it has to discover the truth and communicate
that truth.
And maybe if you're appointing the director of that agency, you're not, they're less likely
to communicate the truth to you unless the truth aligns perfectly with your desired worldview.
Well, not necessarily perfectly because there are other steps, right?
They have to go in front of Congress and they have to have the support of multiple legislatures
or legislators, but
they, they're, the, the challenges that the short list of people who even get the opportunity
aren't a meritorious list.
It's a short list based off of who the president is picking or who the would be president is
picking.
Now, I think we've proven that an intelligence organization can be, an intelligence organization
can be extremely effective even within the flawed system.
The challenge is how much more effective could we be if we improved?
And I think that's the challenge that faces a lot of the US government.
I think that's a challenge that has resulted in what we see today when it comes to the
decline of American power and American influence, the
rise of foreign influence, authoritarian powers, and a shrinking US economy, a growing Chinese
economy.
And it's just, we have questions, hard questions we need to ask ourselves about how we're
going to handle the future.
What aspect of that communication between the president and the CIA could be fixed to help fix the problems
that you're referring to in terms of the decline of American power.
So when you talk about the president wanting to prioritize what the president cares about,
that immediately shows a break between what actually matters to the long term success
of the United States versus what happened, what to the long term success of the United States
versus what happened, what benefits the short term success of the current president.
Because any president is just a human being and has a very narrow focus.
And narrow focus is not a long term calculation.
Exactly.
What's the maximum amount of years a president can be president?
Eight.
Yeah.
He has to be, he or she in the United States.
In the United States according to our current constitution. Yeah. But they they're very limited
in terms of what they have to prioritize. And then if you look at a four-year cycle,
two years of that is essentially preparing for the next election cycle. So,
what's only two years of really quality attention you get from the president,
who is the chief executive of all the intelligence community. So the most
important thing to them is not always the most important thing to the long term survival
of the United States.
What do you make of the hostile relationship that to me at least stands out of the presidents
between Donald Trump and the CIA? Was that a very kind of personal bickering.
I mean, is there something interesting to you
about the dynamics between that particular president
and that particular instantiation
of the intelligence agency?
Man, there were lots of things fascinating to me
about that relationship.
So first, what's the good and the bad, sorry,
I'm trying to talk about it.
So let me start with the good first
because there's a lot of people who don't think
there was any good.
So the good thing is we saw that the president, who's the chief customer, the executive,
to the CIA, when the president doesn't want to hear what CIA has to say, he's not going
to listen.
I think that's an important lesson for everyone to take home.
If the president doesn't care what you have to say,
he's going to take funding away or she will take funding away. They're going to take
attention away. They're going to shut down your operations, your missions. They're going
to kill the careers of the people working there. Think about that. For the four years,
the president Trump was the president. Basically, everybody at CIA, the career was put on
pause. Some people's careers were ended. everybody at CIA, their career was put on pause. Some
people's careers were ended. Some people voluntarily left their career there because they found
themselves working for a single customer that didn't want what they had to produce.
So for people who don't know, Donald Trump did not display significant, deep interest in
the output. He did not trust it. Yeah, he was a disinterested customer.
Exactly right.
He, he, information.
And then what do disinterested customers do?
They go find someone else to create their product.
And that's exactly what Donald Trump did.
And he did it through the private intelligence world,
funding private intelligence companies to run their own operations that
brought him the information he cared about when CIA wouldn't.
It also didn't help that CIA stepped outside of their confines, right?
CIA is supposed to collect foreign intelligence and not comment on domestic matters.
They went way outside of that when they started challenging the president, when they started
questioning the results, when they started publicly claiming Russian influence, that's
all something the FBI could have handled by itself.
The Justice Department could have handled by itself. The Justice Department could have handled by itself. CIA had no place to contribute to that conversation.
And when they did, all they did was undermine the relationship they had with their primary customer.
Let me sort of focus in on this relationship between the President or the leader and the intelligence agency and look outside the
United States.
It seems like authoritarian regimes or regime start history if you look at Stalin and Hitler,
if you look at today with Vladimir Putin.
The negative effects of power corrupting the mind of a leader manifest itself is that they
start to get bad information from the intelligence agencies.
So this kind of thing that you're talking about over time, they start hearing information
they want to hear.
The agency starts producing only the kind of information they want to hear.
And the leader's worldview starts becoming distorted to where the propaganda they generate is also the
thing that the intelligence agencies provide to them. And so they start getting this, they start
believing they're a propaganda and they start getting a distorted view of the world. Sorry for
the sort of walking through in a weird way, but I guess I want to ask, do you think, let's look at Vladimir Putin specifically, do you think he's getting accurate information about the world? Do you think he
knows the truth of the world, whether that's the war in Ukraine, whether that's the behavior of
the other nations in NATO, the United States in general? What do you think? It's rare that I'll talk about just thinking. I prefer to share
my assessment, why I assess things a certain way, rather than just what's my random opinion.
And my assessment, Vladimir Putin, is winning. Russia is winning. They're winning in Ukraine,
but they're also winning the Battle of Influence against the West. They're winning in the face
of economic sanctions. They're winning. Imperically, when you look at the West. They're winning in the face of economic sanctions. They're winning.
Imperically, when you look at the math, they're winning. So when you ask me whether or not
Putin is getting good information from intelligence services, when I look at my overall assessment
of multiple data points, he must be getting good information. Do I know how or why I do
not? I don't know how or why it works there. I don't know how or why it works there.
I don't know how such deep cronism, such deep corruption can possibly yield true real results.
And yet somehow there are real results happening.
So it's either excessive waste and an accidental win or there really is a system in a process
there that's functioning.
So this winning idea is very interesting in what way short-term and long-term is Russia winning.
Some people say there was a miscalculation of the way the invasion happened. There was an assumption
that you would be able to successfully take you, you'd be able to successfully capture the east, the south, and the north of Ukraine, and with
what now appears to be significantly insufficient troops spread way too thin across way too large
of a front. So that seems to be like an intelligence failure. And that doesn't seem to be like winning.
In another way, it doesn't seem like winning if we put aside the human cost of war.
It doesn't seem like winning because the hearts and minds of the West
work completely on the side of Ukraine.
This particular leader in Volotomers-Lensky
captured the attention of the world and the hearts and minds of Europe, the West, and many
other nations throughout the world, both financially in terms of military equipment, and in terms
of social and cultural and emotional support for the independence fight of this nation.
That seems to be like a miscalculation. So against that pushback, why do you think there's still
kernels of winning in this and the Russian side?
What you're laying out isn't incorrect, and the miscalculations are not unexpected.
Anybody who's been to a military college, including the Army War College in Pennsylvania, where so many of our military leaders are brought up, when you look at the conflict in Ukraine,
it fits the exact mold of what an effective long-term military conflict, protracted military
conflict, would and should look like four military dominance.
Now, did Zelensky and did the Ukrainians
shock the world? Absolutely. But in that, they also shocked American intelligence, which
like you said, miscalculated. The whole world miscalculated how the Ukrainians would respond.
Putin did not move in there accidentally. He had an assessment. He had high likelihood of
a certain outcome, and that outcome did not happen.
Why did he have that calculation? Because in 2014, it worked.
He invaded, he took primary in 14 days.
He basically created an infiltration campaign that turned key leaders over in the first few days of the conflict.
So essentially there was no conflict.
It worked in 2008 when he took Georgia. Nobody talks about that. He invaded Georgia the
exact same same way and it worked. So in 2008 it worked and 2014 it worked. There was
no reason to believe it wasn't going to work again. So he just carried out the same campaign.
But this time something was different. That was a miscalculation for sure on the part
of Putin. And the reason that there was no support from the West because let's not forget
There is no support. There is nothing other than the Lend-Lease Act
Which is putting a Ukraine in massive debt right now to the West
That's the only form of support they're getting from NATO or the United States
So if somebody believed Ukraine would win, if somebody believed Ukraine had
a chance, they would have gotten more material support than just debt. And we can jump into
that anytime you want to. But the whole world miscalculated. Everybody thought Russia was
going to win in 14 days. I said that they would win in 14 days because that was the predominant
calculation. Once the first invasion didn't work, then the military does what professional militaries do, man.
They re-evaluate, they reorganize leaders, and then they take a new approach.
You saw three approaches. The first two did not work. The first two campaigns against Ukraine
did not work the way they were supposed to work. The third has worked exactly like it's supposed to work.
You don't need Kiev to win Ukraine.
You don't need hearts and minds to win Ukraine.
What you need, yeah, what you need is control
of natural resources, which they're taking in the east,
and you need access to the heartbeat,
the blood flow of food and money into the country,
which they're taking in the south.
The fact that Ukraine had to go to the negotiation table with Russia and Turkey in order to
get exports out of the Black Sea approved, again, demonstrates just how much Ukraine is
losing.
The aggressor had a seat at the negotiation table to allow Ukraine the ability to even export one of its top exports.
If Russia would have said no, then they would not have had that. Russia has that's like someone holding
your throat. It's like somebody holding your jugular vein and saying, if you don't do what I tell
you to do, then I'm not going to let you breathe. I'm not going to let blood flow to your brain. So do you think it's possible that Russia takes the south of Ukraine.
It takes, so starting from Maripu, the Herzan region, all the way to Odessa, all the way to Odessa,
and into Moldova. I believe all of that will happen before the fall.
Fall of this year. Fall of this year. Before winter hits Europe, NATO wants Germany needs
to be able to have sanctions lifted so they can tap into Russian power. There's no way
they can have those sanctions lifted unless Russia wins. And Russia also knows that all of Europe, all of NATO is the true, the
true people feeling the pain of the war outside of Ukraine are the NATO countries because they're
so heavily reliant on Russia. And as they have supported American sanctions against Russia,
their people feel the pain economically, their people feel the pain. What are they gonna do in the winter?
Because without Russian gas,
their people are gonna freeze to death.
Ukrainian people.
People all over NATO.
You crane, everybody knows you crane's at risk.
Everybody knows Ukrainians are dying.
The game of war isn't played.
Just, it isn't played majoratively by the people
who are fighting. The game of war is
played by everyone else. It's an economic game. It's not a military game. The flow of resources and
energy. Attention. Exactly right. I was on the front in the Harrison region. This is very
area that you're referring to and I spoke to a lot of people, and the morale is incredibly high, and I
don't think the people in that region, soldiers, volunteer soldiers, civilians are going to
give up that land without dying.
I agree with you. I mean, in order to take a desa, would require huge
amount of artillery and slaughter of civilians essentially. They're not going to
use artillery in Odessa because Odessa is too important to Russian culture.
It's going to be even uglier than that. It's going to be clearing up streets,
clearing up buildings, clearing up buildings,
person by person, troop by troop.
It'll be a lot like what it was in Margole,
just shooting at civilians.
Because they can't afford to just do bombing raids,
because they're going to destroy cultural,
significant architecture that's just too important
to the Russian culture.
And that's going to demoralize their own Russian people.
I have to do a lot of thinking to try to understand what I even feel, I don't know, but in terms
of information, the thing that the soldiers are saying, the Russian soldiers are saying,
the thing the Russian soldiers really believe is that they're freeing, they're liberating
the Ukrainian people from Nazis. And they believe this. Because I visited Ukraine, I spoke
to the over 100, probably a couple hundred Ukrainian people from different walks of life.
It feels like the Russian soldiers at least are under a cloud of propaganda.
They're not operating on a clear view of the whole world.
And given all that, I just don't see Russia taking
the South without committing war crimes. And if Vladimir Putin is aware of
what's happening in terms of the treatment of civilians, I don't see him pushing forward
all the way to take the South because that's not going to be effective strategy for him
to win the hearts and minds of these people.
Atocracies don't need to win hearts and minds.
That's a staunchly democratic point of view.
Hearts and minds mean very little to people who understand core, basic needs and true power. You don't see Xi Jinping worrying about hearts and minds in China. You don't see
you don't see it in North Korea. You don't see it in Congo. You don't see it in most of the world.
Hearts and minds are a luxury. In reality, what people need is food, water, power. They need
income to be able to secure a lifestyle. It's it is absolutely sad. I am not in any
way, shape or form saying that my assessment on this is is enriching or enlightening or hopeful. It's just back. It's just calculatable empirical evidence. If Putin loses in Ukraine, the losses,
the influential losses, the economic losses, the lives lost, the power lost, is too great.
So it is better for him to push and push and push through war crimes through everything else.
War crimes are something defined by the international court system.
The international court system has Russia
as part of its board.
And the international court system
is largely powerless
out when it comes to enforcing its own outcomes.
So the real risk gain scenario here
for Russia is significantly in favor of gain over risk.
The other thing that I think is important to talk about is we, everybody, is trapped
in the middle of a gigantic information war.
Yes, there's battlefield, bullets, and cannons and tanks, but there's also a massive information
war. The same narrative that you see these ground troops in Ukraine,
these Russian ground troops in Ukraine believing they're clearing the land of Nazis, that
information is being fed to them from their own home country. I don't know why people
seem to think that the information that they're reading in English is any more or less true.
The entire every piece of news coming out of the West, every piece of information coming
out in the English language is also a giant narrative being shared intentionally to try
to undermine the moral and the faithfulness of English-speaking Russians, which somebody
somewhere knows exactly how many of those there are.
So we have to recognize that we're not getting true information from other side, because
there is a strategic value in making sure that there is just the right amount of mis- or
disinformation out there, not because someone's trying to lie to Americans, but because someone
is trying to influence the way English-speaking Russians think.
And in that world, that's exactly why you see so many news articles cited to anonymous
sources, government officials who do not want to be named.
There's nothing that links back responsibility there, right?
There's nothing they can go to court there.
But the information still gets released.
And that's enough to make Ukrainians believe that the United States is going to help them
or that the West is going to help them
It's enough to make Russians think that
That they're going to lose and maybe they should just
They should just give up now and leave from the battlefield now. We have to understand we are in the middle of a giant
Information war
Maybe you can correct me, but it feels like in the English-speaking world. It's harder to control
It's harder to fight the information war.
Because of some people say there's not really a freedom of speech in this country, but
I think if you compare, there's a lot more freedom of speech. And it's just harder to control
narratives when there's a bunch of guerrilla journalists that are able to just publish
anything they want on Twitter or anything.
It's just harder to control narratives.
So people don't understand where freedom of speech is.
That's the first major problem.
And it's, it's shameful how many people in the United States do not understand what freedom
of speech actually protects.
So that aside, you're absolutely right.
Fighting the information war in the West is extremely difficult because anyone with a blog,
anyone with a Twitter account, anyone, I mean anyone can call themselves a journalist essentially.
We live in a world, we live in a country where people read the headline and they completely bypass
the author line and they go straight into the content and then they decide whether the content's
real or not based on how they feel,
instead of based on empirical, measurable evidence.
So you mentioned the Len Lisek and the support of the United States,
support of Ukraine by the United States.
Are you skeptical to the level of support that the United States is providing
and is going to provide over time?
The strategy that the United States has taken to support Ukraine
is similar to the strategy we took to support
Great Britain during World War II.
The enactment of the Len Lysak is a perfect example of that.
The Len Lysak means that we are lending
or releasing equipment to the Ukrainian government
in exchange for future payment.
So every time a rocket is launched,
every time a drone crashes
into a tank, that's a bill that Ukraine is just racking up. It's like when you go to a
restaurant and you start drinking shots, sometime the bill will come do. This is exactly what
we did when Europe and when Great Britain was in the face of Nazi invasion, we signed the
same thing into motion.
Do you know that the UK did not pay off the debt from World War II until 2020?
They've been paying that debt since the end of World War II.
So what we're doing is we're in debting Ukraine against the promise that perhaps they will secure
their freedom, which nobody seems to want to talk about what freedom is actually going to look like for Ukrainians.
What are the true handful of outcomes,
the realistic outcomes that could come of this,
and which of those outcomes really looks like freedom to them,
especially in the face of the fact
that they're going to be trillions of dollars in debt
to the West for supplying them with the training
and the weapons and the food and the med kits and everything else that we're giving them because nothing that it's free.
It's all coming due. It's all we're a democracy, but we're also a capitalist country.
We can't afford to just give things away for free, but we can give things away at a discount. We can give things away, lay away, but the bill will come due.
And unfortunately, that is not part of the conversation that's being
had with the American people. So that's is a way to establish some level of control. Power is power.
That said, having a very close relationship between Ukraine and the United States does not seem to be
a negative possibility when the Ukrainians think about their future in terms of freedom.
That's one thing.
The other, there's some aspect of this war that I've just noticed that one of the people
I talked to said that all great nations have a independence war, have devil war for their
independence. In order, there's something it's dark, but there's something about war just being a catalyst
for finding your own identity as a nation.
So you can have leaders, you can have sort of signed documents, you can have all this
kind of stuff, but there's something about war that really brings the country together
and actually try to figure out what is at the core of the spirit of the
people that defines this country and they see this war as that as the independence war
to define the heart over the country is so there's been before the war before this invasion
there was a lot of factions in the country there was a lot of influence from oligarchs and corruption and so on.
A lot of that was the factions were brought together under one umbrella,
effectively, to become one nation because of this invasion.
So they see that as a positive direction for the defining of what a free democratic country looks like after the war, in their perspective
after the war's won. It's a difficult situation because I'm trying to make sure that you and all
everybody listening understands that what's happening in Ukraine among Ukrainians is noble and brave
and brave and courageous and beyond the expectations of anyone. The fact is there is no material support coming from the outside.
The American revolution was won because of French involvement,
French ships, French troops, French generals, French military might. The independence of communist China was won
through Russian support, Russian generals,
Russian troops on the ground fighting with the communists.
That's how revolutions are won.
That's how independent countries are born.
Ukraine doesn't get any of that.
No one is stepping into that.
Because we live in a world right now
where there simply is no economic benefits to the parties in power to support Ukraine to that level.
And war is a game of economics. The economic benefit of Ukraine is crystal clear in favor of Russia,
which is why Putin cannot lose. He will not let himself lose.
Short of something completely unexpected, right?
I'm talking 60% 70% probability Ukraine loses,
but there's still 20% 30% probability
of the unimaginable happening.
Who knows what that might be?
An oligarch assassinates Putin,
or a nuclear bomb goes off somewhere,
or who knows what, right?
There's still a chance that something unexpected will happen and change the tide of the war.
But when it comes down to the core calculus here, Ukraine is the agricultural bed to support
a future Russia.
Russian knows they know they have to have Ukraine.
They know that they have to have it to protect
themselves against military pressure from the West. They have to have it for agricultural reasons.
They have major oil on natural gas pipelines that flow through eastern Ukraine. They cannot let
Ukraine fall outside of their sphere of influence. They cannot. The United States doesn't really have any economic vested interest
in Ukraine. Ideological, you know, ideological points of view and promises aside, there's no
economic benefit. And the same thing goes for NATO. NATO has no economic investment in Ukraine.
Ukrainian output, Ukrainian food goes to the Middle East and Africa. It doesn't go to Europe.
So the whole, the West's side with Ukraine is exclusively ideological and it's putting
them in a place where they fight a war with Russia so the whole world can see Russia's
capabilities.
Ukraine is a, it's sad as it is to say, man, Ukraine is a pawn on a table for superpowers
to calculate each other's capacities.
Right now we've only talked about Russia and the United States.
We haven't even talked about Iran.
We haven't even talked about China, right?
It is a pawn on a table.
This is a chicken fight so that people get to watch and see what the other trainers are
doing.
A lot of people might have said the same thing about the United States back in the independence fight.
So there is there is possibilities.
As you've said, we're not saying zero percent chance.
And it could be a reasonably high percent chance that this becomes one of the great democratic nations
that the 21st century is remembered by.
Absolutely.
And so you said American support. So ideologically, first of all,
you don't assign much long-term power to that. That US could support Ukraine purely on ideological
grounds. Just looking at the last four years, the last three years,
do you remember what happened in Hong Kong right
before COVID?
China swooped into Hong Kong violently,
beating protesters, killing them in the street
and prisoning people without just cause.
And Hong Kong was a democracy.
And the whole world stood by and let it happen.
And then what happened in Afghanistan just a year ago? And the whole world stood by and let the Taliban take power again after 20 years of loss.
This we are showing a repeatable point of view. We will talk American politicians American administrations. We will say a lot of things
We will promise a lot of ideological pro-democracy rara
statements we will say it
But when it comes down to putting our own people our own economy our own GDP at risk
We step away from that fight
America is currently supplying military equipment to Ukraine.
Absolutely.
And a lot of that military equipment has actually been the thing that turned the tides of war
a couple of times already.
Currently, that's the high-mar systems.
So you mentioned sort of Putin can't afford to lose, but winning can look in different
ways.
So you've kind of defined so on. At this
moment, the prediction is that winning looks like capturing not just the east, but the
south of Ukraine. But you can have narratives of winning that return back to the, what
was at the beginning of this year before the invasion? Correct. That Crimea is still with Russia.
There's some kind of negotiated thing about Donbass, where it still stays with
Ukraine, but there's some public government there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Just like that's what they have in Georgia right now.
And that could still be defined through mechanisms as Russia winning, as
Russia winning for Russia.
And then for Ukraine, as Ukraine winning, uh, and, and then for Ukraine, as Ukraine winning, and for the West,
as democracy winning, and you kind of negotiate.
I mean, that seems to be how geopolitics works.
It's sort of...
Everybody can walk away with a win-win story, and then the world progresses with lessons learned.
That's the high likely.
That's the most probable outcome.
The most probable outcome is that Ukraine remains in air quotes, a sovereign nation. It's not going
to be truly sovereign because it will become, it will have to have new government put in place.
Zelensky will, it's extremely unlikely he will be president because he has gone too far
to demonstrate his power over the people and his ability to separate the Ukrainian people from
the autocratic power of Russia. So he would have to be unseated whether he goes into exile or whether
he is peacefully left alone is all going to be part of negotiations. But the thing to keep in mind also
is that a negotiated peace
really just means a negotiated ceasefire.
We've seen this happen all over the world.
North Korea and South Korea are technically still
just a negotiated cease power.
What you end up having is
Russia will allow Ukraine to call itself Ukraine
to operate independently,
to have their own debt to the United States. Russia doesn't want to take on that debt
and then in exchange for that they will have
firmer guidelines as to how NATO can engage with Ukraine and then that becomes an example for all the other former Soviet satellite states which are all required
economically by Russia not required economically by the West and
economically by Russia, not required economically by the West.
And then you end up seeing how it just, you can see how the whole thing plays out once you realize that the key stone is Ukraine.
There is something about Ukraine, the deep support by the Ukrainian people of America
that is in contrast with, for example, Afghanistan,
is in contrast with, for example, Afghanistan,
that it seems like ideologically, Ukraine could be a beacon of freedom used
in narratives by the United States
to fight geopolitical wars on that part of the world,
that they would be a good partner
for this idea of democracy, of freedom,
of all the values that America stands for.
They're a good partner.
And this so it's valuable,
if you sort of have a cynical, pragmatic view,
sort of like Henry Kissinger type of view,
it's valuable to have them as a partner,
so valuable that it makes sense to support them
in achieving a negotiated ceasefire
that's on the side of Ukraine.
But because of this particular leader, this particular culture, this particular dynamics
of how the war enrolled and things like Twitter and the way digital communication currently
works, it just seems like this is a powerful symbol of freedom that's useful for the United
States if we're sort of to take the pragmatic view.
Don't you think it's possible that United States supports Ukraine financially and militarily
enough for it to get an advantage in this war?
I think they've already got an advantage in the war.
The fact of the war is still going on. Demonstrates the asymmetrical advantage. The fact that Russia has stepped up to the negotiating table
with them several times without just turning to...
I mean, you remember what happened in Chechnya?
Without turning to Chechnya level,
just mass blind destruction,
which was another Putin war.
To see that those things have happened demonstrates the asymmetric advantage that the West is given.
I think the true way to look at the benefit of Ukraine as a shining example of freedom in Europe for the West
isn't to understand whether or not they could. They absolutely could.
It's the question of how valuable is that in Europe?
How valuable is Ukraine?
Which before January, nobody even thought about Ukraine
and the people who did know about Ukraine
knew that it was a extremely corrupt former Soviet state.
With 20% of its national population
self-ident identifying as Russian.
Like, there's a reason Putin went into Ukraine. There's a reason he's been promising he would go
into Ukraine for the better part of a decade. Because the circumstances were aligned, it was a
corrupt country that self identified as Russian in many ways. It was supposed to be an easier
of multiple marks in terms of the
former Soviet satellite states to go after. That's all part of the miscalculation
that the rest of the world saw too when we thought it would fall quickly. So the
think that it could be a shining example of freedom is accurate. But is it as
shining a star as Germany? Is it as shining a star as the UK? Is it as shining a star as Germany? Is it as shining a star as the UK?
Is it as shining a star as Romania?
Is it as shining a star as France?
Like it's got a lot of democratic freedom-based countries
in Europe to compete against to be the shining stellar example.
And in exchange, on counterpoint to that,
it has an extreme amount of strategic value to Russia,
which has no interest in making it a shining star of the example of democracy and freedom.
Outside of resources, in terms of the shininess of the star, I would argue, yes.
If you look at how much you captivated the attention of the world.
The attention of the world has made no material difference, man. That's what I'm saying.
That's your estimation, but you know, I assure we can, we can't, if you can convert that into political influence,
into money, don't you think attention is money? Attention is money in democracies and capitalist
countries, which serves as a counterweight to sort of authoritarian regimes. So for Putin,
resources matter. The United States also resources matter, but the attention and the belief
of the people also matter because that's how you attain and maintain political power.
So going to that exact example, then I would highlight that our current administration
has the lowest approval ratings of any president in history.
So if people were very fond of the war going on in Ukraine, wouldn't that counterbalance
some of our upset, some of the distant coming from the economy and some of the dissent coming
from the great recession or the second great, or the great resignation and whatever is happening
with the draw out with the down stock market, you would think that people would feel like they're sacrificing
for something.
If they really believed that Ukraine mattered, that they would, they would stand next to
the president who is, who is so staunchly driving and leading the West against this conflict.
Well, I think the opposition to this particular president, I personally believe, has less to
do with the policies and more to do with a lot of the other human factors.
And, but again, empirically, this is, I look at things through a very empirical lens,
a very cold fact-based lens.
And there are multiple data points that suggest that the American people ideologically
sympathize with Ukraine, but they really just want their gas prices to go down.
They really just want to be able to pay less money at the grocery store for their food,
and they most definitely don't want their sons and daughters to die in exchange for
Ukrainian freedom.
It does hurt me to see the politicization of this war as well. I think that it has, that's
maybe has to do with the kind of calculation you're referring to, but it seems like it
doesn't. It seems like there's a cynical, whatever takes attention of the media for the
moment, the red team chooses one side and the blue team chooses another. And then I think I'm
correct if I'm wrong, but I believe the Democrats went into full like support
of Ukraine on the idealit logical side. And then I guess Republicans are saying
why are we wasting money? The prices are the gas prices are growing up. That's
it's a very crude kind of analysis, but they basically picked whatever argument
on whatever side. And now more and more and more, this particular war in Ukraine is becoming a kind of pawn
in the game of politics that's first the midterm elections, then building up towards the
presidential elections and stops being about the philosophical, the social, the geopolitical aspects, parameters of this war, and more
apologists, like whatever the heck captivates Twitter, and we're going to use that for politics.
You're right in sense of the fact that it's, I wouldn't say that the red team and the
blue team picked opposite sides on this.
What I would say is that media discovered that talking about Ukraine wasn't as profitable as talking about something else.
People simply, the American people who read media
or who watch media, they simply became bored
reading about news that didn't seem to be changing much.
And we turned back into wanting to read about our own economy
and we wanted to hear more about cryptocurrency
and we wanted to hear more about the Kardashians.
And that's what we care about.
So that's what media writes about.
That's how a capitalist market-driven world works.
And that's how the United States works.
That's why in both red papers and blue papers, red sources and blue sources, you don't
see Ukraine being mentioned very much.
If anything, I would say that your Republicans are probably more in support of what's happening
in Ukraine right now because we're creating new weapons systems.
Our military is getting stronger.
We're sending these military...
We get to test military systems in combat in Ukraine.
That's priceless.
In the world of the military industrial complex, being able to field test combat tests,
a weapon without having to sacrifice your own people is incredibly valuable.
You get all the data, you get all the performance metrics, but you don't have to put it yourself
at risk.
That is one of the major benefits of what we're seeing from supporting Ukraine with weapons
and with troops, the long-term benefit to what will come of this for the United States.
Practically speaking, in the lens of national security,
through military readiness, through future economic benefits, those are super strong. The
geopolitical fight is essentially moot because Ukraine is not a geopolitical player. It was
not for for 70 years. And after this conflict is over, it will not again. Just think about what you
were just saying with the American people's attention span to Twitter and whatever's currently
going on. If the Ukraine conflict resolved itself today in either in any direction, how many
weeks do you think before no one talked about Ukraine anymore? Do you think we would make it two weeks
or do you think we'd make it maybe seven days? It would be headline news for one or two days and then we'd be on to something else.
It's just an unfortunate reality of how the world works in a capitalist democracy.
Yeah, it just breaks my heart. How much you know, I know that there's Yemen and Syria and
that nobody talks about anymore. Still raging conflicts going on.
It breaks my heart how much generational hatred is born.
I happen to be from my family is from Ukraine and from Russia and so for me just personally
it's a part of the world I care about
in terms of its history. I because I speak the language I can appreciate the beauty of the literature, the music, the art, the cultural history of the 20th century, through all the dark times,
through all the the hell of the dark sides of the authoritarian regimes, the destruction of war, there is still just
the beauty that I'm able to appreciate that I can't appreciate about China, Brazil, other
countries because I don't speak their language. This one I can appreciate. And so in that
way, this is personally really painful to me to see so much of that history, the beauty in that history suffocated by the hatred that is born through this kind
of geopolitical game, fought mostly by the politicians, the leaders.
People are beautiful, and that's what you're talking about.
People are just, people are beautiful creatures, culture and art and science.
Like these are beautiful, beautiful things
that come about because of human beings.
And the thing that gives me hope is that
no matter what conflict the world has seen,
and we've seen some devastating horrible crimes
against humanity.
Already, we saw nuclear bombs go off in Japan,
we saw genocide happen in Rwanda,
we've seen horrible things happen. But people persevere, language, culture, arts, science,
they all persevere, they all shine through. Some of the most people don't even realize how
gorgeous the architecture and the culture is inside Iran. People have no idea.
just the architecture and the culture is inside Iran. People have no idea. Chinese people in the rural parts of China are some of the kindest, most amazing people you'll ever meet.
And Korean art and Korean dance, Korean drumming, they know nobody has ever even heard of Korean
drumming. Korean drumming is this magical, beautiful thing. And the North, in North Korea,
does it better than anybody in the world.
Taekwondo in North Korea is just exceptional to North Korea.
In North Korea.
Nobody knows these things.
How do you know about Taekwondo in North Korea?
I have questions.
But my fascinating, that's a,
that people don't think about that,
but the culture, the beauty of the people,
still flourishes even in the toughest of places.
Absolutely.
And we always will.
We always will because that is what people do.
And that is just the truth of it.
And it breaks my heart to see travesties that people commit against people.
But whether you're looking at a micro level, like what happens with shootings here in
the United States, or whether you look at a macro level,
like geopolitical power exchanges and intra and interstate conflicts, like what you see in Syria
and what you see in Ukraine, those are disgusting terrible things. War is a terrible thing. That is a But people will persevere. People will come through.
I hope so. I hope so.
And I hope we don't do something that I'll probably also ask you about later on,
is things that destroy the possibility of perseverance, which is things like nuclear war, things that can do such tremendous
damage that we will never recover. But I am it's your pragmatic pessimism. I think both you and I
have a kind of maybe small flame of optimism in there about the perseverance of the human species in general. Let me ask you about
intelligence agencies outside of the CIA. Can you illuminate
what is the most powerful intelligence agency in the world?
The CIA, the FSB, formerly the KGB, the MI6, Masad.
I've gotten a chance to interact with a lot of Israelis while in Ukraine.
Just incredible people.
In terms of both training and skill, just all of the, every fun.
American soldiers too, just American military is incredible.
I just, the competence and skill of the military.
The United States, Israeli, I got to interact in Ukrainian as well.
It's striking. It's striking. It's beautiful. I just love people. I love carpenters or people
that are just extremely good at their job and then take pride in their craftsmanship. It's
beautiful to see. And I imagine the same kind of thing happens inside of intelligence agencies
as well that we don't get to appreciate because of the secrecy. Same thing with like Lockheed
Martin. I envy the the CTO of Lockheed Martin.
It breaks my heart as a person who loves engineering.
Because of the cover of secrecy,
we'll never get to know some of the incredible engineering that happens inside of Lockheed Martin.
Bullying and...
Raytheon.
Yeah.
You know, there's kind of this idea that these are,
you know, people have conspiracy theories and a kind of a sign evil to these companies in some to some part
But I think there's beautiful people inside those companies brilliant people and
Some incredible science and engineering is happening there. Anyway, that said
the CIA the FSB the MI6 Mossad China. I know very little about the
MSS Ministry of State Security. I don't I don't know how much you know
Or just other intelligence agencies in India Pakistan that also heard yeah raw is powerful and so is ISS or ISSI
And then of course your PM nations in Germany France and yeah, so
And then of course European nations and Germany and France. And yeah, so what can you say about the power,
the influence of the different intelligence agencies
within their nation and outside?
Yeah, so to answer your question,
your original question, which is the most powerful,
I'm gonna have to give you a few different answers.
So the most powerful intelligence organization in the world
in terms of reach is the Chinese
MSS, the Ministry of State Security, because they have created a single solitary intelligence
service that has global reach and is integrated with Chinese culture so that essentially every
Chinese person anywhere in the world is an informant to the MSS.
Because that's their way of serving the middle kingdom, John Guo, the central kingdom,
the Chinese word for China.
So they're the strongest.
They're the most powerful intelligence service in terms of reach.
Most assets, most informants, most intelligence.
So it's deeply integrated with the citizenry, correct, with their culture.
You know what a Chinese person who lives in Syria
thinks of themselves as a Chinese person?
Do you know what a Chinese person,
a Chinese national living in the United States
thinks of themselves as a Chinese person?
Right?
Americans living abroad often think of ourselves as expats,
expatriates living on the local economy,
embracing the local culture.
That is not how Chinese people view traveling around the world.
And by the way, if I may mention, I believe the way Messiah operates
is similar kind of thing because people from Israel
living abroad still think of themselves as Jewish and Israeli first.
So that allows you to integrate the culture
and the faith-based aspects.
Exactly right.
But the number of people in Israel is much, much more.
Exactly right.
And the number of people in China.
So when it comes to reach, China wins that game.
When it comes to professional capability,
it's the CIA by far,
because budget-wise, capability-wise,
weapons system-wise, modern technology-wise, CIA is the leader around the world,
which is why every other intelligence organization out there wants to partner with CIA.
They want to learn from CIA. They want to train with CIA.
They want to partner on counter-narcotics and counter-drug and counter-terrorism
and counter-weager. You name it, people want to partner with CIA.
So CIA is the most powerful in terms of capability and wealth.
And then you've got the idea, you've got tech.
So tech alone, meaning corporate espionage, economic espionage,
nothing beats, nothing beats DGSE in France.
They're the top.
They've got a massive budget that
almost goes exclusively to stealing foreign secrets. They're the biggest threat to the United
States, even above Russia and above China. DGSE in France is a massively powerful intelligence
organization, but they are so exclusively focused on a handful of types of intelligence collection
that nobody even really thinks that they exist.
And then in terms of just terrifying violence, you have Masad.
Masad will do anything.
Masad has no qualms doing what it takes to ensure the survival of every Israeli citizen around
the world.
Most other countries will stop at some point, but Masad doesn't do that. So, it's the lies you're willing to cross.
And the reasons that you're willing to cross them, you know, there's CIA will let
an American stay in jail in Russia unlawfully and seek a diplomatic solution.
I mean, the United States has let people, there are two gentlemen in the 1950s who were
imprisoned in China for 20 years,
waiting for diplomatic solutions to their release.
So we do not kill to save a citizen,
but Mossad will.
And then they'll not just kill,
they'll do large-scale infiltration. They do amazing things.
There is no, they spare no expense because it's a demonstration to their own people.
Again, going back to the whole idea of influence.
Every intelligence operation that sees the light of day has two purposes.
The first purpose is the intelligence operation. But if it was just the intelligence
operation, it would stay secret forever. The second purpose of every successful intelligence
operation when they become public is to send a signal to the world. If you work against us,
we will do this to you. If you work for us, we will take care of you in this way. It's a massive information campaign.
Do you think in that way, say, is not doing a good job? Because there's, you know, the FSB,
perhaps much less so, Jari, but the KGB did this well, which is the send the signal,
basically communicate that this is a terrifying organization with a lot of power. And so Masad is doing a good job of that.
Correct.
This is the psychological information warfare.
And it seems like the CIA also has a lot of kind of myths about it, conspiracy theories
about it, but much less so than the other agencies.
CIA does a good job of playing to the mythos. So when General Petraeus used to be the director of CIA
2000 and your workout partner, I worked out a part about this. So I loved and hated those workouts
with Petraeus because he is a physical beast. He's a strong fit at the time, 60-something year old man.
Let me take a tangent on that because he's coming on this pocket.
Oh, excellent man. So can you say what you learned from the man in terms of, or like what
you think is interesting and powerful and inspiring about the way he sees the world, or
maybe what you learn in terms of how to get strong in the gym.
Yeah. Or anything about life. Two things right away. And one of them I was going to share with you
anyway. So I'm glad that you asked the question. So the first is that on our runs and man, he runs
fast and we would go for six mile runs through Bangkok. And he talked openly about, I asked him,
And he talked openly about, I asked him,
how do you keep this mystery, this epic mythology about your fitness and your strength?
How do you keep all of this alive with the troops?
And he had this amazing answer, and he was like,
I don't talk about it.
Myths are born, not from somebody orchestrating
the myth, but from the source of the myth simply being secretive. So he's like, I don't
talk about, I've never talked about it, I've never exacerbated it, I just do what I do,
and I let the troops talk. And he's like, when it's in favor, when it goes in favor of discipline
and loyalty and commitment, I let it run. If it starts getting destructive
or damaging, then I have my leadership team step into fix it. But when it comes to the
mythos, the myth of him being super powered soldier, that's what he wants every soldier
to be. So he lets it run. And he was fantastic. It was so enlightening when he told me, when
there's a myth that benefits you, you just let it go.
You let it happen because it gets you further
without you doing any work.
It costs no investment for so the catalyst
of the virality of the myth is just being mysterious.
And that's what CIA does well to go back to your first question.
What does CIA do?
They don't answer any questions.
They don't say anything.
And wherever the myth goes, the myth goes,
whether it's that they sold drugs or used child prostitutes or whatever else And wherever the myth goes, the myth goes, whether it's that they sold drugs
or used child prostitutes or whatever else.
Wherever the myth goes, they let it go.
Because at the end of the day,
everybody sits back and says,
wow, I really just don't know.
Now, the second thing that I learned from Patreus,
and I really am a big fan of Patreus.
I know he made personal mistakes.
You don't get to be that powerful
without making personal mistakes. But when I worked out with him, the one thing that my, the one thing that my commanding
officer told me not to ask about, he was like, never ask the general about his family.
I'm a family guy. So as soon as I met General Patreus, one of the first things I asked him was,
hey, what was it like raising a family
and being the commander of forces in the Middle East? You weren't with your family very much.
And the thing I love about the guy, he didn't bite off my head, he didn't snap at me, he didn't do
anything. He openly admitted that he regretted some of the decisions that he made because he had
to sacrifice his family to get there. Relationships with his children, absentee father,
missing birthdays, missing, we all say,
we all say how sad it is to miss birthdays and miss
anniversaries, yeah, yeah, yeah,
everybody knows what that feels like.
Even if business people know what that feels like,
the actual pain that we're talking about is when you're not there
to handle your 13 year olds questions
when a boy breaks up with her, or what you're not there to handle your 13 year old's questions when a boy breaks up with her or what you're when you're not there to handle
The bloody lip that your nine year old comes back with from their first encounter with a bully
Those are the truly heartbreaking moments that a parent
Lives and dies by he missed
Almost all of those because he was fighting a war that we forgot and we gave up on 20 years later, right? It's
He's so honest about that and it was really
Inspiring to me to be told not to ask that question and when I broke that guidance
He didn't recommend me. He just he was authentic and it was absolutely one of the big decisions that helped me leave CIA on my own in
2014 and he was honest on the sacrifice
You make the same man the same man who just taught me a lesson about
letting a myth
Live that same guy was willing to be so authentic about this personal
mistake I like complicated people like that
So what did you, what do you make of that
calculation, a family versus job? You've given a lot of your life and passion to the CIA,
to that work. You spoke positively about that world, the good it does.
And yet you also family man, you value that. What's that calculation?
Like what's that trade off of?
I mean, for me the calculation is very clear.
It's family.
I left CIA because I chose my family.
And when my son was born, my wife and I found out
that we were pregnant while we were still on mission.
We were a tandem couple.
My wife is also a former CIA officer under cover like me.
We were operating together overseas.
We got the positive pregnancy tests,
like so many people do.
And she cried.
My wife was a badass.
I was just, I was like the accidental spy,
but my wife was really good at what she does.
And she cried and she was like, what do we do now?
Like it's what we've always wanted, a child,
but we're in this thing right now.
There's no space for a child.
So long story short, we had our baby,
we see I brought us back to have the baby.
And when we started having conversations about,
hey, what do we do next?
Because we're not the type of people to want to just sit around and be domestic. What do we do next?
But keep in mind, we have a child now. So here's some of our suggestions. We could do this and we can
do that. Let us get our child to a place where we can put them into an international school or we can
get them into some sort of program where we have
the, we can both operate together again during the day.
But CIA just had no, they had no patience for that conversation.
There was no, family is not their priority.
So the fact that we were a tandem couple, two officers, two operators trying to have a
baby was irrelevant to them. So when they didn't
play with us, when they did nothing to help us prioritize parenthood as part of our overall
experience, that's when we knew that they never would. And what good is it to commit yourself
to a career, if the career is always going to challenge the thing that you value most.
And that was the calculation that we made to leave CIA,
not everybody makes that calculation.
And a big part of why I am so vocal about my time at CIA is because I am immensely appreciative of the men and women who to this day have failed marriages and poor relationships with their children because they chose national security.
They chose protecting America over their own family.
And they've done it, even though it's made them abuse alcohol
and abuse substances and they've gotten themselves,
they've got permanent diseases and issues
from living and working abroad.
It's just insane the sacrifice that officers make to keep America free.
And I'm just not one of those people I chose family.
You said that your wife misses it.
Do you miss it?
We both miss it.
We miss it for different reasons.
We miss it for similar reasons, I guess, but we miss it in different ways.
The people, the people at CIA are just amazing.
They're people that, they're everyday people, like the guy in the gown next door, but so smart
and so dedicated and so courageous about what they do and how they do it.
I mean, the sacrifices they make are massive.
More massive than the sacrifices I made, so I was always inspired and impressed by the people around me. So both my wife and I
absolutely miss the people. My wife misses the work because you know everything. When you're inside,
it's all, I mean, we had we had top secret. We had TSSCI clearances at the time. I had a cat six,
cat 12, which makes me nuclear cleared. My wife had other privy clearances that allowed her to look into areas that were specialized.
But there wasn't a headline that went out that we couldn't fact-check with a click of a
few buttons.
And she misses that because she loved that kind of novel.
Now you're just one of us living in the cloud of mystery,
exactly, knowing anything about what's going on.
Exactly, but for me, I've always been the person
that likes operating.
And you know what you still get to do
when you leave CIA, you still get to operate.
Operating is just working with people.
It's understanding how people think,
predicting their actions, driving their direction
of their thoughts, persuading them,
winning negotiations.
It's, you still get to do that.
You do that every day.
And you can apply that in all kinds of domains.
Well, let me ask you on that, you were a covert CIA intelligence officer for several years.
Maybe can you tell me the story of how it all began, how you recruited and what did the job
entail to the degree you can speak about it?
Feel free to direct me if I'm getting too boring or if the every aspect of this super
excited.
So I was leaving the United States Air Force in 2007.
I was a lieutenant getting ready to pin on captain.
My five years was up and I was a very bad fit for the US Air Force.
I was an Air Force Academy graduate, not by choice, but by lack of opportunity,
lack of options otherwise.
So I forced myself through the Academy, barely graduated with a 2.4 GPA,
and then went on the Air Force taught me how to fly,
and then the Air Force taught me about nuclear weapons, and I ended up as a nuclear missile commander in Montana, and I chose
to leave the Air Force because I didn't like shaving my face.
I didn't like having short hair, and I most definitely didn't like shining my shoes.
And I did not want to be one of the people in charge of nuclear weapons.
So when I found myself as a person in charge of 200 nuclear weapons,
I knew that I was going down the wrong road.
I have questions about this,
and more importantly, I have questions about your hair.
So you had short hair at the time?
I had, yeah, you have to.
Military regulations, you can't have hair longer
than one inch.
Okay.
And this, the beautiful hair you know,
that came to be in the CIA or after.
This, so I discovered I had messy hair in CIA because I used to I used to go
muge. We called it muge. I used to go muge a Hadin style big,
burly beard and crazy wacky hair. Yeah. Because an
ambiguously brown guy with a big beard and long hair can go anywhere in the
world without anyone even noticing him. They either think
that he's a janitor or they think that he's like some forgotten part of history, but nobody ever
thinks that that guy is a spy. So it was the perfect for me. It was one of my favorite disguises,
it's what's known as a level two disguise. One of my favorite disguises to Don was just
Disguises, it's what's known as a level two disguise. One of my favorite disguises to Don was just
dilapidated brown guy
Can you actually just take a million tangy? What's the level of people's skies?
What's what's what are the different levels of disguise? What are the disguises? Yeah, there's three levels of disguise By and large level one is what we also know what we also call light disguise
So that's essentially you put on sunglasses and a ball cap and and that's a disguise you look different than you normally look.
So it's just different enough that someone who's never seen you before someone who literally has to see you just from a picture on the internet.
They may not recognize you. That's why you see celebrities walk around with ball caps and oversized jackets and baseball
hats because they just need to not look like they look in the tabloid or not look like they
look in TV.
That's level one.
Let me jump from level one to level three.
Level three is all of your prosthetics.
All the stuff you see in mission impossible.
Your fake ears, your fake faces, your fat suits, your stilts inside your leg, your feet, all that's level three.
Whenever they make any kind of prosthetic disguise, that's a level three disguise because prosthetics
are very damning if you are caught with a prosthetic.
If you're caught wearing a sudden, wearing a baseball hat and sunglasses, nobody's going
to say you're a spy.
But when you're caught with a custom made, you know, nose prosthetic that changes the way
your face looks or when someone pops out a fake jaw and they see that your top teeth
don't look like they did in this prosthetic, then all of a sudden you've got some very
difficult questions to ask or to answer.
So level three is extremely dangerous, level one is not dangerous.
Level two is long term disguise.
Level two is all the things that you can do
to permanently change the way you look for a long period of time
so that whether you're agressed in the street
or whether someone breaks into your hotel room or whatever,
it's real.
So maybe that's, maybe you get a tattoo.
Maybe you cut your hair short.
Maybe you grow your hair long.
Maybe you go bald.
Maybe you start wearing glasses. Well you cut your hair short. Maybe you grow your hair long. Maybe you go bald. Maybe you start wearing glasses.
Well, glasses are technically a prosthetic,
but you can, if you have teeth pulled,
if you gain 20 pounds,
really gain 20 pounds or lose 15 pounds,
whatever you might do,
all of that's considered level two.
It's designed for a long-term mission
so that people believe you are who you say you are in that disguise.
A lot of that is physical characteristics. What about like, you know, what actors do,
which is the method acting? Yeah, the method acting sort of developing a backstory in your
own mind and then you start, you know, pretending that you host the podcast and teach it to
the university and then do research and so on just so that people can believe that you're
not actually an agent.
Is that part of the disguise levels or no?
So yes, disguise has to do with physical character traits.
That's what a disguise is.
What you're talking about is known as a cover legend when you go undercover.
What you claim to be, who you claim to be.
That's called your legend, your cover legend.
Every disguise would theoretically have its own cover legend.
Even if it's just to describe why you're wearing what you're wearing, it's all a cover.
So the method acting, this is a fantastic point that I don't get to make very often.
So I'm glad you asked. The difference between CIA officers in the field and method actors
is that method actors try to become the character. They try to shed all vestiges of who they
really are and become the character. And that's part of what makes them so amazing. But
it's also part of what makes them mentally unstable
over long periods of time.
It's part of what feeds their depression, their anxiety, their personal issues, because
they lose sight of who they really are.
Field officers don't get that luxury.
We have to always, always remember.
We are a covert CIA intelligence officer collecting secrets in the field.
We have to remember that. So we're taught a very specific skill to compartmentalize
our true self separately, but make that true self
the true identity.
So then we can still live and act and effectively
carry out our cover legend without ever losing sight,
without ever losing that compass true north of who we actually are.
And then we can compartmentalize and secure all the information that we need, retain it, remember it,
but then return to our true self when we get back to a position of safety.
Is it possible to do that?
I just have kind of anecdotal evidence for myself.
I really try to be the exact same person in all conditions,
which makes it very easy.
Like if you're not lying, it makes it very easy to,
first of all, to exist,
but also to communicate a kind of authenticity
and ingenuiveness, which I think is really important.
Like trust and integrity around trust
is extremely important to me.
It's the thing that opens doors and maintains relationships.
And I tend to think like when I was in Ukraine,
so many doors just open to the very high security areas
and everywhere else too,
like I've just interacted with some incredible people
without any kind of concerns, you know, who's this guy?
Is he going to spread it in?
You know, all that kind of stuff.
And I tend to believe that you're able to communicate a trustworthiness somehow if you
just are who you are.
And I think, I suppose, method actors are trying to achieve that by becoming something. And they can, I just feel like there is very subtle cues that
extremely difficult to fake.
Like you really have to become that person, be that person.
But you're saying as a CIA agent, you have to remember that you are there to
collect information.
Do you think that gives you away?
So one of the flaws in your argument is that you are there to collect information, do you think that gives you a way? So one of the flaws in your argument
is that you keep referring to how you feel.
I feel this, I feel that, I feel like this,
I feel like that.
That feeling is a predictable,
character trait of all human beings.
It's a pink matter, we call it pink matter,
it's a cognitive trait.
You are not alone in trusting your feelings, all people trust their feelings, but because
what CIA teaches us is how to systematically create artificial relationships, where we're
the one in control of the source that is giving us intelligence, and the core element to being able to control the relationship
is understanding the pink matter truth of feelings.
What all people feel becomes their point of view on what reality is.
So when you understand and you learn how to manipulate what people feel, then you can essentially
direct them to feel anyway you want them to feel.
So if you want them to feel like they can trust you, you can make them feel that way. If you want them to feel like you're a good guy or a bad
guy, if you want them to feel like they should give you secrets, even though their government
tells them not to, you can do that. There are men who make women feel like they love
them and just so that the woman will sleep with them. There are women who make men feel
like they love them, just so the men will give them their money. Manipulation is a core behavioral trait of all the human species, because we all understand
to some level how powerful feelings are, but feelings are not the same thing as logical
rational thought.
They're two different sides of the brain.
What CIA teaches us how to do is systematically tap into the right side, emotional side of
the brain, so that we can quickly get past all
of the stuff you were just saying. All of the, well, don't you have to be convincing and don't
you have to really know your story and don't you have to be able to defend it. Don't you have
to have authenticity and don't you have to have genuine feelings. Yes, all of those things are
true if you're having a genuine relationship, but in an artificial relationship, there's ways to bypass all of that and get right to the heart of making
someone feel comfortable and safe.
I guess the question I'm asking and the thing I was implying is that creating an artificial
relationship was an extremely difficult skill to accomplish the level like, how good I am at being me and creating a feeling in another person that
I create for you to do that artificially. That's got to be, you got to be, my sense is you
got to be really damn good at it. I would venture to say, I mean, I don't know how to measure
how difficult the thing is, but especially when you're
communicating with people whose job depends on forming trusting relationships, they're
going to smell bullshit.
And to get past that bullshit detector is tough, it's a tough skill.
Well, it's interesting.
So I would say that, or maybe I'm wrong actually on that,
I would say that once you understand the system,
it's not that hard, it makes a lot of sense.
But I would also say that to your exact point,
you are right that people smell bullshit,
people smell bullshit.
But here's the thing, if you come in smelling like,
goat shit, you still smell like shit,
but you don't smell like bullshit.
So they don't count you out right away.
And if you come in smelling like rotten tomatoes,
or if you come in smelling like lavender,
or if you come in smelling like vanilla,
or if you come in without any smell at all,
all that matters is that you don't smell like bullshit.
Here's the thing that's one of the secret sauces of CIA.
When you look and act like a spy, people think you're a spy.
If you look and act in any other way,
you know what they never ever think you are?
A spy.
They might think you're an idiot, they might think you're a,
they might think you're trailer trash,
they might think that you're a migrant worker,
but they never think you're a spy.
And that's what's that lesson in everyday life
is immensely powerful.
If you're trying to take your boss's job,
as long as you don't ever look like the employee
who's trying to take the boss's job,
the boss is focused on all the employees
who are trying to take his job.
Everybody's prioritizing whether they know it or not.
The goal is to just not be the one that they're targeting
Target them without them knowing you're targeting them. So people just
When they meet you they put you in a bin and
If you want to avoid being put in a particular bin, just don't act like the person that will be
Just show some kind of characteristics that've been you in some other way. Exactly right. You have to be in a bin. Just choose the bin
All right. So, you knowing these methods,
when you talk to people, especially in civilian life,
how do you know who's lying to you and not?
That gets to be more into the trained skill side of things.
There's body cues, there's micro expressions.
I'm not a big fan of, I don't believe that micro expressions alone do anything.
I also don't believe that micro expressions without an effective baseline do anything.
So don't for a second think that I'm, all the people out there pitching that you can tell
if someone's lying to you just by looking at their face, it's all, it's all baloney.
In my world, that's baloney.
Like the way you move your eyes is something like that.
Without knowing a baseline, without knowing for that individual,
then you actually don't know.
And an individual's baseline is based on education,
culture, life experience, you name it, right?
So this is huge.
But when you combine facial expressions
with body movements, body language, nonverbal cues,
and you add on top of that effective
elicitation techniques that you are in control of.
Now you have a more robust platform
to tell if someone's lying to you.
So there's a set of interrogation trajectories
you can go down, they can help you figure out a person.
Technically, their interview, interview,
like this concept.
Correct.
Because an interrogation, an interrogation is something very different than an interview. technically their interview, interview, like this concept. Correct.
Because an interrogation, an interrogation
is something very different than an interview.
And in the world of professionals,
an interrogation is very different.
What's the difference?
The nature of how relaxed the thing is or what?
So in an interrogation, there's a clear pattern of dominance.
There's no equality.
Also, there's no escape.
You are there until the interrogator is done with you, right?
Anybody who's ever been reprimanded by mom and dad knows what an interrogation
feels like. Anybody who's ever been called into the principal's office or the boss's
office, that's what interrogation feels like. You don't leave until the boss says you can
leave. And you're there to say to answer questions, the boss asks questions. In interview,
is an equal exchange of ideas. You are in control of this interview, for sure. But if
we were having coffee, I could take control
if I wanted to take control.
If I wanted to ask you personal questions I would,
if I wanted to talk to you about your background,
I could, why am I in control of this interview exactly?
Because the person in control is the person asking questions.
I'm sitting here as you've spoken about,
my power here is I'm the quiet one listening finger.
You're exactly right.
Guess where this conversation goes?
Anywhere you choose to take it because you're the one asking questions.
Every time I answer a question, I'm creating a pattern of obedience to you,
which subliminally subconsciously makes me that much more apt to answer your questions.
Of course, you can always turn that and ask me questions.
You know, so you, but you're saying that there's through this
conversation you can call it interviewing, you can start to see cracks in the story of the
person and the degree to which they exaggerate or lie or to see how much they could be trusted, that kind
of stuff.
What I'm saying is that through a conversation, you develop a baseline, right?
Like even just in the last, the last, the first part of our conversation, we've been able
to create some baseline elements about you.
You've been able to create baseline elements about me.
Maybe they're just not a front of mind.
From those baselines, now we can push through more intentional questions
to test, got it, to test whether or not the person is being truthful because they're operating
within their baseline, or if you are triggering sensitivities outside of their baseline, and then
you can start to see their tells as fast as yeah, baseline, like even like, yeah, the tells, right?
The eye contact, like you've probably already formed
baseline that I have trouble making eye contact.
And so like, so if you ask me difficult questions
and I'm not making eye contact,
maybe that's not a good signal of me lying
or whatever, because I always have trouble making eye contact.
Stuff like that, that's really fascinating.
The majority of your eye movement is to the right.
Yeah, my, your right, my left, right?
Which is usually someone who's, if you ask micro expressionists, that's someone who's referencing fact.
That's not necessarily what's happening for you because you're pulling concepts out
of the air.
So it's also a place that you reference something other than fact.
It's a place for you to find creativity.
So if I just thought that you were lying because you look up into the right, I would be
wrong.
That's so fascinating.
And a lot of that has to do with like habits that are formed and all those kinds of things.
Or maybe some right hand, left hand type of situation.
White eye dominance.
Yeah, right.
I'm just going to make you look to the right.
Is this a science or an art?
It's a bit of both.
I would say that like all good art, art is taught from a foundation of skills.
And those skills are plated, are taught in a very structured manner. And then
the way that you use the skills after that, that's more of the artistic grace. So I've always
called espionage and art, spying as an art, being able to hack human beings is an art, but
it's all based in a foundation of science. You still have to learn how to mix the color palette and use certain brushes.
Do you think of that as a kind of the study of human psychology?
Is that what a psychologist does or a psychiatrist?
From this process, have you learned about human nature?
Human nature.
I suppose the answer to that could be a book, but it probably will be a book.
I'll say it.
I'll say it.
I'll say it.
I'll say it.
But is there, is there things that are surprising about human nature, surprising to us civilians
that you could speak to?
Yes.
One thing is extremely surprising about human nature, which is funny because that's not
the answer I would have said.
So I'm glad that you clarified this specific question.
The thing that's surprising about human nature is that human beings long, like in their soul, there's like a painful longing to be with other people.
people. And that's really surprising because we all want to pretend like we're strong, we all want to pretend like we're, you know, independent, we all want to pretend like we
are the masters of our destiny. But what's truly consistent in all people is this like longing
to commune with others like us. My, my more practical answer about what I've learned to be the truth is that
people, human nature is predictable. And that predictability is what gives people an incredible
advantage over other people. But that's not the surprising piece. I mean, even when CIA taught
me that human nature is predictable, it just made sense. I was like, oh, yeah, that makes sense.
But what I never ever anticipated was
no matter where I've been in the world, no matter who I've talked to, no matter what
socio-economic bracket is that longing, man, it hurts. Loneliness sucks.
And togetherness feels good, even if you're together with someone you know isn't the right person.
It still feels better than being alone.
I mean, that's such a deep truth you speak it. And I could talk about that for a long
time. There is, I mean, through these conversations, in general, whether it's being recorded or
not, I hunger to discover in the other person that longing, you strip away the other things.
And then you share in the longing for that
connection. And I particularly also detected that in people from all walks of life, including
people that others might identify as evil or hard as completely cold. It's there. It's there. They've hardened themselves in their search.
And who knows what dark place their brain is in, their heart is in, but that longing is still there.
Even if it's an Ember, it's there. It's the reason why in World War I and World War II,
It's the reason why in World War I and World War II,
you know, enemy combatants still shared cigarettes on the front lines,
you know, during periods of holidays or bad weather or whatever else, because that human connection, man, it triumphs overall.
See, that's in part of what I refer to when I say love,
because I feel like if, if like political leaders and people in
conflict that the small scale and the large scale were able to tune into that
longing to seek in each other that basic longing for human connection a lot of
problems could be solved. But of course, it's difficult because it's a game of chicken.
If you open yourself up to reveal that longing for connection with others, people can hurt you.
Well, I would go a step further and I would say that taking the connection away, punishing,
the connection away, punishing, penalizing people by removing the connection is a powerful tool. And that's what we see. That's why we send people to jail. That's why we put economic
sanctions on countries. That's why we ground our children and send them to their rooms.
We are penalizing them, whether we know it or not, we're using punitive damage by taking away that basic human connection that longing for for community.
What was your recruitment process and training process and things you could speak to in the CIA?
As I was leaving the Air Force, all that was on my mind, I don't know what you were like
at 27, but I was a total tip shit at 27.
I'm not much better now at 42, but you owe me, but I was like, I just wanted to be anything
other than a military officer.
So I was actually in the process of applying to the Peace Corps through this thing called the internet, which was still fairly rudimentary in 2007.
I had a computer lab that we went to and it had 10 computers in it.
You had to log in and log out and slow internet and everything else.
But anyways, I was filling out an online application to go work in the US Peace Corps.
I wanted to grow my hair out.
I wanted to stop wearing shoes that were shiny.
I wanted to meet a hippie chick and have hippie babies in the wild teaching Nigerian children how to
read. So that was the path I was going down. And as I filled in all of my details, there came this
page that popped up and it was this blinking red page and it said, stop here, you may qualify for other government positions.
If you're willing to put your application on hold for 72 hours,
that gives us a chance to reach out to you.
So again, 27-year-old dipshit, I was like, sure, I'll put myself on hold.
If I'm my qualify for other government opportunities,
and then about a day later, I got a phone call from an almost
unlisted number.
It just said 703, which was very strange to see
on my flip phone at the time, just one 703 area code.
And I picked it up and it was a person
from Northern Virginia asking me if I would be telling me
that I was qualified for a position in national security.
And if I would be interested, they'll pay for my ticket
and fly me up to Langley, Virginia.
They didn't say CIA, they said Langley,
I put one on one together and I was like,
maybe this is CIA.
Yeah, this could, how cool is this?
Yeah, yeah.
Or maybe this is all make believe and this is totally fake.
So either way, it doesn't hurt me at all to say yes.
They already have my phone number.
So yes, yes, yes.
And then I, I remember thinking, there's no way that happened.
And this isn't real.
And then a day later, I got a FedEx or an overnight delivery of an airplane
ticket and a hotel reservation and a rental car reservation.
And then I just kept doing the next thing, which I found out later on as a form of
control. You just do the next thing that they tell you to do.
And then before I knew it, I was interviewing in a non-descript building with a person who only told me their first name
for a position with the National Clandestine Service. So you never really got a chance to think
about it because there's a small steps along the way and it kind of just leads you
and your maybe your personalities such that that's an adventure. It's an adventure and you don't because it's one step at a time, you don't
necessarily see the negative consequences of the adventure, you don't think about
and you know that you're just stepping on stepping into the adventure. And it's easy, there's no work
involved. Somebody else is doing all the work telling me where to be and when, it's a lot like
basic training in the military. Anybody who's ever been through basic training will tell you.
They hated the first few days and then by the end, it was really comforting because
you just did what you were told. They told you when to eat, they made the decision of what to eat,
then you just, you marched when they told you to march,
shine your shoes when they told you to shine your shoes.
Human beings love being told what to do.
What about the training process for becoming a covert J agent?
Yeah, so the interview process is...
Yeah, the interview process, too.
Was that how rigorous was that?
It was very rigorous.
That was where it became difficult.
Everything up to the first interview was easy, but there's three interviews.
And some people are lucky enough to have four or five interviews if something goes wrong
or something goes awry with the first few interviews.
And again, this might be dated from when I went through.
But during the interview process is when they start, they do your psychological evaluations,
they do your personality assessments, they do skills assessments,
they'll start sending you back to your,
wherever you're living with assignments,
not intel assignments, but actual like homework assignments.
Write an essay about three parts of the world
that you think will be most impacted
in the next three to five years,
or prioritize the top three
strategic priorities for the United States and put it into 250 words or 2,500 words and
whatever else, double spaced in this font, super specific stuff that's kind of stressful,
but it's just like going back to college again.
So you go through all of those acts and then you submit this stuff to some PO box that doesn't
have anybody that's ever going to respond to you.
Then you hope.
You just send it into the ether and you hope that you sent it right.
You hope that you wrote well enough.
You hope that your assessment was right, whatever else it might be.
Then eventually get another phone call.
It says, hey, we received your package.
You've been moved to the next level of interview.
Now we need to go to this other non-descript building and this other non-descript city. And then you start meeting,
you start sitting in waiting rooms with other groups of people who are at the same phase
of interview with you, which were some of the coolest experiences that I remember still.
One of my best friends to this day, who I don't get to talk to because he's still undercover,
is a guy I met during those interview processes. And I was like, oh, we met and I saw what he was
wearing. He saw what I was wearing. I was brown.
So you're immediately connected and you like the people there.
Close. More like we immediately judge each other because we're all untrained. Right. So
he looked at me and he was like, brown dude with crazy hair and I was wearing dude I was
dressed like a total ass. I was dressed in like a clubbing shirt
Yeah, I don't know why I thought we could idea to go to CIA interview in like a clubbing shirt with my buttons on button down here
Yeah, and he was like yeah, you were really after we would get in he was like yeah, did you were always really cool to talk to but I was like
There's no way that idiot's getting in and I remember looking at him being like dude
You were just another white guy in a black suit. Yeah. They're not looking for you.
Yeah.
But here you are.
Yeah.
So it was just those kinds of things
were so interesting because we were totally wrong
about what CIA was looking for.
Until you're in, you have no idea what they're looking for.
And you're just shooting the dark.
Did they have you do a like a lie detector test?
Yes.
It's called a polygraph.
Polygraph.
How effective, just interesting,
or our previous discussion. How effective are those? Polygraph. How effective, just interesting, there are previous discussions.
How effective are those?
Polygraphs are really interesting.
So one of the things that people don't understand
about polygraphs is that polygraphs aren't meant
to detect a lie.
Like they're called a lie detector,
but they're not actually meant to detect a lie.
They're built to detect variance
from your physiological baseline.
So they're essentially meant to identify sensitivities
to certain types of questions.
And then as they identify a sensitivity to a question,
it gives the interviewer an additional piece of information
to direct the next round of questions.
So then from there they can kind of see
how sensitive you are to a certain level of questions.
And your sensitivity could be a sign of dishonesty,
but it could also be a sign of dishonesty, but it could also be a
sign of vulnerability. So the interrogator themselves, the interviewer themselves, they're
the one that have to make the judgment call us to which one it is, which is why you might
see multiple interviewers over the course of multiple polygraphs. But that's really what
they're all about. So, I mean, outside of they're extremely uncomfortable, what they're all about. I mean, outside of, they're extremely uncomfortable.
They're mentally uncomfortable, but then there's also, you sit on a pad because the pad
is supposed to be able to tell your body movements, but also your sphincter contractions or
whatever.
So you're sitting on this pad, you're plugged in, you're strapped in, you're tied up,
and it takes so much time to get in there.
Then they started asking you questions, baseline questions at first, and then other questions from there.
And you're just answering the best you can.
And you never know what they're seeing,
and you don't know what they're doing.
And it's really hard not to get anxious of that anyways.
And then the whole time monitoring the readings.
Yeah, from like a big, they've got multiple screens,
and they've got just, it's all information superiority.
They have information superiority.
You're the idiot looking away from them, or sideways of them and trying not to move because you're afraid that if you like have gas or if you move a little bit, it's going to vary you from your baseline.
And the whole time you're worried your heart's racing and your blood pressure is increasing, which is a variance from baseline.
So yeah, that means it's it's an interesting art or your baseline. Correct. Maybe there's some people that are just chilling all the time. And that's their baseline.
Right.
Right.
But that's what they're doing.
They're establishing a baseline.
I mean, I guess that means the polygraph is a skill that you develop to do it well.
So when people talk about beating a lie detector, it's not that they're telling an effective lie.
That's not hard.
It's not hard to tell a lie to an interviewer.
What, and the interviewer doesn't care
if you're being honest or not honest about a topic,
what they're looking for is sensitivity.
If they see no sensitivity, that's a big sign for them.
That's a big sign that you're probably a pathological liar.
If you show sensitivity to many things,
then that's a sign that you're probably an anxious person.
And they can still reset their baseline because they can tell how your anxiety is increasing,
you know, in 15 minute increments.
It's a unique skill.
I mean, a really good polygrapher is immensely valuable.
But the, yeah, it's the misnomer, the misconceptions about polygraphs are vast.
You also mentioned personality tests.
That's really interesting.
So how how effective
a personality tests one for the hiring process, but also for understanding a human being.
So personality is extremely important for understanding human being. And I would say that there's
a thousand different ways of looking at personality. The only one that I count with any with
any significance is the MBTI. And the MBTI is what all the leading spy agencies around the
world use as well. Well, that's kind of interesting to hear. Oh, yeah, there's been
criticisms of that kind of test. There have been criticisms for a long time. Yeah,
and you think there's value. Absolutely. Absolutely. And here's there's a few
reasons why, right? So first MBTI makes the claim that your core personality
doesn't change over time. And that's how it's that's how it's calibrated. And one of the big arguments is that people say that your personality can change over time. And that's how it's calibrated.
And one of the big arguments is that people say
that your personality can change over time.
Now, in my experience, the MBTI is exactly correct.
Your core personality does not change
because your core personality is defined as your personality
when all resources are removed.
So essentially, your emergency mode,
your dire conditions, that is your core personality.
We can all act a little more extroverted.
We can all be a little more empathetic
when we have tons of time and money in patients.
When you strip away all that time, money in patients,
how empathetic are you?
How much do you like being around other people? How much do you like being around other people?
How much do you like being alone? Do you make judgments or do you analyze information? That's
what's so powerful about MBTI. It's talking about what people are like when you strip away resources.
And then, because it's so consistent, it's also only four codes. It's super easy to be able to
assess a human being through a dialogue, through a series of conversations,
to be able to hone in with high accuracy what is there for code, for letter code. There's only
16 options and it becomes extremely valuable. Is it perfectly precise and does everybody do it the
same? I mean, those things are, their answers to those are no. But is it operationally useful in a short period of time?
That is a resoundingly powerful yes.
Yeah, I just, I only know, I think the first letter
is introverted and extroverted, right?
Yep.
I've taken the test before just like a crude version of the test.
And that's the same problem you have with IQ tests.
Yeah.
There's the right thorough way of doing it.
And there's like fun internet way.
And I do mind sharing what your personality,
my type index.
Yes.
I'm an ENTP.
That's an extrovert, Intuitive, Perceiver,
thinker, ENT, thinker, Pee Perceiver.
My wife is an ISFJ, which is the polar opposite of me.
E, I'm extroverted, she's introverted,
I'm an Intuitive, she's a sensor,
I'm a thinker, she's a feeler,
I'm a Perceiver, she's a judge.
Is there good science on like long term,
successful relationships in terms of the dynamics of that,
the 16, I wonder if there's good data on this?
I don't, I don't think there's a lot of good data
in personalities writ large because there's not
a lot of money to be made in personality testing,
but I would say that there's that with experience with a good MBTI test,
with a good paid test, a 400-500 question test,
once you understand your own code,
and then you're taught how to assess the code of others.
With those two things kind of combined,
because then you have experience and learning,
it becomes very useful and you can have high confidence
in the conclusions that you reach about people's professions,
about people's relationships with family,
about people's relationships professionally,
people's capabilities to deal with stress,
how people will perform when pushed outside of their comfort zones,
really, really powerful useful stuff in corporate world
and in the espionage world.
So in terms of compressed representation of another human being,
you can't do much better than those four letters.
I don't believe you can do much better.
In my experience, I have not seen anything better.
Yeah, it is kind of, it's difficult to realize
that there is a core personality or the degree
that's true, it seems to be true. It's even more difficult to realize that there is a stable,
or at least the science, a stable, consistent intelligence, unfortunately,
you know, the G factor that they call, that if you do a barrage of IQ test, that's going to
consistently represent that G factor and we're all born with that and we can't fix it. Yeah, that defines so much of who we are.
It's sad. I don't see it as sad because it's for me the faster you learn it the faster you learn what your own
sort of natural strengths and weaknesses are.
The faster you get to stop wasting time, yeah, on things that you're never going to be good at,
and you get to double down on the things that you're already naturally skilled or interested in.
So there's always a silver lining to a cloud, but I know now that I will never be a ballerina,
or a ballerino. I know that I'll never be an artist. I'll never be a musician
I'll never be any of those things and when I was 18 that might have made me sad
But now at 42 I'm like, well shit awesome. I can go be something else good
Why do you always being bad? You're not gonna be a ballerina
I know because I'm not graceful and you've you've learned the years of experience. Yeah, exactly. Well, I don't know if
there's an MBTI equivalent for grace of movement. I think it's
called S sensor. Oh, yeah, because a sensor is someone who's
able to interact with the world around them through their
five senses very effectively. Like, if you talk to dancers,
dancers can actually feel the grace in all of their muscles.
They know what position their finger is in.
I don't have any idea.
I don't know what position my feet are in right now.
I had to look to make sure I actually feel the floor right.
Yeah, I definitely have.
Oh, that's good to know.
So I don't, you know, I'm not a dancer,
but I do have that as a musician, man.
Like, to be able to play guitar.
Yeah, that's true.
That there is that physical component
but I think deeper because there's a technical aspect to that that's just like it's less about
feel but I do know Jiu Jitsu you know and grappling done all my life I don't you know there's some
people who are clumsy and they drop stuff all the time they they run into stuff. I don't, first of all, I don't know how that happens, but to me, I just have an awareness
of stuff.
Like, if there's a little orientation.
Yeah, like, I know that there's a small object, I have to step over and I have a good sense
of that.
It's so interesting.
Yeah, you're just like born with that or something.
My wife is brilliant.
And she still walks into doors.
Yeah.
I mean, she'll walk in a doorway
She'll bang her knee on the same wall. It's been there for the last 50 years. It's it's for some reason really hilarious
That's good for
You've been asked I think on
Reddit are there big secrets that you know that could lend you and our country in terrible trouble if he came out to the public and you answered
Yes, I wish I could forget them. So let me ask you just about secrecy in general. Are these
secrets or just other secrets? Ones that the public will never know or will it come out in
10, 20, 50 years? I guess the deeper question is, what is the value of secrecy?
Yeah, so...
And transparency.
The standard classification for all human intelligence operations
is something called 2, 5x2, 25x2, so 50 years, 25 years times 2 rounds.
So, in essence, anything that I've seen
has the first chance of becoming
public domain declassified after 50 years, unless there's some congressional
requirement for it to be reviewed and assessed earlier. So by then, you know,
I'll be 80 something years older or potentially dead, which is either way,
that's when it's it can come out according to its typical classification.
The value of secrets I have seen is that secrets create space. Secrets give opportunity
for security, they give opportunity for thinking, they give space, and space is an incredibly
advantageous thing to have.
If you know something, somebody else doesn't know,
even if it's just 15 or 20 minutes different,
you can direct, you can change the course of fate.
So I find secrets to be extremely valuable,
extremely useful.
Even at the place where secrets are being kept
from a large mass, part of what all Americans
need to understand is that one of the trade-offs to building a system of government that allows
us to be first world and wealthy and secure and successful, one of the trade-offs is that
we have given up a great deal of personal freedom.
And one of the personal freedoms that we give up
is the freedom of knowing what we want to know.
You get to know what the government tells you,
you get to know what you need to know
or what you've learned yourself,
but you don't get to know secrets.
People who do get to know secrets know them for a reason.
That's why it's called a need to know.
How difficult is it to maintain secrecy?
It's surprisingly difficult as technology changes.
It's also surprisingly difficult as our culture becomes one where people want notoriety.
People want to be the person who breaks the secret.
25 years ago, 40 years ago, that wasn't the case.
There was a time in the United States where if someone gave you a secret,
it was a point of personal honor not to share the secret.
Now we're in a place where if someone tells you a secret,
like that could turn into a Twitter post that gets you a bunch of thumbs up
and a bunch of likes or whatever else.
It's an opportunity.
Right, so the value of secrets has changed.
And now there's almost a greater value on exposing secrets else. It's an opportunity. Right. So the value of secrets has changed.
And now there's almost a greater value on exposing secrets than there is on keeping secrets.
That makes it difficult to keep secrets, especially when technology is going in the same direction.
Yeah.
Where is the line?
And by the way, I'm one of those old school people with the secrets.
I think it's a karma thing.
Again, back to the trust. I think it's a karma thing.
Again, back to the trust.
I think in the short term, you can benefit by sharing a secret.
But in the long term, if people know they can trust you, like the juicy of the secret,
it's a test of sorts.
If they know you can keep that secret, that means like you're somebody that can be trusted.
And I believe that like not just effectiveness in this life,
but happiness in this life is informing a circle of people you can trust.
Right.
We're taught that secrets and lies are similar in that they have a limited
shelf life.
If you treat them like food, secrets and lies have a very limited shelf life.
So if you cash in on them while they're still fresh,
you beat them before they spoil. You get to take the advantage, take advantage from before they
spoil. However, trust has no limit to its shelf life. So it's almost like you're trading a short
term victory and losing a long term victory. It's always better to keep the secret. It's always better to let the lie live
because it will eventually come to light from somebody else, not from you because it already has a
limited shelf life. But what you win in exchange for not being the one that cashed in on the secret
is immense trust. Let me ask you about lying and trust and so on.
So I don't believe I've been contacted by or interacted with the CIA, the MI6, the FSB,
Masad or any other intelligence agency.
I'm kind of offended.
But would I know if I was?
So from your perspective? No, you would not know if you was, so from your perspective,
no, you would not know if you were.
For sure you've been on their radar.
Absolutely, you've got a file.
You've got a dossier somewhere.
Why would I be on their radar?
Because you're, you're, you're, you're, you're, it's not,
it's not, it's not necessarily that you are interesting
to someone as a born asset or an intelligence collection source.
But your network is extremely interesting.
But network's important.
Correct.
If someone was able to clone your phone, every time you cross a border, you go through
some sort of security.
If you've ever been pulled into secondary and separated from your bag, that's exactly
when and how people clone computers.
They clone phones.
They make whatever. Photocopies of your old school planner, whatever it might be.
But for sure, you are an intelligence target. It just may be that you're not suitable to be
in a person who reports foreign intelligence. We've got to understand that all people are potential
sources of valuable information to the national security infrastructure of our host country and any
country that we visit. Someone like you with your public footprint, with your notoriety, with
your educational background, with your national identifications, becomes a viable and valuable target information. Yeah, so to speak to that, you know, I take security pretty seriously, but not to the degree
that, you know, it runs my life, which I'm very careful about.
It's good.
I'm glad to hear that.
So the moment you start to think about germs, right?
Like you start to freak out and you become sort of paralyzed by the stress of it.
So you have to balance those two things.
If you think about all the things that can hurt you in this world and all the risk you
can take is it can overwhelm your life.
That said, the cyber world is a weird world
because it doesn't have the same.
I know not to cross the street without looking each way
because there's a physical intuition about it.
I'm not sure I'm a computer science guy,
so I have some intuition, but the cyber world,
it's really hard to build up an intuition
what is safe and not.
I've seen a lot of people just logging out of your devices
all the time, like regularly,
just like that physical access step is a lot of people don't take.
I can just like walk into the offices of a lot of CEOs
and it's like why everything's wide open
for physical access of those
systems, which is kind of incredible for somebody, that sounds really shady, but it's not. I've written
keyloggers, like things that record everything you type in the mouse you move. And like, I do that for
during my PhD, I was recording everything you do on your device and everything you do on your computer
to understand, like people sign up to the study, they willingly do this to understand behavior.
I was trying to use machine learning to identify who you are based on different biometric and behavioral things,
which allows me to study human behavior and to see which is uniquely identifiable.
And the goal there was to remove the need for a password.
But the, how easy it is to write a thing that logs everything you type, I was like, wait a minute.
I can probably get a lot of people in the world to run this for me. I can then get all of their
passwords. I mean, you could do so much. Like, I can run the entirety of the CIA for myself.
And I imagine there's a lot of really good hackers like that out there, much better than
me.
So I try to prevent myself from being all the different low hanging fruit attack vectors
in my life.
I try to make it difficult to be that.
But then I'm also aware that there's probably people
that are like five steps ahead.
You're doing the right thing.
What I always advocate is the low hanging fruit
is what keeps you from being a target of opportunity.
Because you're half-assed hackers, you're lazy hackers,
you're unskilled hackers, they're looking
for low-hanging fruit.
They're looking for the person who gets the Nigeria email about how you could be getting
$5 million if you just give me your bank account.
That's what they're looking for.
The thing that's scary is that if you're not a target of opportunity, if you become
a intentional target, then there's almost nothing you can do.
Because once you become an intentional target, then your security apparatus, they will
create a dedicated, customized way vector of attacking your specific security apparatus.
Because security is always after, there's There's always, there's the,
there's the leading advantage and the trailing advantage. When it comes to attacks,
the leader always has the advantage because they have to create the attack before anybody else
can create a way to protect against the attack. So the attack always comes first and that means
they always have the advantage. You are always stuck just leaning on, this is the best security that
I, that I know of.
Meanwhile, there's always somebody who can create a way of attacking the best security out there.
And once they win, they have a monopoly. They have all that time until a new defensive
countermeasure is deployed. Yeah, I tend to think exactly, as you said, that the long-hanging
food protects against, like, yeah, crimes of opportunity.
And then I assume that people can just hack in if they really want.
Think about how much anxiety we would be able to solve if everybody just accepted that.
Well, there's several things you do.
First of all, I, to be honest, it just makes me, it keeps me honest, not to be a douchebag or like not, yeah, to, uh, to, uh,
to assume everything could be public. And, you know, and so don't trade in information
that could hurt people if it was made public. So I tried to do that. And the thing I tried to make sure is a,
like, home alone style, try to have booby traps.
I really would like to know if I was hacked.
Right.
And so I tried to assume that I will be hacked
and detect it.
Yeah.
Have a tripwire or something.
Yeah.
A tripwire is through everything.
And not paranoid, orwire is just like open door,
but I think that's probably the future of life on this earth
is you go, like everybody of interest is going to be hacked.
That hopefully inspires,
now this is outside of company,
there's these are individuals, I mean,
there's of course, if you're actually operating,
like I'm just a scientist, a person,
podcasting person.
So if I was actually running a company or was an integral part of some kind of military
operation, then you have to probably have to have an entire team that's now doing that battle of like
being trying to be ahead of like the best hackers in the world that are attacking. But
that requires a team that like full-time is their focus. And then you still get in trouble.
Correct. Yeah. So what I've seen as the norm, what I've seen is the cutting edge standard for corporations and the ultra wealthy and even
intelligence organizations is that we have tripwires. It's better if you can't prevent from being
hacked, the next best thing is to know as soon as you get hacked because then you can essentially terminate
all the information. If you know it fast enough, you can just destroy the information.
This is what the ultra wealthy do.
They have multiple phones.
So as soon as one phone gets hacked, the tripwire goes off, the operating system is totally
deleted along with all data on the phone.
And a second phone is turned on with a whole new separate set of metadata.
And now for them, there's no break in service.
It's just up this phone went black. It's got a warning on it that says it was hacked. So trash it because they don't
care about the price of the phone, pick up the next phone and we move on. That's the
best thing that you can do, essentially outside of trying to outhack the hackers. And
then even in your intelligence and military worlds where the cyber, where cyber warfare
is active, the people who are aggressing
are not trying to create aggression
that beats security.
They're trying to find aggressive techniques,
offensive techniques that have no security
built around them yet,
because it's too cost and time intensive
to protect against what you know is coming.
It's so much more efficient and cost effective
to go after new vectors.
So it just becomes like,
it becomes a most a silly game of,
of your neighbor gets a guard dog.
So you get a bigger guard dog,
and then your neighbor gets a fence.
So you're just constantly out doing each other.
It's called the security paradigm.
People just, they just one up each other
because it's never worth it to just get to the
same level.
You're always trying to out through each other.
Yeah, and then maybe like banks have to fight that fight, but not everybody can.
Right.
Yeah, no.
So you're saying I operate at the state of the art with the cheerifiers.
This is good to know.
Absolutely, man.
And also just not, not using anybody else's services doing everything myself.
So that's harder to figure out what the heck
this person is doing.
Because if I'm using somebody else's service,
I did with QNAP.
I have a QNAP NAS I use for cold storage
of unimportant things, but a large videos.
And I don't know if you know, but QNAP is a company
that does NAS storage devices and they got hacked and
Everybody that didn't update as of a week ago from the point of the zero day hack
Everybody got hacked. It's several thousand machines and they asked
You can get your data back if you pay I forget forget what it was, but it was about a couple thousand
dollars.
And the QNAP can get all the data back for their customers.
If they pay, I think two million dollars.
But that came for me relying on the systems of others for security.
I assumed this company would have their security handled, but then that was a very valuable
lesson to me.
I now have like layers of security and also an understanding which data is really important,
which is somewhat important, which is not that important and layering that all together.
So just so you know, the US government, the military woke up to that exact thing about
two years ago.
It's still very new.
I mean, they were sourcing, take night vision goggles, for example.
They were sourcing components and engineering and blueprints for night vision goggles from
three, four, five different subcontractors all over the country, but they never asked themselves
what the security status was of those subcontractors. So, fast forward, a few years,
and all of a sudden they start getting faulty components.
They start having that vision goggles that don't work.
They start having supply chain issues
where they have to change their provider.
And the army doesn't know that the provider is changing.
I mean, this is a strategy.
The idea of going through third-party systems
is identifying the vulnerability in the supply chain. That's a savvy offensive practice for
more than just cyber hackers. Let me ask you about physical hacking. I'm now, like I'm an
introvert, so I'm a paranoid, but all social interaction, but
How much truth is there? It's kind of a funny question
How suspicious should I be when I'm traveling in Ukraine or different parts of the world when an attractive female walks up to me and shows any kind of attention?
Is that like this kind of James Bond spy movie stuff or is that kind of stuff used by
Intelligent agencies. I don't think it's used. It's absolutely used. It's called sex bionage
It's that's the term that we jokingly call it is sex bionage
But yeah, the the art of attraction appeal
The manifestation of feelings through sexual manipulation
All of that is it's super powerful tool the Chinese use it extremely well The manifestation of feelings through sexual manipulation,
all of that is super powerful tool.
The Chinese use it extremely well,
the Russians use it extremely well.
In the United States, we actively train our officers
not to use it because in the end,
it leads to complications
in how you professionally run a case.
So we train our officers not to use it.
However, you can't control what other people think.
So if you're an attractive male or an attractive female officer
and you're trying to talk to an older general
who just happens to be gay or happens to be straight
and is attracted to you,
of course they're gonna be that much more willing
to talk to an American who is also attractive.
So it's a part of that back.
In all definitions, so it could be all elements of charisma.
That's, so, you know, attractiveness in a dynamic sense
of the word, so it's visual attractiveness,
but the smile, the humor, the wit, the flirting,
all that kind of stuff that could be used to correct
through the art of conversation.
There's also elements of sexuality that people underestimate, right?
So physical sexuality, physical attraction is the most obvious one.
It's the one that everybody talks about and thinks about.
But then there's also sapio-sexuality, which is being sexually attracted to
to thoughts, to intelligence. And then you got all the various varieties of personal preferences.
Some people like people of a certain color skin or they like big noses, they like small noses,
they like big butts, they like small butts, they like tall guys, they like bald guys, whatever it
might be, you can't ever predict what someone's preference is. Sexual arousal preferences are
going to be. So then you end up walking into a situation where then you discover, you know, and just
imagine, imagine being, being an unattractive, overweight married guy, and you're walking
into an asset or a target meeting with like a middle aged female who is also not very attractive
and also married.
But then it turns out that that person is a sapiosexual and gets extremely turned on
by intelligent conversation.
That's exactly what you're there to do.
Your mission is to have intelligent conversation
with this person to find out if they have access to secrets
and by virtue of you carrying out your mission,
they become extremely aroused and attracted to you.
That is a very complicated situation.
It's hard to know what to trust.
Like, how do you know
your wife? How does your wife know that you're not a double agent from Russia? There's a large
element of experience and time that goes into that. She's also trained. And I think my wife and I also think, my wife and I also have the benefit of being recruited,
young and together, where so over time you can start to figure out things that are very
difficult to do.
So you form the baseline, you start to understand the person's very, it becomes very
difficult to lie.
The most difficult thing in the world is consistency.
It's the most difficult thing in the world.
Some people say that discipline or self-discipline, what they're really the world is consistency. It's the most difficult thing in the world. Some people say that discipline or self-discipline,
what they're really talking about is consistency.
When you have someone who performs consistently
over long periods of time,
under various levels of stress,
you have high, high confidence
that that is the person that you can trust.
You can trust, again, you can trust them to behave
with an assurton pattern.
You can trust an asshole to be an asshole without
trusting the asshole to take care of your kids, right?
So I don't ever want to mix up the idea of personal trust versus trusting the outcome.
You can always trust a person to operate within their pattern of behavior.
It just takes time for you to get a consistent, to get consistent feedback as to what that
baseline is for them, to form
a good model, predictive model of what their behavior is going to be like.
And it's fascinating as I think the challenge is building that model quickly.
So technology is one of those tools that will be able in the future to very quickly create
a model of behavior because technology can pull
in multiple data points in a very short period of time that the human brain simply can't
pull in at the same period at the same space, at the same speed.
Well, that's actually what I did in my PhD on. That's what I did at Google is forming a
good representation, unique representation required the entire world based on the behavior
of the person,
the specific task there is so that you don't have
to type in the password,
the idea was to replace the password.
But it also allows you to actually study human behavior
and to think, all right, what is the unique representation
of a person?
How?
Because we have very specific patterns,
and a lot of humans are very similar in those patterns. What are the unique identifiers within those patterns of behavior?
And that's I think that's from a psychology perspective a super fascinating question and from a machine learning perspective
It's something that you can as the system is get better and better and better and as we get more and more
Digital data about each individual you start to get you start to be able to do that kind of thing it's, I mean, when I think of the fact that you could create a dossier on somebody
in a matter of 24 or 48 hours, if you could wire them for two days, right? Internet of things style,
you put it in their underwear, whatever, right? Some chip that just reads everything. How heavy are
they walking? How much time do they sleep? How many times do they open the refrigerator? When they
log into their computer, how do they do it? Which hand do they use when they log in?
What's their most common swipe? What's their most visited website? You could
collect an enormous amount of normative data in a short period of time, where otherwise we're stuck
the way that we do it now. Once or twice a week, we go out for a coffee for two hours.
that we do it now, once or twice a week, we go out for a coffee for two hours.
And two hours at a time over the course of six, eight weeks, 12 weeks,
you're coming up with a 50% assessment on how you think this person is going to behave. Just that time savings as immense.
Something you've also spoken about is private intelligence and the power and
the reach and the scale and the importance of private intelligence versus
government intelligence. Can you elaborate on the role of what is private intelligence and
what's the role of private intelligence in the scope of all the intelligence that is gathered
and used in the United States?
Yeah, absolutely. It's something that so few people know about. And it became a more mainstream
topic with the Trump administration because Trump made it no secret that he was going to hire
private intelligence organizations to run his intelligence operations and fund them. So that
really brought it to the mainstream, but going all the way back to 9-11, going all the way back to 2001,
to 9-11, going all the way back to 2001. When the 9-11 attacks happened,
there was a commission that was formed
to determine the reasons that 9-11 happened.
And among the lists that they determined,
of course, they found out that the intelligence community
wasn't coordinating well with each other.
There were fife domes and there was infighting
and there wasn't good intel sharing.
But more than that, they identified that we were operating at cold war levels,
even though we were living in a time when terrorism was the new biggest threat to national security.
So the big recommendation coming out of the 9-11 commission was that the intelligence
organizations, the intelligence community, significantly increased the presence of intelligence
operators, overseas and in terms of analytical capacity here in the United States.
When they made that decision, it completely destroyed.
It totally was incongruent with the existing hiring process because the existing hiring process
for CIA or NSA is a six to nine month process. The only way they could plus up their sizes fast enough was to bypass their own hiring
and instead go direct to private organizations. So, naturally, the government contracted with
the companies that they already had secure contracts with, Boeing, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman,
secure contracts with Boeing, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman, Kackie, you name it. And then over time, from 2001 to now, or as that started really in 2004, when they started significantly increasing
their private, the presence of private intelligence officers. From then until now, it's become a
budgetary thing, it's become a continuity of operations thing. And now the reason Northern Virginia has become
one of the wealthiest zip codes in America
is because of the incredible concentration
of private intelligence that is supporting CIA, NSA,
DIA, FBI, and all the slew of IC partners.
By the way, does Palantir play a role in this?
Palantir is one of those organizations
that was trying to pitch their product
to an intelligence community
because they have, it's a fantastic product on paper.
But the challenge was the proprietary services,
the proprietary systems that we current
that we used in CIA prior to Palantir
continued to outperform Palantir.
So, just like any other business decision,
if you've got homegrown systems that outperform
external systems, and it's not worth it
to share the internal information.
Got it.
So, what the closed connection between Peter Tiel
and Donald Trump.
Did that have a role to play in Donald Trump's
leveraging of private intelligence?
Where's that completed disjoint?
I think that they're related,
but only circumstantially,
because remember Donald Trump wasn't really investing
in CIA.
So the last thing he wanted to do was spend his network, Wasta.
Wasta is a term that we call influence.
It's an Arabic term for influence.
Trump didn't want to use his Wasta, putting Teal into CIA, only to lose Teal's contract
as soon as Trump lopped office.
So instead, it was more valuable to put Peter Teal's tool to use in private intelligence.
And then, of course, I think he nominated Peter Teal to be his secretary of defense, secretary of state.
At some point in time, he tried to present, like,
Presidentially appoint Peter Teal into a position of government authority.
What do you think of figures like Peter Teal, today, we yield, and I'm sure there's figures of similar scale and reach and power
in private intelligence. What do you think about their role and power in this whole,
like, without public accountability that you would think directors of CIA perhaps have?
So this is where private intelligence has both a strength and a weakness.
The ultimate law overriding that's overseeing private intelligence is not
is not government legislation. It's the law of economics. If they produce a superior product,
then they will have a buyer. If they do not produce a superior product, they they will have a buyer. If they do not produce a superior product,
they will not have a buyer. And that's a very simple business principle. Whereas in the
current national security infrastructure, you can create a crap product, but the taxpayer
dollars are always going to be spent. So it's really thrown things for a loop, especially
during the Trump administration. And this is one of the things that I will always say I liked about the Trump administration.
It shown it put a big blazing bright light on all of the flaws within our system.
One of those flaws being this executive power over the intelligence organizations and
the lack of the accountability for intelligence organizations
to produce a superior product.
When that light got shown down, that's when you also saw Trump start to go after, if you
remember, there was a period where he was taking security clearances away from retiring
officers.
That became a big, hot issue.
That became something that people were very opposed to.
When they didn't realize that process of taking security
clearances away, that incentivized seasoned senior officers
to stay in service.
Because with private intelligence paying a premium
during the Trump administration, because Trump was
paying a premium to the private intelligence world,
when senior officers found that it was more
profitable to retire early, keep their clearance and go work for Raytheon, Trump saw that
as bypassing service to the American people.
You've made a career in CIA, you've made a career in NSA, you should stay there.
If you leave, you lose your clearance because you no longer have a need to know.
He upset the apple cart with that.
And unfortunately, the narrative that came out in many ways was a negative narrative against
Trump. When in fact, he was actually doing quite a service to the American people trying
to take away the incentive of senior officials leaving their service in order to just prop it here in the private and tellin' it works. So in that way, he was kind of supporting the CIA
in making sure that competent people
and experienced people stay and say,
are incentivized to stay there.
Correct, I think that there was definitely,
he understood incentives.
I mean, Donald Trump understands incentives.
So he was in trying to incentivize them to stay,
but I think he was also playing a safety card
because he didn't want former CIA officials
who were not listening to him
to then move into private intel organizations
that he may be hiring only to then have them
undermine him from both sides of the coin.
So there was a little bit of offensive
calculation in there as well. But do the dynamics and the incentives of economics that you refer
to that the private intelligence operates under, is that more or less ethical than the forces
that maybe government agencies operate under? What's your intuition? Is capitalism lead?
legionaries operate under, what's your intuition? Is capitalism lead? So you mentioned at least two maximizations of efficiency and performance, but is that correlated with
ethical behavior when we're talking about such hairy activities like collection of intelligence?
The question of ethics is a great question. So let me start this whole thing out by saying
The question of ethics is a great question. So let me start this whole thing out by saying CIA hires people on a spectrum of our ability
to be morally flexible, ethically flexible.
All people at their heart are ethically flexible.
I would never punch somebody in the face, right?
Some people out there would say, I would never hurt another human being. But as soon as a human being
posed a direct threat to their daughter or their son
or their mother, now all of a sudden,
they're gonna change their ethical stance
in self-defense, right?
But at the end of the day, it's still hurting another person.
So what CIA looks for is people who are able to swing
across that spectrum for lesser offenses, more flexibility.
I do not believe that private intelligence and the laws of economics lend themselves
to increased ethics or increased ethical behavior in the short term. But what ends up happening is that in the long term,
in order to scale economic benefits,
you are forced to act within norms of your customer base.
So as the norms of that customer base dictates certain requirements,
the company has to adapt to those requirements in order to continue to scale.
So if a company tries to ostracize LGBTQ or if they try to ostracize men or ostracize women,
they're limiting their ability to grow economically. They have to adapt to whatever is the prevailing
ethical requirement of their customer base.
That's such an interesting question because you look at big farm and pharmaceutical companies.
And they have a quite poor reputation in the public eye. And some of it, maybe much of it is
deserved at least historically speaking. And so you start to wonder, well, can intelligence
agencies use some of the same technique to manipulate the public, like what they believe
about those agencies in order to maximize profit as well, sort of finding shortcuts or
unethical paths that allow you to not be ultimately responsible to the customer.
Absolutely. And I would go a step further to say that the covert nature of intelligence operations
is really attractive when it comes to the private sector because now they have all the same money with none of the oversight and all they have to do is deliver.
So without the oversight, what's holding you back?
And in a lot of for anybody who's ever run a business, anybody's ever started to start
up or tried to make something succeed, we all know that there come those times where you
have to skirt the boundaries of proprietaryety or morality or commitments or promises to other people
because at the end of the day, if your business fails, it's on you. So if you promise to deliver something to a client,
you've got to deliver it to the client. Even if that means you stay up late or if you lie on your taxes, whatever it might be,
there's a certain level of do or die.
Yeah, I personally have a sort of optimistic view that ultimately the best way is to stay
within ethical bounds, kind of like what you suggested.
If you want to be a company that's extremely successful is win with competence, not with
cheating because cheating won't, I believe, win in the long
term. But in terms of being publicly responsible to your decisions, I mean, I've heard you've
been supposed to talk to Peter Teele twice in this podcast, and it's just been complicated. If I were to put myself into shoes, why do
podcasts? The risk is too high to be a public person at all. And so I totally understand
that at the same time, I think if you're doing things by the book and you're the best in the world at your job. You have nothing to worry
about. And you can advertise that and you recruit, you help recruit. I mean, that's the work of
capitalism is you want to advertise that this is the place where the best people in the world at this thing work? True. I think that your point of view is accurate. I would also say that the complexities
of what makes somebody make a decision can only really be properly calculated with a baseline.
So because there is no baseline that you or I have on Peter Teo, it's difficult to really
ascertain why he does or doesn't accept invites or why he doesn't appear.
Well, let me ask your opinion on the NSA.
And then maybe you can mention about bulk connection collection in general in the CIA, but
you know, let's look at some history with NSA and Snowden. What's your opinion on the
mass surveillance
that is
reported to have been conducted by the NSA?
We talked about ethics. Are you troubled by the
from a public perception
the the, from a public perception, the unethical nature of mass surveillance of, especially
American citizens. This is a topic that I never get tired of talking about, but it's very
rare that anyone ever really agrees with me just so you know.
So I see where you're, well, what I think there's a nuanced thing here. Maybe we'll find some agreement.
The truth is that the American experience after 9-11 is nothing like the American experience
now.
So all the terminology, all the all this talk about privacy and privacy laws and mass surveillance
and all this other stuff, it was a completely different time then.
And that's not to say it was an excuse because to this day, I will still say mass, mass
collection, bulk collection of data that allows for an expedient identification of a threat
to national security benefits all of us.
But people don't understand what they want, like people don't understand what the value
of their own privacy is
First of all the fact that people think they have personal privacy is laughable
You have no privacy the cell phone that you carry in your pocket
You're giving permission to those apps constantly. You're giving commercial organizations would you and I have already said are
Less tied to ethical responsibility. You're giving them permission to collect enormous amounts of private data from you all the time.
And do you know what happens?
If AT&T or Verizon sees some nefarious activity
on your account, they do nothing.
They might send a note to FBI
because they have to, according to some checklist.
But when NSA was collecting intelligence
on metadata from around the United States, they
were very specifically looking for terrorist threats that would harm American lives.
I don't, man, NSA can clone my phone.
I will give them my children's phone.
I will give them the passwords to every one of my accounts.
If it means that there's a likelihood that my family will be safer from a nefarious actor
who's intent on hurting
us. NSA doesn't care about your affair. NSA doesn't care if you're cheating on your
taxes. NSA doesn't care if you're if you talk shit about your boss or if you hate the US
president. Nobody cares about that. Your intelligence community is there to find threats to national
security. That's what they're there to do. What Snowden did when he
outed that whole program, the fact that the court, the justice system, the civilian justice system
went back and essentially overruled the ruling of the intelligence courts before them,
just goes to show how the general mass community really shouldn't have a say in what
happens in the intelligence community.
They really shouldn't.
You have politicians and you have the opportunity to elect people to a position and then you
trust them.
That's what a representative republic is.
You vote the people in, you trust them to work on your behalf.
They make decisions without running them by you. They make decisions that they believe are in the best interest of their
constituency. And that's how our form of democracy works. It worked. We were safer now that
we don't have that information. And now that there's this giant looming question of whether
not NSA is there to serve people or is collecting mass surveillance against all American people that's not really a true accurate representation of what
they were ever doing. They were looking for the needle and a haystack of the series of transactions
in metadata that was going to lead to American deaths. We are now less secure because they can't
do that. And that bothers me. So you said a few really interesting things there. So because you are kind of an insider
word for time and insider, meaning you were able to build up an intuition about the good,
the bad and the ugly of these institutions, specifically the good. A lot of people don't have a good
sense of the good. They know the bad and the ugly or can infer the bad and the ugly.
You mentioned that the one little key little thing there at the end saying the NSA doesn't
care about whether you hate the president or not.
Now that's what people really worry about is they're not sure they can trust the government
to not go into full dictatorial mode and base in your political preference, your oppositions,
your...
Basically one of the central powers of the freedom of speech in the United States is the
ability to criticize your government.
Exactly. And that they worry while can't the government get a hold of the NSA and start to ask the
basic question, well, can you give me a list of people that are criticizing the government?
Think about, so let's just walk through that exact example, right?
Because this is, it's a preponderous fear.
It's a ridiculous fear because you would have to tap
on multiple elements of government for anything to happen.
So for example, let's just say that somebody goes to the NSA and says,
hey, can you give us a readout on all the people
who are tweeting terrible things about the president?
Okay, cool.
Here's your 100 million people, whatever it is.
Right?
Here's all the people saying negative things about the government. So now they have a list. What do they do next? Well,
let's just make it simple. They stay with NSA and they say, surveil them even more. Tap their
phones, tap their computers. I want to know even more. So then they get this preponderance of evidence.
What do you do with evidence? You take it to a court. Well, guess what? No court is going to
support anything that goes against the freedom of speech. So the court is not going to support
what the executive is asking them to do. Even before you take somebody to court, you have to
involve law enforcement. Essentially, you have to send some sort of police force to go
apprehend the individual who's in question.
Well, guess what doesn't meet criteria
for any police force anywhere in the United States?
Are resting people who have,
who have to say negative things about the president.
Now, if somebody poses a threat to the life
of a public figure or the threat to life of a politician,
that's a completely different case,
which means the standards of evidence
are much higher for them to arrest that person.
So unless you create a secret police force, then your actual public police force is never
going to take action.
So all these people who are afraid of this exact situation that you're outlying, they
need the creation of a secret police force, the creation of a secret court that operates
outside the judicial system, the creation of a secret intelligence service that operates outside of foreign intelligence collection
All so that a handful of people who don't like the president
Get what whisked away, assassinated put in prison. Who knows what?
Think about the resources that would be the amount of money and time and how hard would it be to keep that secret to have all of
those things in motion.
The reason it worked in Russia and Soviet Germany or Russia and communist Germany was because
everybody knew there was a secret police.
Everybody knew that there was a threat to work to speaking out against the government.
It's completely different here.
Well, so there's a lot to say.
So one is yes, if I was a dictator, and I
wanted to, and just looking at history, let me take myself out of it. But I
think one of the more effective ways is you don't need the surveillance. You can
pick out a random person and in a public display, semi-public display, you know,
basically put them in jail for opposing
the government, whether they oppose it or not, and the fear, that sends a message to a lot of people.
That's exactly what you see happening in China. That's what you just light out. It's genius,
and that is the standard. You don't need the surveillance for that. Yep.
But that said, if you did do the surveillance, so that's the support, the sort of the incentives
aren't aligned.
It seems like a lot of work to do for the thing you can do without the surveillance.
But yes, the courts wouldn't, if you were to be able to get a list of people, which I
think that part you could do, that
opposed the government, you could do that, like just like you said on Twitter publicly,
you could make a list.
And with that, you can start to, especially if you have a lot of data on those people,
find ways in which they did violate the law, not because they opposed the government, but
because in some other way though a part of tickets or
Didn't pay the taxes. That's probably a common one or like screwed up something about the taxes
I just happen to know Russia and Ukraine they they're very good at this kind of stuff that knowing
We how the citizens screwed everything up because especially in those countries everybody's breaking the law
Because in a corrupt nation you have's breaking the law because in a corrupt
nation, you have to bend the law to operate the law.
The number of people that pay taxes fully in those nations is just very low.
It's not zero.
And so they then use that breaking of the law to come up with an excuse to actually put
your jail based on that.
You know, so it's possible to imagine, but yes, I think, I think that's the ugly part
of surveillance.
But I do think, just like you said, the incentives aren't correct.
Like, you really don't need to get all of the secret police and all of these kinds of organizations
working.
If you do have a charismatic,
powerful leader that built up a network that's able to control a lot of organizations to level
authoritarianism in a government, they're just able to do the usual thing. One, have propaganda
machine to tell narratives, to pick out people that they can put in jail for opposing the state and maybe
loud members of the press start silencing the press. There's a playbook to this
thing and it doesn't require the surveillance. The surveillance, you know, what is
useful for the surveillance is the thing you mentioned in China which is
encourage everybody in the citizenry to watch
each other, to say there's enemies of the state everywhere.
And then you start having children reporting on their parents and that kind of stuff.
Again, don't need a surveillance state for that.
Now the good of a surveillance system, if it's operating within ethical bounds is that yes, it could
protect the populace.
So you're saying like the good given your understanding of these institutions, the good outweighs
the bad.
Absolutely.
So let me give you just a practical example.
So people don't realize this, but there's multiple surveillance states that are out there.
There are surveillance states that are close allies with the United States.
One of those surveillance states is the United Arab Emirates, the UAE.
Now I lived in the UAE from 2019 to 2020.
Came back on a repatriation flight after COVID broke out.
But we were there for a full year.
We were residents, we had IDs, we had everything.
Now, when you get your national ID in the Emirates,
you get a chip and that chip connects you to everything.
It connects you to cameras,
it connects you to your license plate on your card,
to your passport, to your credit card, everything.
Everything is intertwined, everything is interlinked.
When you drive, there are no police.
There are no police on the roads. Every 50 to 100 meters, you cross a camera that reads your license
plate, measures your speed, and if you're breaking the speed limit, it just immediately charges your
credit card, because it's tied. It's all tied together. Totally surveillance. That technology was
invented by the Israelis, who use it in Israel.
When I was in Abu Dhabi and I was rear-ended at high speed, by what turned out to be an Emirati official, a senior ranking official of one of the Emirates. It was caught on camera.
His idea was registered, my idea was registered, everything was tied back to our IDs, the proof
and the evidence was crystal clear. Even still, he was Emirati, I was not. Everything was tied back to our IDs. The proof and the evidence was crystal clear.
Even still, he was Emirati. I was not. So when I went to the police station to file the complaints,
it was something that nobody was comfortable with because generally speaking, Emirates don't
don't accept legal claims against their own from foreigners. But the difference was that I was an American and I was there on a contract supporting the Emirati government.
So I had these different variances, right?
Long story short, in the end, the surveillance states is what made sure that justice was played
because the proof was was incontrovertible.
There was so much evidence collected because of the surveillance nature of their state.
Now why do they have a surveillance state?
It's not for people like me.
It's because they're constantly afraid of extreme extremist terrorist activity happening inside
Abu Dhabi or inside the UAE because they're under constant threat from Islam and they're
from extremists and they're under constant threat from Iran.
So that's what drives the people to want a police state, to want a surveillance state. For them, their survival is paramount
and they need the surveillance to have that survival. For us, we haven't tasted that level
of desperation and fear yet or hopefully never. But that's what makes us feel like there's
something wrong with surveillance. Surveillance is all about the purpose. It's all about the intent.
Well, and like you said, companies
do a significant amount of surveillance
and to provide us with services that we take for granted.
For example, just one of the things
to give props to the digital efforts
of the Zelensky administration in Ukraine, I don't know,
if you're aware, but they have this digital transformation efforts where you can put, like, there's not, it's laughable to say
in the United States, but they actually did a really good job of having a government app
that has your passport on it. It's all the digital information you can get a doctor. It's
like everything that you would think America would be doing, you know, like license, like all that kind of stuff, it's in an app.
You could pay this payment to each other.
And that's all coming, I mean, there's probably contractors somehow connected to the whole
thing, but that's like under the flag of government.
And so that's an incredible technology.
And I didn't, I guess, hear anybody talk about surveillance in that context, even though
it is, but they all love it.
And it's super easy.
And they, frankly, already, it's so easy and convenient.
They've already taken for granted that, of course, this is what you do.
Of course, your passport is on your phone.
Yeah, for everybody to have, yeah, housed in a server that you have no idea where it's
at. And they could be hacked at any time by a third party
They don't ask these kinds of questions because it's so convenient as we do for
For Google
Facebook Twitter
Apple Microsoft
Secure security and convenience around two opposite sides of another spectrum. Yeah, the more convenience something is the less secure
And the more secure something is the less convenient and that's a that's a battle that we're always
We're always working with as individuals and then we're trying to outsource that battle to our politicians and our politicians
Are frankly just more interested in being politicians
Yeah, that said I mean people are really worried about
giving any one institution a large
amount of power, especially when it's a federal government institution given some history.
First of all, just history of the corruption of power corrupting individuals and institutions and second of all,
myth or reality of certain institutions like the CIA misbehaving. Well, let me actually ask you about the Edward Snowden.
So you outside of the utility that you're arguing for of the NSA
surveillance program, do you think Edward Snowden is a criminal or a hero?
In terms of the eyes of the law, he's a criminal. He broke the law, he broke the confidence,
he made us, he was under security obligation, and then when he ran away, he ran away to all of
the worst villains in the world from the US perspective to basically seek protection. That's that how
you act in the face of accusation is in an essence part of the case that you build for yourself.
So running away to China, Russia, Cuba, there was a Latin Ecuador, I think.
That just paints a very negative picture that does not suggest that you were doing anything
that was ethical and upright and in favor of the American people, if you're going to run
to American enemies to support yourself.
So for sure, in the eyes of law, he's a criminal.
In the eyes of a group of people who are largely ignorant to what they lost. To them, he's a hero.
To me, he's just kind of a sad case.
I personally look at Snowden as a sad, unfortunate case.
His life is ruined, his family name is tarnished.
He's forever going to be a desperate pawn.
And that's all because of the decisions that he made
and the order that he made them.
I'm not sure his name is tarnished.
I think the case you're making is a difficult case to make.
And so I think his name represents fighting one man,
it's like Tiam and Square standing before the tank, is like one man fighting the government.
And I think that there is some aspect to which taking that case aside, that is the American spirit,
which is hold the powerful accountable. So whenever there's somebody in power, one individual can change,
one man can make a difference? Can make a difference. Yeah. Very nice.
Right. I mean, that's the American individualism. And so he represents that. And I think there's a huge
skepticism against large federal institutions, and I think
if you look at the long arc of history, that actually is a forcing function for the institutions
to behave their best.
So basically hold them accountable.
If what's nice about this is that we can agree to disagree, and history will be the one that decides.
But once, there's a reason that Edward Snowden needs to do something new every 16 or 18 months,
to remain relevant, because if he didn't, he would just be forgotten.
Because he was not a maverick who changed history for
the better.
He was a man who broke a law and now he's on the run.
And to some people, he is a hero, to other people, he is a criminal, but to the vast majority,
he's just a blip on a radar of their everyday life that really makes no difference to them
at all.
So actually, let's linger on that. So just to clarify, do you think,
are you making the difficult case that the NSA Masterveillance program
was one ethical and two made a better world for Americans?
I am making the case that at the time it was exactly what we needed
to feel safe in our own homes.
But what about to be safe?
Actually be safe.
This is what's difficult because any proof that was that they collected, that actually
prevented an attack from happening, is proof we'll never know about.
This is the really unfortunate side of intelligence operations.
And I've been at the front end of this.
You work your ass off.
You take personal risk.
You make personal sacrifice to make sure
that something terrible doesn't happen.
Nobody knows that that ever happened.
That have to be that way.
Is it, does it have to remain secret every time
the NSA or the CIA saves the lives of Americans?
It does.
For two reasons, it has to be secret.
First, the mythos, the same thing we were talking about with General Petraeus.
You can't brag about your victories if you want to let the myth shape itself.
You can't do that.
The second thing is, once a victory is claimed, the danger comes from
letting your enemy know that you claimed the victory because they can reverse engineer
and they can start to change how they did things.
If a terrorist act, if a terrorist cell tries to execute an operation, the operation fails,
from their point of view, they don't know why it failed.
They just know that it failed. From their point of view, they don't know why it failed. They just know that it failed. But then if the US or if the American government comes in and says, we took apart this amazing
attack, now they have more information, right? The whole power of secrets, like we talked
about before, the power of secrets is in knowing that not everybody has them. There's only a shelf
life. So take advantage of the shelf life. You get space, so you got to keep it a secret.
There is no tactical advantage from sharing a secret unless you are specifically trying
to achieve a certain tactical advantage from sharing that secret, which is what we've
seen so much of with US and tell sharing with Ukraine.
There's a tactical advantage from sharing a secret about Russian military movements or
weaknesses and tanks or supply
chain challenges, whatever it might be.
Well, let me argue that there might be an advantage to share information with the American
public when a terrorist attack is averted or the lives of Americans are saved because
what that does is make every American think that they're not that safe.
There is no tactical advantage there.
You think so? Absolutely.
What about if if if if the.
Austin PD started telling you every day about the.
These crazy crimes that they prevented.
Would that make you feel more safe?
It would make you feel like they're doing their job.
Is that wrong?
It makes us feel less safe,
because if we see competence,
that there is extremely competent defenders
of this territory of these people,
wouldn't that make us feel more safe or no?
The human nature is not to assign competence.
So empirically, humans overvalue losses and undervalue gains.
That's something that we've seen from finance to betting and beyond. If the Austin Police
Department starts telling you about all these heinous crimes that they were avoided because
of their hard work, the way that your brain is actually going to process
that information is you are going to say,
if this is all the stuff that they've stopped,
how bad must this place be?
How much more haven't they stopped?
I take your point, it's a powerful psychological point,
but I looking at the other picture of it,
looking at the police force, looking at the CIA,
the NSA, those people, now with the police,
they're seen, they're such a negative feeling
amongst Americans towards these institutions.
Who the hell wants to work for the CIA now,
and the police force?
Like, that's, you're gonna be criticized criticized. Like that's a, I mean,
that's really bad for the CIA. It's terrible. Like as opposed to being seen as a hero. Like,
for example, currently, soldiers are for the most part seen as heroes that are protecting
this nation. That's not the case for this CIA.
Soldiers weren't seen as heroes in the Vietnam War.
Right, you've got to remember that when you,
so first of all, public service is a sacrifice.
Yeah.
We oftentimes forget that.
We start to think, oh, government jobs are cushy
and they're easy and it must be so easy to be the president
because then you're basically a celebrity overnight. Public service is a sacrifice. It's a grind. For all of the soldiers,
the soldiers, the sub mariners, the miscelliers, the police officers, intelligence specialists,
they all know what it's like to give things up to serve a public that can turn its opinion at any given time and
History is what defines it the more important thing is to understand that if you want a true open and fair democracy
You cannot control a narrative and
Starting to share all of your victories or starting to share your biggest victories with the intent of shaping public opinion to be supportive of the police force or supportive of CIA or
supportive of you name it is shaping a narrative that is intentional operated operational use
of influence to drive public opinion.
That is something nobody wants to get into.
It is much more professional to be a silent sentinel, a silent servant,
humbly carrying the burden of public service in the United States, where we are a bear in
open democracy. Why? Why not celebrate the killing of Bin Laden? We did. The search,
discovery, and the capture, and the killing of Bin Laden wasn't that actually the details of
that, how much of the details of that how much
of the details of that how he was discovered more made public.
I think someone was made public enough.
Why not do that?
Does that make heroes out of the people that are servants or do people who serve to do service
for this nation?
Do they always have to operate in the thankless
manner and the shadows? That's I think that's a very good question. The the folks who
I left behind when I left CIA who continue to serve as faceless, nameless heroes
every day. I am grateful to them. The truth is that if you, if they were
motivated by something else, they wouldn't be as good as they are at doing what
they do. And I see your points about shouldn't we be celebrating our victories.
But when celebrating our victories, runs the risk of informing our enemies how we operate,
giving away our informational advantage, giving away our tactical battlefield advantage, and
running the risk of shaping a narrative intentionally among our own American people,
now all of a sudden we're turning into exactly the thing that the American people trust us
not to become.
Yeah, but then you operate in the secrecy and then there's there's a
corrupt and douchebag people everywhere. So when they even inside the CIA and criminals inside the CIA,
there's criminals in all organizations and all walks of life, human
nature is such that this is always the case.
Then it breeds conspiracy
theories. It does. And sometimes those conspiracy theories turn out to be true, but most times
they don't. That's just part of the risk of being a myth.
Can you speak to some of the myths? So MK Ultra. So not a myth. Not a myth. So this is a fascinating human experimentation program
undertaken by the CIA to develop procedures for using drugs
like LSD to interrogate people through, let's say,
psychological manipulation and maybe even torture.
The scale of the program is perhaps not known.
How do you make sense that this program existed?
Again, you've got to look through the lens of time.
You've got to look at where we were historically
at that time.
There was the peak of the Cold War.
Our enemies were doing the same kind of experimentation.
It was essentially of another space race.
What if they any broke through a new weapon technology
faster than we did?
What would that mean for the safety and security
of the American people?
So right decision or wrong decision,
it was guided by and informed by national security priorities.
So from this program that was designed to use drugs
to drive interrogation and torture people,
was born something very productive,
Operation Stargate, which was a chance to use remote viewing drugs to drive interrogation and torture people was born something very productive, Operation
Stargate, which was a chance to use remote viewing and metaphysics to try to collect intelligence.
Now even though in the end, the outcome of MK Ultra and the outcome of Stargate were
mixed, nobody really knows if they did or didn't do what they were supposed to do, we still
know that to this day, there's still a demand in the US government in CIA for people who have sensitivities to ethereal
energies.
By the way, is there any proof that that kind of stuff works or is it just shows that there's
interest, it shows that there's openness to consider those kinds of things, but is there any evidence
that that kind of stuff works?
If there's evidence, I haven't seen it.
Yeah.
Speaking from a science-based point of view only, if energy and matter can always be exchanged,
then a person who can understand and become sensitive to energy is a person who could become sensitive to what does become matter.
Yeah, I mean the basics of the physics might be there, but a lot of people probably are skeptical.
I'm skeptical too, but you should be open-minded.
That's actually, you know, that's what science is about, is remain open-minded, even for
those things that are long shots, because those are the things that actually define scientific revolutions.
What about Operation North Woods?
It was a proposed 1962 false flag operation by the DOD and the CIA to be carried out by the CIA
to commit acts of terrorism on Americans and blame them on Cuba. So JFK, the president rejected
the proposal. What do you make that this was on the table, Operation North Woods?
So it's interesting. First, I'm glad that JFK rejected it. That's a good sign. So we have to
understand that good ideas are oftentimes born from bad ideas.
I had a really good friend of mine who actually went on to become a pastor.
And he used to say all the time that he wanted all the bad ideas on the table.
Like give me all your bad ideas.
Every time we had any kind of conversation.
And I was always one of those people was like, isn't a bad idea just a waste of time?
And he was like, no, because the best ideas oftentimes come from bad ideas.
So again, Cuban Missile Crisis, mass hysteria in the United States about nuclear war from Cuba,
missiles blowing up American cities faster than we could even see them coming. It makes
sense to me that a president would go to, especially the part of CIA, which is the special
activities division.
It makes perfect sense to me that the president would go to a division called special activities
whose job it is to create crazy ideas that have presidential approval,
but nobody knows they exist.
So it makes sense that he would challenge a group like that to come up with any wacky idea, right?
Come up with anything.
Let's start with something, because we can't bring nothing to the table.
We have to do something about this Cuban issue.
And then that's how an operation like that could reasonably be born, not because anybody
wants to do it, but because they were tasked by the president to come up with five ideas
and it was one of the ideas.
That still happens to this day.
The president will still come in, but it'll basically send out a notice to his covert
action arm and he will say, I need this and I need it on Wednesday.
And people have to come back with options for the thing he asked for.
A finding.
He will issue a presidential finding.
And then his covert action arms have to come back and say, here's how we would do this
and hide the hands of the Americans
How gangster was it of JFK to reject it though his baller, right?
That's like that is the that is a mic drop right there. Nope not doing that. So yep doing that
You know a thing That crosses an ethical line even in it in the time where the human
The entirety of human civilization hangs in a balance where the human, the entirety of human
civilization hangs in a balance, still forfeit that power.
That's, that's a beautiful thing about the American experiment.
That's a few times throughout this history that's
this happened, including with our first president, George Washington.
Well, let me ask about JFK. 25 times two. And they still keep that stuff classified.
So do you think the CIA had a hand in the assassination of JFK?
I cannot imagine in any reasonable point of view that the organization of CIA had anything to do
with the assassination of JFK.
So it's not possible to infiltrate a CIA, a small part of the CIA in order to attain political
or criminal gains.
I think financial.
Yeah, absolutely. It's possible to infiltrate CIA.
There's a long history of foreign intelligence services infiltrating CIA from alder games
to Jerry Lee recently with China. So we know CIA can be infiltrated, even if they are infiltrated and even if that's interlocutor executes on their own agenda
or the agenda as directed by their foreign adversary, their foreign handler, that's different
than organizational support for an event.
So I do think it's possible they could have been infiltrated at the time, especially.
It was a massive, a major priority for the Cubans and the Russians to infiltrate
some aspect of US intelligence. Multiple moles were caught in the years
following, so it's not surprising that there would be a priority for that. But to
say that the organization of CIA was somehow in cahoots with to independently
assassinate their own executive, that's a significant stretch. I've seen no evidence to support
that. And it goes contrary to everything I learned from my time at CIA.
Well, let me ask you, do you think, say, played a part in enabling drug cartels and drug trafficking, which is
another big kind of shadow that hangs over the CIA?
At the beginning of the drug war, I would imagine the answer is yes.
CIA has its own counter-narcotics division, a division that's dedicated to fighting and
preventing narcotics from coming into the United States.
So when you paint a picture for me
like do you think the CIA was complicit
in helping drug trafficking or drug use?
When I say yes, my exception is I don't think
they did that for Americans inside the United States.
If the CIA can basically set it up
so that two different drug cartels shoot each other
by assisting
in the transaction of a sale to a third country, and then leaking that that sale happened
to a competing cartel.
That's just letting cartels do what they do.
That's them doing the dirty work for us.
So especially at the beginning of the drug war, I think there was tons of space, lots
of room for CIA to get involved in the economics of drugs and
Then let the inevitable happen and that was way more efficient way more productive than
Us trying to send our own troops in to kill a bunch of cartel warlords
So that makes a ton of sense to me. It just seems efficient. It seems very practical
I do not believe that CIA would like I don't think all the accusations out there about how they would buy drugs and sell drugs and somehow make money on the
side from it. That's not how it works.
So, do you think there's a, on that point, a connection between Barry Seal, the great governor
and then President Bill Clinton, Oliver North and Vice President of former CIA director
George H. W. Bush and the little town with a little airport called Mina Arkansas.
So I am out of my element now. This is this is when I haven't heard money details about.
Okay. So your your sense is any of the drag drug trafficking has to do with
criminal operations outside the United States and the CIA just leveraging that
to achieve its ends, but nothing to do with American citizens and American politicians.
And with American citizens, again, speaking organizationally.
So that would be my sense, yes.
Let me ask you about, so back to Operation Roth Earthquiz because it's such a powerful tool,
sadly powerful tool used by dictators throughout history, the false flag operation. And you said the terrorist attacks in 9-11 were changed a lot for us, for the United States,
for Americans.
It changed the way we see the world to walk us up to the harshness of the world.
I think there is to my eyes at least there's nothing that shows evidence that 9-11 was
a quote inside job. But is the CIA or the intelligence agencies
or the US government capable of something like that? But that's the question. So there's
a bunch of shady and that's about how it was reported on. I just can't. That's the thing I struggle with. While there's no evidence
that there was an inside job, it raises the question to me, well, could something like this be an inside
job? Because it sure is now looking back 20 years, the amount of money that will spend on these wars,
the military industrial complex, the amount of interest in terms spend on these wars, the military industrial complex, the
amount of interest in terms of power and money involved organizationally can something
like that happen.
You know, Occam's razor.
So the hair-harm's razor is that you can never prescribe to conspiracy what could be explained through incompetence.
Yeah.
Right?
That is one of those are two fundamental guidelines
that we follow all the time.
The simplest answer is oftentimes the best.
And never prescribe to conspiracy
what can be explained through incompetence.
Can you elaborate what you mean by we?
We as intelligence professionals.
So you think there's a deep truth to that second razor?
There is more than a deep truth.
There's ages of experience for me and for others.
So, in general, people are incompetent.
If left to their own means, they're more incompetent than they are malevolent at a large organizational scale.
People are more incompetent of executing a conspiracy than they are of competently, yeah,
than they are of competently executing a conspiracy.
That's really what it means, is that it's so difficult to carry out a complex lie that
most people don't have the competency to do it.
So it doesn't make any sense to lead thinking of conspiracy. It makes more sense to lead
assuming incompetence. When you look at all of the outcomes, all the findings from 9-11, it speaks to incompetence.
It speaks brashly and openly to incompetence. And nobody likes talking about it. FBI and CIA to this day hate hearing about it.
The 9-11 commission is gonna go down in history
as this painful example of the incompetence
of the American intelligence community.
And it's going to come back again and again.
Every time there's an intel flap,
it's gonna come back again and again.
What are you seeing even right now?
We miss the US intelligence infrastructure,
misjudged Afghanistan, misjudged Hong Kong,
misjudged Ukraine's Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Those were three massive misjudgments in a few years.
It's just embarrassing to the end.
It's just embarrassing.
Exactly right.
So all the sort of cover up looking things around 9-11
is just people being embarrassed by their failures. If they're taking steps to cover anything
up, it's just their own, it's a painful reminder of their lack of competency at the time.
Now I understand that conspiracy theorists want to take inklings of information and put them together in a way
that is the most damning, but that goes back to our point
about overvaluing losses and undervaluing gains.
It's just predictable human behavior.
Let me ask you about this because it comes up often.
So I'm from MIT and there's a guy by the name of
Jeffy Epstein that still troubles me
to this day that some of the people I respect were interacted with this individual and fell into his
influence. The charm, charisma, whatever the hell he used to dilute these people, he did so successfully.
I'm very open-minded about this thing.
I would love to learn more, but a lot of people tell me, a lot of people I respect, that
there's intelligence agencies behind this individual, so they were using Jeffrey Epstein for getting access
to powerful people and then to control and manipulate those powerful people. The CIA, I believe,
is not brought up as often as Mossad. And so this goes back to the original aspect of
our conversation. It's how much each individual intelligence agencies is willing to go to control, to manipulate, to achieve
its means. Do you think there is, can you educate me if obviously you don't know, but you
can bet what are the chances the intelligence agencies are involved with the character
of Jaffe Epstein?
In some way, shape or form with the character of Epstein, it's 100% guaranteed.
That's some intelligence organization was involved, but let's talk about why.
Let's talk about why, okay?
There's multiple types of intelligence assets, just like we were talking earlier.
There's foreign intelligence reporting assets.
There's access agents, and then there's agents of influence.
Three different categories of intelligence, right?
One is when you talk about foreign intelligence reporters,
these are people who have access to secrets,
and their job is to give you their secrets in exchange for gold or money or alcohol or prostitution or whatever else, right?
Their job is to give you secrets, and then you pay them for the secrets.
Access agents, their job is to give you physical
access or digital access to something of interest to you. So maybe they're the ones that open a door
that should have been locked and let you come in and stick your thumb drive in the computer. Or maybe
they're the ones that share a phone number with somebody and then they're just like, just don't tell
them you got the phone number for me. Their job is to give you access. Then you have these agents of influence.
An agent of influence is job is to be part of your effort
to influence the outcomes in some way
that benefits your intelligence requirements, right?
Of these three types of people, the least scrupulous
and the most shady is your agent of influence.
Because your agent of influence understands exactly what they're doing.
They know they're working with one guy and they know they're using the influence to
manipulate some other guy.
When it comes to powerful people, especially wealthy powerful people, especially wealthy, powerful people. The only thing that interests them is
power. Money is not a challenge anymore. Prestige, notoriety, none of those things are a challenge.
The rest of us, we're busy trying to make money. We're busy trying to build a reputation.
We're busy trying to build a career, keep a family afloat. At the highest levels, they're
bored. They don't need any of that. The only thing that they care about is being able to wield power. So a character like Jeffrey Epstein is exactly the kind of
character that the Chinese would want, the Russians would want, Mossad would want, the
French would want. It's too easy because the man had access to a wide range of American influential people.
For corporate espionage uses,
for economic espionage uses,
for national security espionage uses,
it doesn't make any sense
that a person like that wouldn't be targeted.
It doesn't.
So the question is,
who, who, and whether I think the,
the really important distinction here is was this person, was Jeff Epstein created or once he's achieved and built his network, we'll see then infiltrated.
And that's a really sort of important difference, like at which stage do you connect a person
like that?
You start to notice maybe they're effective at building a network, and then you start making building a relationship
to where, at some point, it's a job, they're working for you. Or do you literally create a person
like that? Yeah, so intelligence organizations have different strategies here. In the United States,
we never create. We don't have a budget cycle that
allows us to create. I mean, the maximum budget cycle in the United States is five years.
So even if we were to try to invest in some seed operation or create some character of
influence, essentially every year you have to justify why you're spending budget. And
that becomes very difficult in a democracy like ours. However, Russia and China are extremely adept
at seed operations, long-term operations.
They are willing to invest and develop
and create an agent that serves their purposes.
Now, to create someone from scratch,
like Jeffrey Epstein,
the probabilities are extremely low. They would have had to start with like a thousand different targets
and try to grow a thousand different, if you will, influencers.
And then hope that one of them hits kind of like a venture capital firm, right?
Invest in many hope that a few hits.
More likely, they observed him at some point in his own natural rise. They identified
his personal vulnerability, very classic espionage technique, and then they stepped in, introduced
themselves mid-career and said, Hey, we know you have this thing that you like that isn't
really a frowned upon by your own people, but we don't frown upon it. And we can help
you both succeed and, you know,
have an endless supply of ladies along the way.
Everything you talk to Ryan Graves, who's a lieutenant, Ryan Graves, who's a fighter jet pilot,
about many things. He also does work on autonomous weapons systems systems drones and that kind of thing, including quantum computing.
But he also happens to be one of the very few pilots that were willing to go on record and talk about
UFO sightings. Does the CIA and the federal government have interest in UFOs?
In my experience at CIA, that is an area that remains very compartmented.
And that could be one of two reasons. It could be because there is significant interest,
and that's why it's so heavily compartmented. Or it could be because it's an area that's
non, that's just not important. It's a distraction. So the compartment, so it doesn't distract from other operations.
One of the areas that I've been quite interested in and where I've done a lot of research,
and I've done some work in the private intelligence and private investigation side is with UFOs.
The place where UFOs really connect with the federal government is when it comes to aviation's safety and predominance of power.
So, FAA and the U.S. Air Force and the U.S. military are very invested in knowing what's
happening in the skies above the United States.
And that's of primary interest to them.
When they can rule out the direct threat to national security of UFOs, then they become
less interested. That said, when you have unexplained
aerial phenomenon that are unexplained, that can't directly be tied to anything that is known
of the terrestrial world, then they're left without an answer to their question. They don't know if
it's a threat or not a threat. But I think the scarier concern for the US national government
or for the US federal government,
the scarier concern that nobody talks about
is what if the UFO isn't alien,
what if it is actually a cutting edge war machine
that we are eons behind ever being able to replicate?
Or the other concern is that it's a system,
it's a machine from a foreign power
that's doing intelligence collection.
Correct.
So it's not just military purposes,
it's actually collecting data.
Well, they fall.
A lot of times the federal government will see the two
as the same.
It's a hostile tool from foreign government.
So a collection of information is a hostile act.
Absolutely. That's why the Espionage Act exists. That's why it's a criminal offense. If
you're committing Espionage in the United States, as a U.S. citizen or a foreign citizen.
So I guess they keep digging until they can confirm it's not a threat. But it's just,
and you're saying that there's not from your understanding much
evidence that they're doing so it could be because they're compartmentalized, but you're
saying private intelligence institutions are trying to make progress on this.
Yeah, it's really difficult to know.
There's a vested, yeah, there's an economic interest in the private and the private intelligence
world.
Because for example, if you understand why certain aerial phenomenon are happening over
a location, then you can use that to inform investors whether to invest in that location
or avoid investment in that location.
But that's not a national security concern.
So that doesn't, it doesn't matter to the federal government.
Could these UFOs be aliens? Now I'm going to a territory of you as a human being, wondering
about all the alien civilizations that are out there. The humbling question.
We are not alone. You think we're not alone? There's, it's an improbability that we are alone. If by virtue of the fact that sentient human life exists,
intelligent human life exists,
all of the probabilities that would have to be destroyed for that to be true,
simply speak over the galaxies that exist,
that there's no possible way we're alone.
It's a mathematical equation.
It's a one or a zero, right?
And for me, it has to exist.
It's impossible otherwise rationally for me
to think that we are truly the only intelligent life form
in all of the universe.
But to think that an alien life form
is anything like us at all is equally
as inconceivable.
To think that they're carbon-based, bipedal, humanoid, alien species
that just happen to fly around in metal machines and visit alien planets in a way that they become
observed is, it's just silly, it's the world of sci-fi.
Well, let me push you down.
Every good scientist, because we always assume that they're superior
to us intelligence. Yes. And when any scientist carries out an experiment, the whole objective
of the experiment is to observe without being disclosed or being discovered. So why on
earth would we think that this superior species makes the mistake of being discovered over
and over again? So to push back on that idea, if we were to think about us humans trying to communicate with ants,
first we observe for a while, there'll be a bunch of PhDs written, a bunch of people just sort of
collecting data, taking notes, trying to understand about this thing that you detected that seems
to be a living thing, which is a very difficult thing to define from an alien perspective or from our perspective, we find a life on Mars or something like that.
Okay, so you observe for a while, but then if you want to actually interact with it, how would you interact with the ants? If I were to interact with the ants, I would try to infiltrate. I would try to put, like, figure out what is the language they
used to communicate with each other. I would try to operate at their physical scale, like,
in terms of the physics of their interaction, in terms of the information methods, mediums
of information exchange, with pheromamones or whatever however the heck ants
So I will try to mimic them in some way. So in that sense it makes sense that
The objects we would see you mentioned by Peter. Yes, of course, it's ridiculous that aliens would actually be
Very similar to us, but maybe they create forms in order to be like,
here, the humans will understand it, and this needs to be sufficiently different from humans
to know that there's something weird. I don't know, I think it's actually an incredibly difficult
problem of figuring out how to communicate with a thing way dumber than you. People assume like if you're smart it's easy to
talk to the dumb thing, but I think it's actually extremely
difficult when the gap in intelligence is just orders of
magnitude. And so of course you can observe, but once you
notice the thing is sufficiently interesting, how do you
communicate with that thing?
So this is where one of the things I always try to highlight is how conspiracies are born
because many people don't understand how easy it is to fall into the conspiratorial cycle.
So the first step to a conspiracy being born is to have an piece of evidence that is true.
And then immediately following the true evidence is a gap in
information. And then to fill in the gap of information,
people create an idea, and then the next logical outcome is
based on the idea that they just created, which is an idea that's
based on something that was imagined in the first place.
So the idea, the factual thing is now two steps away, and then three steps away, four steps
away as the things go on.
And then all of a sudden, you have this kernel of truth that turn into this wild conspiracy.
So in our example, you talked about humans trying to communicate with ants, answer not intelligence.
There's no answer not intelligent species.
There are drone species that's somehow commanded through whatever technology, whatever, whatever
whatever. It's spoken like a typical human, but yes. Whatever biological thing is in the
queen, right? But they're not it's not a fair equivalent. But let's look at gorillas or let's
look at something in the monkey family, right? Where we're largely we agree that there there
is some sort of intelligence there or dolphins some sort of intelligence, right?
It is a human thing a human thing to want to observe and
Then communicate and integrate
That's a human thing not an intelligent life thing
So for us to even think that a foreign and intelligent alien species would want to engage
and communicate at all, is an extremely human assumption.
And then from that assumption, then we started going into all the other things you said.
If they wanted to communicate, wouldn't they want a mimic?
If they wanted to mimic, wouldn't they create devices like ours?
So now we're three steps removed from the true fact of there's something unexplainable in
the skies.
Yeah, so the fact is there's something unexplainable in the skies and then we're filling in the gaps
with all of our basic human biases and assumptions.
But the thing is now we're getting right back to Project Northwood.
We need some plan.
I don't care how crazy the idea is guys, give me some plan. So that's
where we come up with. Maybe it's an alien species trying to communicate or maybe it's an alien
a hostile threat that's trying to take over the the world or who knows what maybe it's...
I mean, but you have to you have to somehow construct hypotheses and theories for anomalies and then
hypotheses and theories for anomalies. And then from that amidst giant pile of the ridiculous merges perhaps a deeper truth over a period of decades. And at first that truth is ridiculed,
and then it's accepted that whole process.
But if revolving around the sun?
Yeah, the earth revolving around the sun.
But to me, it's interesting because it asks us looking out
there with Sadi, just looking for alien life,
is forcing us to really ask questions about ourselves,
about what is life, how special, first of all,
what is intelligence, how special is intelligence and the cosmos.
And I think it's, it's inspiring and challenging to us as human beings, both on a scientific and
engineering level, but also on a philosophical level. I mean, all of those questions that are
laid before us when you start to think about alien life. So you interviewed Joe Rogan recently.
Yeah. And he said something that I thought was really,
really brilliant during the podcast interview.
He said that you-
He's gonna love hearing that.
But, guys, sorry.
But he said that he realized at some point
that the turn in his opinion about UFOs happened
when he realized how desperately he wanted it to be true.
This is the human condition.
We are pink matter works the same way,
as everybody's pink matter.
And one of the ways that our pink matter works
is with this thing, with what's known as a cognitive bias.
It's a mental shortcut.
Essentially, your brain doesn't want to process through facts
over and over again.
Instead, it wants to assume certain facts are in place
and just jump right to the conclusion.
It saves energy. it saves megabytes.
So what Joe, what Joe or Joe Rogan, I feel weird calling him Joe, I don't know him, but what
Joe identified on his own, what Mr. Rogan identified on his own, was his own cognitive loop.
And then he immediately grew suspicious of that loop.
That is a super powerful tool.
That is something that most people never become self-actualized enough to realize that they
have a cognitive loop, let alone questioning their own cognitive loop.
So that was when it came to this topic specifically, that was just something that I thought was really
powerful because you learned to not trust your own record.
After he drinks one whiskey, all that goes out.
I think that was just in that moment in time.
Like, you know, a moment of brilliance.
A moment of course, because I think he's still,
is, you know, he's definitely one of the things
that inspires me about Joe is how open mind he is, how curious he is.
He refuses to let sort of the conformity and the conventions of any one community, including the scientific community,
be a kind of thing that limits his curiosity of asking, what if, like the whole, it's entirely possible.
I think that's a beautiful thing. It actually represents
what the best of science is, that childlike curiosity. But so it's good to balance those two things, but then you have to wake up to it. Is this a chance this is true or do I just really want it to be true?
Right. And that like that hot girl that talks to you overseas? Yeah. Yeah.
right? And that like that hot girl that talks to you overseas. Yeah. Yeah.
For a brief moment. There's there's actually a deeper explanation for it that I'll tell you off the mic that perhaps a lot of people can kind of figure out. Anyway, just to take it one step further
because I love this stuff. Personally, I love pink. I love pink matter stuff.
And your interview with Jack Barsky, Jack's a good friend of mine, a good dude.
Yeah, incredible person.
Yeah, and your conversation with Jack Barsky,
you guys, he started talking to you about
how his recruiters were feeding back to him
his own beliefs, his own opinions about himself,
how smart he was, how good he was,
how uniquely qualified he was.
That's all pink matter manipulation.
Feeding right back to the person,
what they already think of themselves,
is a way to get them to invest and trust you faster,
because obviously you value them for all the right reasons,
because that's how they see themselves.
So that loop that the KGB was using with Jack,
Jack did not wake up to that loop at the time.
He woke up to it later.
So it's, it's, it happens to all of us.
We're all in a loop.
It's just whether it's about oat milk or whether it's about aliens or whether it's about,
you know, the Democrats trying to take your guns, whatever it is.
Everybody's in a loop and we've got to wake up to, to ask ourselves just like you said,
is it true?
Or do we just really want it to be true?
And until you ask yourself that question, you're just one of the masses trapped in loop.
Yeah, that's the, that's the really, the, the Nietzsche
who gave it to the abyss.
It's a dangerous thing.
It's, that's the past insanity is to ask that question.
You want to be doing it carefully, but it's also the place where you can truly discover
something fundamental about this world
that people don't understand, and then that,
and lay the groundwork for progress,
scientific, cultural, all that kind of stuff.
Absolutely.
What is one spy trick?
This is from a Reddit that I really enjoy.
What's one spy trick? This is from a Reddit that I really enjoy. What's one spy trick?
And in your full of a million spy tricks, people should follow you. You do an amazing podcast.
You're just an amazing person. What is the one spy trick you would teach everyone that they can use to improve their life instantly?
Now, you already mentioned quite a few, but what what else could jump to mind?
My go-to answer for this is not really changed much over the last few years. So the first,
the most important spy trick to change everything immediately is something called perception versus
perspective. We all look at the world through our own perception. My dad used to tell me, my step-to-head used to tell me
that perception is reality.
And I was arguing this with him when I was 14 years old.
I told you, so dad, you're still wrong.
Yeah.
But perception is your interpretation of the world around you.
But it's unique only to you.
There's no advantage in your perception.
That's why so many people find themselves arguing all the time,
trying to convince other people of their own perception.
The way that you win any argument, the way that you get ahead in your career, the way that you outsell or out race anybody is when you move off of perception
and move into perspective.
Perspective is the act or the art of observing
the world from outside of yourself. Whether that's outside of yourself as like an entity
just observing a third from a different point of view, or even more powerful, you sit in
the shoes, you sit in the seat of the person opposite you, and you think to yourself, what
is their life like? What do they feel right now? Are they comfortable? Are they uncomfortable? Are they afraid? Are they scared?
What's the stressor that they woke up to this morning? What's the stressor that they're
going to go to sleep with tonight? When you shift places and get out of your own perception
and into someone else's perspective, now you're thinking like them, which is giving you
an informational advantage.
But you know what they're all doing?
Everyone else out there is trapped in their own perception, not thinking about a different
perspective.
So immediately you have superior information, superior positioning.
You have an advantage that they don't have.
And if you do that to your boss, it's going to change your career.
If you do that to your spouse, it's going to change your marriage. If you do that to your kids, it's gonna change your career. If you do that to your spouse, it's gonna change your marriage.
If you do that to your kids, it's gonna change your family legacy.
Because nobody else out there is doing it.
It's so interesting how difficult empathy is for people
and how powerful it is, especially for, like you said,
with spiles like intimacy.
Yeah.
Like stepping outside of yourself
and really putting yourself in the shoes of
the other person considering how they see the world. And that that's, I really enjoy that because
how does that exactly lead to connection? I think when you start to understand the way the other
person sees the world, you start to enjoy the world through their eyes,
and you start to be able to share in terms of intimacy,
share the beauty that they see together,
because you understand their perspective,
and that's somehow you converge as well.
Of course, that allows you to gather information better
and all that stuff, and like,
that allows you to work together better
to share in all different kinds
of ways, but for intimacy, that's a really powerful thing. And also for actually, like
people you really disagree with or people on the internet you disagree with and so on,
I find empathy is such a powerful way to resolve any tensions there. Even like people like
trolls or all that kind of stuff.
I don't deride them, I just kind of put myself in their shoes and it becomes like an enjoyable
camaraderie with that.
So I want to draw a pretty hard line between perspective and empathy.
Because empathy is frankly an overused term by people who don't really know what they're saying sometimes.
I think you know what you're saying,
but the vast majority of people listening.
I would argue that, but that's fine.
As soon as you say empathy, they're gonna just be like,
oh, yeah, I've heard this a thousand times.
Yes.
Empathy is about feeling what other people feel.
And...
Or understanding, you would you say?
Yeah, it's about feelings.
It's about understanding someone else's feelings.
Feeling, it's not the same as sympathy
where you feel their feelings.
Empathy is about recognizing that they have feelings
and recognizing that their feelings are valid.
Perspective is more than just feelings.
It's about the brain, it's about the pink matter
on the left side and the right
side of the brain. Yes, I care about feelings. And this goes directly to your point about
connection. Yes, I care about feelings, but I also care about objectives. What is your
life? What is your aspirational goal? What was it like to grow up as you? What was it like
to experience this and how did this shape your opinion on that? And, you know, what is it that you're going to do next more than just feelings actual tactical
actions? And that's, that becomes extremely valuable in the operational world. Because if you can
get into someone's head, left brain and right brain feelings and logic, you can start anticipating
what actions they're going to take next. You can direct the actions that they're going to take next because you're basically telling them
the story that's in their own head. When it comes to relationships and personal connection,
we talked about it earlier. The thing that people want the most is community. They want someone
else who understands them. They want to be with people. They don't want to be alone.
The more you practice perspective, empathy or no empathy, the more you just validate that a person is there. I am in this time and space with you in this moment. Feelings aside, right? That is powerful.
That is intimate. And whether you're talking about lovers or whether you're talking
about a business exchange or whether you're talking about collaborators in a crime, I'm
here with you, Ryder, Die. Let's do it, right? That's powerful.
How much of what you've learned in your role at the CIA transfer over to relationships,
the business relationship to other aspects of life.
This is something you work closely with powerful people to help them out.
What have you learned about the commonalities about the problems that people face?
Man, I would say about a solid 95% of what I learned at CIA carries over to the civilian
world.
That 5% that doesn't, it would carry over in a disaster, right?
There's knowing how to shoot on target with my non-dominant hand, really only has one
purpose. It's not going to happen day to day, right? Knowing how to do a dead drop that
isn't discoverable by the local police force isn't going to be useful right now, but it
could be useful in a disaster. But the 95% of stuff that's useful, it's all tied to the human condition.
It's all tied to being able to understand what someone's thinking, understand what someone's
feeling, direct their thoughts, direct their emotions, direct their thought process, win
their attention, win their loyalty, win influence with them, grow your network,
grow your own circle of influence.
I mean, all of that is immensely, immensely valuable.
As an example, the disguise, the disguise thing that we talked about earlier, disguise
in and of itself has mixed utility.
If you're Brad Pitt and you don't know your Brad Pitt, you put on a level one disguise,
and that's great.
Or maybe you call me and I walk you through a level two disguise so that you can go to
Aruba and nobody's going to know you're in Aruba, right?
Whatever it is.
But even there, with the 5% that doesn't apply to everyday life, there's still elements
that do.
For example, when a person looks at a human being's face, the first place they look is the
same part of the
face as if they were reading a piece of paper.
So in English, we start from the top left and we read left to right top to bottom.
So when an English speaking person interacts with another person, the first thing they look
at isn't their eyes.
It's the upper left from their point of view, corner of their face. They look there and the information
they get is hair color, hair pattern, skin color. That's it. Before they know anything
else about the face, this is one of the reasons why somebody can look at you and then you
ask them what color are my eyes? I don't really remember. Because they read the face, they
read it from left to right, top to bottom. So they're paying a lot of attention to the first few things they see,
and then they're paying less attention as they go down the face.
The same scrolling behavior that you see on the internet, right?
So when you understand that through the lens of disguise,
it allows you to make a very powerful disguise.
The most important part of your disguise is here, if you're English speaking,
right, here, if you're speaking some foreign languages that read right to left,
right?
If it's Chinese you know
They're gonna look from here down because they read left down so it's so interesting
So yeah knowing that really helps you sort of configure the things in terms of physical appearance. That's correct
Correct, so when it comes to how to make it disguise not so useful to the ultra wealthy usually
But when it comes to how to read a face or more importantly how people are going to read your face, that's extremely important. Because now you know where to find the first
signs of deception in a baseline or anything else. You mentioned that the idea of having privacy
is one that we kind of we think we can but we really don't.
Is it possible for maybe somebody like me
or a regular person to disappear from the grid?
Absolutely.
Yeah, and it's not as hard as you might think.
It's not convenient, again, convenience and security.
You can disappear tomorrow, right?
I can walk you through three steps right now
that's gonna help you disappear tomorrow,
but none of them are convenient.
They're all extremely secure.
The first thing you do is every piece of digital technology you have that is connected
to you in any way is now dead.
You just let the battery run out.
Forever.
You never touch it again, starting at this moment.
What you have to do is go out and acquire a new one.
Realistically, you will not be able to acquire
a new one in the United States by buying it. Because to do so, you would tie it to your credit card,
you would tie it to a location, a time, a place, a registered name, whatever else. So you would have
to require it essentially by theft or through the black market. So you would want something because
you're going to need the advantage of technology without it being in your name. So you go out and you steal a phone or you steal
a laptop, you do whatever you have to do to make sure that you can get on with the password
and whatever else that might be as dirty or as clean as you want that to be. We're all morally
flexible here. But now you have a technological device that you can work with. And then from
there on, you're just doing whatever you have to do,
whether you're stealing every step of the way, or whether you run a massive con. Keep in mind that
we often talk about con men and cons. Do you know what the root, the word that con is a root word for
confidence? That's what a con man is. a con man is a confidence man. Just somebody who
is so brazenly confident that the people around them living in their own perception, not
perspective, and their perception, they're like, well, this guy really knows what he's
talking about. So I'm going to do what he says. So you can run a massive con and that can
take care of your finances, that can take care of your lodging, whatever it must, whatever
else it is. You are whoever you present yourself to be.
So if you want to go be, if you want to be bill for the afternoon, just go tell people
your name is Bill.
They're not going to question you.
So the intelligence, the natural web of intelligence gathering systems we have in the United States and in the world
Are they going to believe for long that you're bill?
Are they until you do something that makes them think otherwise if you are consistent?
We talked about consistency being the superpower if you are consistent. They will think you're bill forever
How difficult is that is that to do? It's it's not convenient. It's quite difficult.
Was that required training?
It does require training.
Because why do criminals always get caught?
Because they stop being consistent.
Criminals, I've, I've, I've, I, I never hesitate
to admit this, but people tell me I should hesitate
to admit it.
So now I hesitate because of the guidance I've gotten to hesitate, right? I like criminals. I'm friends with a number
of criminals because the only people who get me, like right away, who get me, are criminals.
Because we know what it's like to basically abandon all the rules, do our own thing our own way,
and watch the world just keep turning. Most people are so stuck in the trap of normal
thought and behavior that when I tell them they just don't just go tell people your name is Bill.
Most people are going to say, that's not going to work. But a criminal will be like, oh yeah,
I did that once. I just told everybody my name is Nancy. And they still believe me.
The criminals just get it, right? So what happens with criminals is they go to the school of hard knocks.
They go to, they learn criminal behavior on the job.
Spies go to school.
We go to the best spy school in the world.
We go to Langley's, the farm, right, was known as field trade craft course, FTC.
In a covert location for a covert period of time
and covert, covert, covert, so if anybody from CI is watching,
I'm not breaking any rules.
It's all on Wikipedia, but it's not coming from me.
Yeah.
But we do, that's how we do it.
They train us from a hundred years of experience
in the best ways to carry out covert operations,
which are all just criminal activities overseas.
We learn how to do it the right way so that we don't get caught.
We learn how to be consistent.
More importantly, we learn how to create an operation that has a limited lifespan
because the longer it lives, the more at risk you are.
So you want operations to be short, concise on the X off the X,
limit your room for mistakes.
Criminals want the default to wanting these long-term operations,
because they don't want to have to recreate a new way to make money every 15 days.
You mentioned, if Amy from the CIA is watching,
so I've seen you talk about the fact that sort of people that are currently working
at the CIA would kind of look down
to the people who've left the CIA and they derived them, especially if you go public,
especially if there's a book and all that kind of stuff.
Do you feel the pressure of that to be quiet, to not do something like this conversation
that we're doing today.
I feel the silent judgment.
That's very real.
I feel it for myself and I feel it for my wife who doesn't appear on camera very often,
but who's also a former CIA.
We both feel the judgment.
We know that right now,
three days after this is released,
somebody's going to send an email on a closed network system inside C.I. headquarters,
and there's a bunch of people who are going to laugh at it, a bunch of people who are going to say that
who knows what it's not going to go. A bunch of people you respect, probably.
A bunch of people who I'm trying to bring honor to, whether I know them or respect them as irrelevant,
these are people who are out there doing the deed every day.
And I want to bring them honor.
And I want to do that in a way that I get to
share what they can't share and what they won't share when they leave because they will also feel
the silent pressure, the pressure to the shame, the judgment, right? But the truth is that I've done
this now long enough. The first few times that I spoke out publicly, the response to being a positive voice for what the sacrifice
is that people are making, it's so refreshing to be an honest voice that people don't normally
hear that it's too important.
One day I'm going to be gone and my kids are going to look back on all this and they're
going to see their dad trying to do the right thing for the right reasons.
And even if my son or daughter ends up at CIA, and even if they get ridiculed for being,
no, you're the boost of Montecid, right? Your dad's a total sellout, whatever it might be.
Like, I want them to know, you know, dad was doing what he could to bring honor to the organization,
even when he couldn't stay in the organization anymore. So you said when you were 27, I think you didn't know what the hell you're doing.
So now that you're a few years older and wiser,
let me ask you to put on your wise sage hat and give advice to other 27-year-olds
or even younger, 17-18-year-olds They're just out of high school. Maybe go into college
I'm trying to figure out this life this career thing that they're on
What advice would you give them about how to have a career or how to have a life that can be proud of?
What's a powerful question, man?
Um
Have you figured it out yet yourself? No, I'm I'm think I'm a
Matt I'm a grand total of seven days smarter than I was at 27. It's not a good
average. There's still time. There's still time. So for all the young people out
there deciding what to do, I'm I would just say the same thing that I would say
that I do say and I will say to my own kids.
You only have one life. You only have one chance. If you spend it doing what other people expect
you to do, you will wake up to your regret at some point. I woke up when I was 38 years old.
My wife in many ways is still waking up to it
as she watches her grandparents pass
and an older generation pass away.
The folks that I've really have a blessed life
are the people who learn early on to live
with their own rules, live their own way
and live every day as if it's the last day.
Not necessarily to waste it by being wasteful or silly, but to recognize that today is
a day to be productive and constructive for yourself.
If you don't want a career, today is not the day to start pursuing a career just because
someone else told you to do it.
If you want to learn a language, today is a day to find a way to buy a ticket
to another country and learn through immersion.
If you want a date, if you want to get married,
if you want a business, today is the day
to just go out and take one step in that direction.
And as long as you, every day,
you just make one new step, just like CIA recruited me,
just do the next thing.
If the step seems like it's too big, then there's probably two other steps that you can do before that.
Just make constant progress, build momentum, move forward,
and live on your own terms.
That way you don't ever wake up to the regret.
And it'll be over before you know it, whether you regret it or not, it's true.
What do you think is the meaning of this whole thing?
What's the meaning of life?
Self-respect.
That's a fast answer.
There's a story behind it if you want the story.
I would love to have the story.
There's a covert training base in Alabama, in the Sinsouth, in far south, in like the
armpit of America, where elite tier one operators go to
learn human intelligence stuff. And there's a bar inside this base. And on the wall is just
it scribbles of opinions. And the question in the middle of the wall says what's the meaning of
life. And all these elite operators over the last 25 or 30 years,
they all go, they get drunk and they scribble their answer
and they circle it with a sharpie, right?
Love, family, America, freedom, right?
Whatever.
And then the only thing they have to do
is if they're gonna write something on there,
they have to connect it with something else on the wall,
at least one other thing.
So if they write love, they can't just leave it floating there. They have to write love in a little bubble and connect it to something else on the wall, at least one other thing. So if they write love, they can't just leave it floating there
They have to write love in a little bubble and connect it to something else, connect it to family, whatever else. When you look at that wall
The word self-respect is on the wall and it's got a circle around it
And then you can't see any other word because of all the things that connect to self-respect
because of all the things that connect to self-respect.
Just dozens of people have written over, have written their words down and been drawn
and scribbled over because of all the lines
that connect with self-respect.
So what's the meaning of life?
From my point of view, I've never seen a better answer.
It's all self-respect.
If you don't respect yourself, how can you do anything else?
How can you love someone else
if you don't have self-respect?
How can you build a business you're proud of
if you don't have self-respect? How can you raise kids? How can you make a difference? How can you do anything else? How can you love someone else if you don't have for self-respect? How can you build a business you're proud of if you don't have self-respect?
How can you raise kids?
How can you make a difference?
How can you pioneer anything?
How can you just wake up and have a good day if you don't have self-respect?
The power of the individual, that's what makes this country great.
I have to say after traveling quite a bit in Europe and especially
in a place of war, coming back to the United States makes me really appreciate about the
the better angels of this nation that deals with the stance for the values of stance for.
And I'd like to thank you for serving this nation for time and humanity for time.
And for being brave enough and bold enough to still talk about it and to inspire others, to educate others,
for having many amazing conversations and for honoring me by having this conversation today.
You're an amazing human.
Thanks so much for talking today.
Lex, I appreciate the end by man.
It was a joy.
Thanks for listening to this conversation
with Andrew Bustamante.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors
in the description.
And now, let me leave you some words from Sun Zoo
in the art of war.
Let your plans be dark and impenetrable as night, and when you move, fall like a thunderbolt.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.
you