QAA Podcast - Fort Bragg Fever feat Seth Harp (E336)
Episode Date: August 19, 2025Murder, drug trafficking and the training of death squads. Just Fort Bragg Things. Journalist and author Seth Harp dropped by to chat with us about his explosive new book — The Fort Bragg Cartel: Dr...ug Trafficking and Murder in the Special Forces. We talk about Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), Delta Force, and a variety of horrors beyond human comprehension. Subscribe for $5 a month to get all the premium episodes: https://www.patreon.com/qaa Buy Seth Harp’s book: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/730414/the-fort-bragg-cartel-by-seth-harp/ Follow Seth Harp: https://x.com/sethharpesq Editing by Corey Klotz. Theme by Nick Sena. Additional music by Pontus Berghe. Theme Vocals by THEY/LIVE (https://instagram.com/theyylivve / https://sptfy.com/QrDm). Cover Art by Pedro Correa: (https://pedrocorrea.com) https://qaapodcast.com QAA was known as the QAnon Anonymous podcast.
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If you're hearing this, well done, you've found a way to connect to the internet.
Welcome to the QAA podcast, episode 336, Fort Bragg Fever.
As always, we are your host, Jake Rakitansky, Brad Abrahams, and Julian Fields.
Sometimes a book comes along that truly elucidates the opaque power structures of the American Empire
and manages to shock even a cynical piece of shit like me.
I'm thinking, of course, of the Jakarta method a couple years ago by Vincent
Bevins covered that at the time, but this week's guest, journalist and author, Seth Harp,
has written a book that astounded to me not just by what it revealed, but also by the
recency of so many of the topics and situations it covered. So he's been dodging, I'm assuming
various hit men to make it to this recording. We're very grateful for that. The book is called
The Fort Bragg Cartel, Drug Trafficking, and Murder in the Special Forces. Welcome to the show, Seth.
Hey guys, thanks for having me. You know, one thing that I really found amazing about this,
book is how it manages to take situations that feel extremely anecdotal like it opens with just
two guys who are in this very specialized spec ops force and they're they're not doing anything
professional they're just coming back from Disneyland on a garden variety of like every hard drug
on earth basically and they've got their daughters in the back and oh no it just gets it gets paranoid and
and of course things kind of get to a pretty gruesome conclusion but what I love
about that is that, you know, you're kind of like reading this as a kind of personal tragedy
or a personal, certainly a personal situation. And then it kind of spins out to reveal
certain aspects of how special forces work, why, you know, they arose in the first place.
And I think my favorite part of that is just that they decided that the CIA black ops teams
had too much oversight. Is that correct? They just were like, hey, we're just, there's too much,
too many over-the-shoulder people.
I mean, I think you're joking, but I think that there's a lot of truth to that.
One thing I figured out as I was researching the creation of Delta Force, I wasn't planning
to go too, too deep into it, and also the Joint Special Operations Command, you know,
was just how soon after the church committee hearings, you know, after those were held and after
laws were passed, putting oversight over the CIA really for the first time, mandating that they
report covert actions to Congress, like within a matter of months.
they had stood up Delta Force. And it was not long after that that they formed J-Soc. And these
organizations have many of the same capacities as a CIA. And in fact, arguably, they have more,
greater capacity in a lot of respect, certainly in the paramilitary operations they do. And
what's more, J-Soc almost never leaks. And I don't think we can say that about the CIA at all.
So you managed to, you know, I mean, get some pretty decent, I'd say, leaks here. I mean,
how did you even get these guys who essentially, I think, like most people wouldn't even know
what the hell you're talking about, if you talk to them about J-Soc or Delta, you know, they would,
they would obviously, like, have more familiarity with some of the other, like, paropolitical and
paramilitary organizations of the past, you know, like you said, you know, the church committee was,
was like a big moment of a supposed disclosure or whatever. I mean, it always seems kind of
paltry to me. And then I realize, oh, that for them was a huge disaster that they had to kind of
plug up. So what makes J-Soc less visible, I guess, to the public? And, yeah, can you kind of
walk us through how Delta came to be because these guys are pretty scared.
And it might help just even like a one-liner on what J-Soc is because a lot of people don't know
what that means. Yeah. So Delta Force was formed, I believe, in 1978. And its first mission
was the Operation Eagle Claw disaster in Iran. It was originally supposed to be a counterterrorism
force, a small elite commando unit that could be used for really exceptional circumstances where there
was some kind of high-level geopolitical event that necessitated a very precise military response
where, you know, failure wasn't really an option, such as the, you know, the hostages that they
kidnapped and kept at the, or they didn't kidnap them, you know, they took over the U.S. embassy in
Tehran and turned them into prisoners of the Islamic Revolution there.
And so President Carter decided to send a Delta Force team to Iran to free them.
And it was a complete disaster.
You know, I won't belabor.
The details, because a lot of people are already well familiar with this case.
But the fact that it failed was significant because the operators never got close.
There was about 100 Delta operators that were sent there, and they were supposed to assault the embassy.
They never even got close because a helicopter crashed into a transport aircraft and blew up and killed a bunch of guys, eight guys.
So the lesson, one of the lessons they took away from that was that, you know, Delta Force needed to be supported by its own sort of organic aviation assets and maritime assets.
So it was built out with Navy units, Air Force units, and then that superstructure is called
the Joint Special Operations Command.
So Delta Force is really the core of J-Soc, but J-Soc includes other units from other service
branches, including, I think, pretty significantly, SEAL Team 6, which a lot of people have
heard about.
That's kind of like Delta Force's sister unit.
So that's what J-Soc is.
Would the Green Berets also be part of J-Soc?
No, the Green Berets are sort of what we call Tier 2 of the Special Operations community.
The things that they do are seekers.
That's the Army Special Forces.
The Green Berets is just another name for the Army Special Forces.
And the Navy SEALs are the same thing.
So the SEALs and the Green Berets, they're special forces,
but they don't do covert operations.
They don't do clandestine stuff.
They still wear uniforms.
They still carry ID cards.
They don't operate in disguise in foreign countries like Delta Force does.
So Delta and J-Soc are significantly a cut above
and include far fewer personnel,
and much more select, small and select organization
and everything that it does is covert.
And in fact, the government doesn't really admit
its existence to kind of dance around or play coy.
They have like way better skins than everybody else probably.
Okay, yeah.
Maybe before we get like too much deeper,
it'd be nice to hear more about you, Seth.
And I think as a disclaimer, I should say that we're friends.
You know, we met at a party like not that long ago,
maybe a couple years ago, right?
And even if that, yeah, and became like,
fast friends, having extremely dark conversations every time we meet. And then you came to my
wedding with your lovely partner. Yeah, that was a beautiful event. Thanks for having us there.
We don't always talk about dark things, but yeah. Not always, but most of the time, yeah.
Get into it. This is hugely discrediting to Seth, uh, that he's friends with you, Brad. So good job.
You're already shit coding this whole interview. I was just going to say like, and Julian and I weren't
invited. Well, that's the thing is, guys, if I invited one of you to have to invite all of you and
I didn't want Travis there. It's true. Yeah, making Seth sit through this is very important,
Jake. Thank you. It's true. Please continue, Brad. For people that don't know you well,
can you kind of just, you know, tell us a little bit about yourself and how you got to writing a book
about Fort Bragg? Sir, I'm from Austin, where we both live. I'll keep it really relevant to
the book. In college, I was in the Army Reserve and was deployed to Iraq for a 15-month deployment
from 2003 to 2005. And during that, I completely opposed the Iraq War. I was 19 years old. I didn't
really know what I was doing when I signed up. I mean, it's on me. I don't have any excuse, but that's
just how it was. It seems kind of contradictory when I try to explain it in retrospect how I wasn't
in favor of the Bush administration. I wasn't in favor of the Iraq War. I still thought that
the Army Reserve would be a cool thing to do to pay for college and like improve my camping skills.
You know, that's what I was about at that age. But I was just very naive about it. And the recruiter
obviously was a complete liar. I remember I asked him if I could sign up one of those two-year
contracts. And he was like, no, we're fresh out of those. We only got these eight-year babies,
sorry. Wow. Wow. And then, you know, before I even got out of basic training, I had been deployed
to Iraq. It was two years before I went back to college. But I completely believed the whole
two weeks a year, one week and a month pitch for the reserves. It turned up to be not the case.
But, you know, because I thought I was forcefully or strongly disagree with the Iraq war and also
being there, of course, just further entrenched, you know, that opposition to it. And I started writing
for the Daily Texan because I went to UT, University of Texas. And I wrote for the paper there. And so I started
writing, you know, articles about the Iraq war and what I saw as the truth of the Iraq war and using
my own experiences there to kind of illustrate some of the horrible things that were taking place.
Then instead of continuing in that path as a writer or a journalist, I actually went to law school
and practiced law for five years before deciding that I wanted to go back to being a journalist.
at that point, I went to grad school for journalism, and ever since then, I've been working
as a reporter full time for about the last nine, almost 10 years. And I've done a lot of reporting
in Iraq and Syria, also other war zones, including Ukraine and Mexico, war reporting, basically,
otherwise writing about the military armed conflict, that kind of thing. And this story that
turned into the book started off as a series of pieces for Rolling Stone, three pieces for Rolling Stone,
that eventually just got turned into a book. So, yeah, let's see. I can.
came to write this book. That's how it started. Yeah, yeah. And the book, like, it really thoroughly
destroyed me reading it. I had insomnia, like, every, you know, every night almost that I would
read it before bed. And I learned not to read it before bed. But, like, every time I just read a chapter
title, I would have to brace myself because they had, they have titles like, you know, I kill people
for a living or they do what they want or he was seeing bad things. I'd be like, oh, no, what am I in for
for the next like hour or so to be honest man it hasn't been great for me either um because it was
the writing the book was actually the idea of my editor of viking she got in touch and suggested i write
the book i actually didn't pitch it as a story and so i was definitely on board for the project
and was happy to have the opportunity but immersing myself in this world for the past two or three
years it hasn't been great because it really is a world of darkness yeah and it's you know the
underbelly of kind of the worst uh features of the u.s military but i try not to keep
it, I mean, for the book itself, like, I don't want people to get the wrong idea. It's not just the
most depressing slog in the entire world. I try to use, like, elements of murder mystery. Yeah.
I try to make it informative. I try not to recapitulate a lot of stuff that people already know
about the military. Hopefully it includes lots of new revelations. Revelations in every page I would hope
to kind of, you know, to keep the reader engaged despite the fact that, yeah, you are having to
wait through some really dark, dark stuff. Yeah, but at no point did I think it was a slog.
and in fact, kind of the opposite, like it reads like a thriller throughout.
It does.
Yeah, and you did such a good job, too, you know, a lot of these people at first,
they're sort of presented in a monstrous way, right?
But you did a really good job at kind of fully diving into all of their backgrounds
and dimensionalizing them, like how they got to where they got to
and how they really did seem like completely different people after experiencing things
they experienced and doing things that they did, which are monstrous.
Yeah, interestingly, you know, my main character, Billy Levine,
who's the Delta Force operator who was found dead on Fort Bragg, found murdered on Fort Bragg in
2020, you know, he, despite having done 14 deployments and having been an operator at the most
elite level of the military and participated in all these assassination programs, as well as
doing all these stateside crimes, trafficking drugs, killing people, working with Mexican
cartels, working with corrupt cops and stuff, he wasn't a one-dimensional character.
In fact, one thing that seems to have sort of precipitated his downward spiral was the fact that
he lost faith in the wars. And, you know, earlier in his career had been sort of just like
a unquestioning gung-ho patriot, but at a certain point, maybe around 2015 or early 2010s,
he realized that, you know, that they weren't doing it for the reasons that he thought. And that
he just kind of lost faith, like in the, in the righteousness of what he was doing and turned
into, you know, someone who holds opinions kind of like, you know, I do and you do about the
wars and would go around telling people that what the U.S. was doing in these foreign countries was
wrong so he was not a one-dimensional character he was some somewhat of a complex character and you know what
happened to him you know although he wasn't a good guy what happened what befell him was tragic ultimately
yeah yeah yeah and to you know julian already kind of painted the picture of of your opening but i
need to talk about it again just because like it's kind of like a saffty brother's film opening like
the anxiety is just like palpably like through the roof reading that and and so just to to give a tease it's like
opens on two special forces soldiers on a Coke and MDMA-fueled Disney trip with their
children, which ends up with one murdering the other, which is almost like a, you know,
best friend, family friend while the, you know, the person who got murdered while his five-year-old
daughter witnessed it. And then the, you know, Levine who did the murdering faced no
repercussions whatsoever. And it was completely covered up. And it was just such a like a riveting
way to open it, such a like nail-biting kind of slow-motion train wreck. And it also touched on all the
themes you were going to get at later in the book in this very complex tell you were telling,
and it was just kind of curious if this was always your way to get into this story and how you
develop that. Definitely, because although that scene takes place in 2018 is a little bit out
of time, I really wanted to illustrate the blatantness of the cover-up that the military and the
civilian law enforcement did, because the murder was so clear-cut and the cover-up was so clear-cut
that I wanted to impress on readers just how exceptional this unit is and the members.
of it are how untouchable they are because the reality is if you're an operator on dull
to force you are not going to prison for any reason like that's just not an acceptable outcome from
like a u.s national security perspective a guy who's done 14 deployments and assassination operations
in syria and iraq a guy who's been stationed in israel doing god knows what with the idf right
he's not going to prison for any reason and levin never went to prison although he was arrested on
felony charges at least six times including for first degree murder including for aggravated assault
with a deadly weapon, including for drug charges, like manufacturing crack in his house,
weapons charges, he was arrested for all these things. And every single time, the DA dropped the charges
against him. So I'd like to talk a little bit about, like, this image that we have of operators,
you know, because it's like, you know, obviously I was aware that, you know, there's some,
there's some drug use. There's definitely, like, you know, just kind of violent personalities
involved. But these people seem to just be constantly drunk and on drugs and just like,
killing people like it's just kind of it's just kind of extremely sloppy for what you said which is
that they are like supposed to be the the very top tier operators first of all I'd like to get get into
that a little bit like the culture but also like what is like what is the USA doing at this point
like what are we even fucking attempting to accomplish by basically destroying these people's moral
frameworks and mines and turning them into essentially killing machines and how much do you think
their kind of personal volition you know it's like obviously like the army or j sock is not telling
them hey you should go to disneyland and take mdma and cocaine and um bath salts oh that one to me
is just like yeah dude you have access to all the good shit and you're taking bath salts bro like
can we so just yeah i kind of paint a picture of like the culture i think of impunity and
especially like just drug use and sloppiness because it seems like
they have to cover up a lot more than they would if they had a little bit more discipline.
Yeah, I mean, I've got to say by way of a disclaimer that I've been told by sources
close to the unit, people who know this community pretty well, they will draw a distinction
and say that it's kind of half and half, like the unit guys kind of separate themselves
into two types. And there is a sort of half of the unit that isn't immersed in this world
of like drugs and criminality and punity. They're more of like the, you know, the guys who are
Tito tollers who don't drink, who are super Christian, you're Warriors for God type of attitude.
Those guys definitely exist. And although, you know, they have a set of ethics that I don't
personally share because of what they do in their work, nevertheless, they're not complete
criminals whacked out of their heads. Like some of the other guys that are in the unit,
you know, there are just complete derelicts in the words of one of my sources, constantly doing
nefarious shit. But I think that those guys are more sort of identified or more like the public
face of this community in places like Fayetteville and southern pines and where they live. And getting
into the world, that world for the first time, I was really amazed by the extent to which it was
normalized and accepted and people just kind of naturally associated like cocaine binges with being
in the Green Berets. I really was not tracking that at all. I didn't know that was part of that
world. You know, as a war reporter and even serving in the military myself, I just hadn't been
aware of that. And I do think it's something that has arisen relatively recently. And I try to use more
than just anecdotal evidence in the book because there's so much of the anecdotal stuff.
And I wanted to kind of get past that and see some of the things I was able to use to really
nail it down were casualty reports. So I obtained the entire set of casualty reports for the
special forces for the last 20 years and sifted through those and was actually able to chart
the frequency of deaths from drug overdose. And that showed a really, really sharp rise in drug
overdoses around 2012 to 2015, let's say, and into 2017, accelerating even more in 18, 19, 20,
and so on. So because that kind of corroborated with the anecdotal stuff, I was led to the conclusion
that this is something real, like these guys are all doing drugs. They're all in drugs. And the Navy
SEALs, too. And it's crazy, yeah, considering, you know, because I'm not a drug warrior. I don't
think drugs should be illegal. I think drugs should be legalized and regulated. I think it should be
treated, just like any kind of pharmaceuticals. But we're talking about, you know,
The military, and the military is exceptional because, you know, they're, and to a large
extent, the ones responsible for prosecuting the war on drugs. They pertain to the U.S. government.
So it's the element of hypocrisy there that I think makes it a worthy target for criticism.
Yeah. And you mentioned, too, I think an important point is that when they get deployed,
they basically by default by medics are being prescribed, already prescribed, like amphetamines
to stay up for days on end and then tranquilizers and, like, Ambien to go to sleep.
at night, and then benzodiazepines, like, they basically develop an addiction that's been
prescribed to them. And then when they're back home, they just, it's additive. They just start
adding more and more to that cocktail. Yeah. After Levine's, like fifth arrest, Billy Levine,
central character who was murdered, who murdered the guy and got away with it and then was
murdered. At the time of his death, after his arrest on manufacturing drug charges, he was also
arrested for harboring an escapee. I don't know what that was about. I never figured out. It was
kind of ominous. After that set of
arrests, he was in the process
of being kicked out of Delta Force.
And one of the people who was on
the review board or on the panel
that was charged with determining how he should
be separated from the Army
told me that Levine
when asked about his out-of-control
drug use, because he was doing
he was smoking crack every single day
and smoking crack wasn't doing it for him anymore.
He was actually booffing speedballs
on a daily basis.
For the bystander, that is a shoving it up
you're us. Oh, I thought you were going to explain what a speedball was.
No, I guess we need that, too. Yeah, it's an upper and a downer at the same time.
Oh, my God. Coke and heroin often. It's what killed Chris Farley, right? It's killed many. It's taken many.
Yeah. Sorry, go ahead. I learned about this for the first time as well writing this book.
People take drugs as a suppository. I did not know that. But he was asked about his drug use,
and to take it back to what you're saying, Brad. Yeah. He told them that his problem began when they,
when they prescribed him to extra amphetamine
when he first made the cut for Delta Force.
So I think just like a lot of addiction problems
in the United States, it is traceable back
to culture and society
giving prescription drugs to young people
for various reasons to do well in school
or to excel in the military or what have you.
To Julian's like original sort of question and point
about the sloppiness of Delta Force,
like I was struck by that too.
Like it's sort of like failed mission
after failed mission
and just like indiscriminate rage
induced murder? Like, why did Julian and I have the impression that, you know, operators were at least
good at what they were supposed to be good at? And is that just, you know, the military controlling that
identity and image, or is it also just like film, too? You know, you watch, you know, whole litany
of Hollywood films that show these people is, is incredibly effective. I think they are
incredibly effective at being a death squad in countries like Iraq and Afghanistan. You know,
people who are who make the cut for Delta Force, you have to be, or most of them, you can
You can trial from any branch, but most of them are Green Berets or Army Rangers who already
tops in their field at what they do.
So to give credit where it's due, these are guys who have an extraordinary level of physical
fitness and just like a savage level of physical fitness.
I mean, imagine like a guy who can, you know, run two miles and 10 minutes while hung over
and then smokes a pack of cigarettes afterwards.
Like that's the type of physical fitness I'm talking about.
Yeah, but they're also, you mentioned they're also like, you know,
know, blitzed on steroids, lexynthetic steroids. Well, that makes it even harder. The more the more drugs
I add into my system, at least even in my younger days in my 20s, would just continually
slow me down eventually. Yeah. And so they're also really good at shooting. I mean,
marksmanship is top notch. I mean, these are guys who drill constantly in shooting. And I've read
before that Delta Force uses more ammo per year than the entire Marine Corps on their drills.
So I think that they are quite good at, you know, when they're pointed at a target and they say just go there and, you know, anybody who resists dies, that they're good at.
Now, when it comes to more sophisticated operations, the more difficult operations like, let's say, hostage rescues, that's very difficult to pull off.
And no, they're not, I don't think, is cracked up as we might like to believe from like Hollywood portrayals of these guys.
Their record of hostage rescues is pretty middling, maybe 50-50, or where, you know, in half the cases, the hostages die.
And they also, you know, a lot of times they fuck up missions that should be pretty routine, like the killing of Osama bin Laden by SEAL Team 6, which is considered this great tactical success, but actually they made kind of a mess of it and are lucky that they got out of there.
You write in the book, for the past two decades, Delta Force had functioned as a high-tech death squad dedicated to,
covertly liquidating the male population base of recalcitrant ethnic and tribal groups that resist
U.S. military occupation. So is that really, I mean, when you kind of get down to it, is that their
purpose, essentially to just go in and wage a kind of hidden part of a war that involves essentially
committing like small to medium scale genocide in targeted ways? I mean, how does that, I guess,
play into how American foreign interventionism has evolved, like, since the kind of, like,
heyday of, like, the 70s and 80s and the, you know, what we, what we kind of imagine when we talk
about, like, you know, Central American interventionism and all of that.
I think that they do play the role.
You know, I think that quote that you're talking about is definitely applicable,
remains applicable.
It depends upon the time and the place.
So that sort of template was definitely set during the Iraq War, starting around 2007, when
the war was going poorly, it was absolutely the case that the J-Soc commander, Stanley McChrystal, stepped up
and offered the administration a new plan of action. That's when you really saw Delta Force become
Delta Force on steroids. And one of the operators who I spoke to for the book told me that after
2007, 90% of insurgent deaths in Afghanistan were from offensive Delta operations. And it's distinct
from infantry operations because, you know, regular infantry, what they do is they pile up in their
vehicles and drive around, wait for someone to shoot them, and then they go and close with that
group or that person and kill them. Whereas Delta Force operates in a different way. They identify
their targets from a distance, usually using like informants or technology or signals intercepts,
and they have the mission all planned out, and then they go to that place at night, and then they
kill their target. So after about 2007, everything in Iraq was done that way. I talk about the
assassination programs in my book, which is new. It's not terminology that you often see.
because in most of the mainstream press
or people who have been following the news for years
will have seen references to this.
It'll be called by the euphemism Night Raids.
Dron strikes and night raids.
We're all familiar with hearing about that
from the Obama years.
So what they mean by night raids
is just the type of offensive operation
that I'm talking about.
And Delta Force is the key unit that does that.
And so to Seal Team 6.
And so, you know, one thing that shocked me
about the way you covered the night raids
was just that when they ran out of
like credible targets they were just like we'll just go go out and kill people like it's like oh it's it's just
amount of people killed as kind of like the measure at that point and i mean it makes me think of like
you know early in these wars where the government and and the kind of higher-ups in the military they
just allowed a lot of like fighting age men to just become unemployed and of course what happens then
you know i mean they they start to get hired by people to essentially i mean become their own death
squads. But yeah, so tell us a little bit about like how indiscriminate the killing was. And do you think
that it's, it's like they're just like kind of mopping up the fuckups of like higher up decisions?
It's really chilling to think about how hard it is to assess the accuracy of these raids and how
little there is to go on about that because there's no accountability. In the most basic sense,
there is zero accountability over Delta Force and J-Soc. We don't know who they've been.
killing and how accurate their intel is. But having looked into it and assessed as much as I could
in the way of sources, the sense that I get is that they have a high error rate, talking about
maybe at least 50% being their error rate, where half the time, the target that they're hitting
is not someone who is a combatant under the laws of war. They may have possessed guns. They may be
armed, they may have been acting in ways that signals that, you know, that surveillance specialists
found to be suspicious. But when it really comes down to it, they weren't planning to attack.
You know, and you have to keep in mind, in countries like Iraq, there's a lot of people who
own guns. In countries like Afghanistan, there's a lot of, like, militias and, like, small
armed groups for all kinds of reasons. We know that their language capabilities are piss poor.
I mean, there's, at least in the, during the Iraq War, Delta Force had all of Jaysock,
McChrystal says in his memoir that they had basically no Arabic speakers. And as far as how the
scale of this, how much, you know, I tried at one point. We ultimately didn't include this in the book,
but I made a good faith effort to estimate, you know, the kill count just from the 2007,
2008 surge in Iraq, and it came up with the number of around 100, 110,000. That means that,
you know, if accurate, then over an 18-month period, this small group of guys, like 100 guys
that are in country any time, let's say 200 to be on the generous side, killed 100,000 people.
And that's consistent with some of the things that, you know, the people who I interviewees like
these guys' ex-wives or moms or girlfriend, sisters, who would talk about you, who would relate
the sort of casual conversations they would have, in particular, like bragging about their
kill counts. And I gather that it was pretty routine for individual operators to boast of having
more than 100 confirmed kills. So you're talking about, you know, a group of guys where it's just
normal for them to have killed 100, to personally killed 100 people. So, I mean, you don't have to
think about that too long to imagine what kind of like psychological and cultural and societal
repercussions is going to have. And like there were euphemisms that they would use like mowing the lawn
and wetwork for assassinations. And like, you know, they would watch helmet cam kill videos as
entertainment among each other and like even feeding their dogs like human brains. What? It's just, yes.
Like, it's just unimaginable.
And this is all sort of, like, casually looked at and talked about.
Yeah.
On the dog thing, you know, Billy Levine, I got that from multiple people.
Yeah.
And you have to keep in mind, Billy Levine in this community was, like, one of the sort of more introverted, soft-spoken, like, nice guys.
But even he would show videos.
He would show people, like, here's the video of my dog ripping this guy's fingers off.
Here's a video, you know, of my dog doing whatever.
Because dogs are a big thing in Delta Force, by the way, which I can talk about.
later, but he also told the sister of Mark Leshiker, the guy who he ended up later
killing, you know, when she visited his house, he introduced her to his dog, which had been
retired from the unit, apparently, because the dogs have, apparently have some kind of augmented
dentures made out of titanium. What? And when they're retired from service, they're attack
dogs. And so when they're retired from service, they have their teeth surgically removed. So he
had this dog with no teeth that was eating, like, you know, some slop that he was feeding.
from dinner. And he told her, he was like, oh, yeah, I used to let him, like, eat people's brains
when we were in the field. Like, if there was a dead body on the ground from the aftermath of an
airstrike, or if they had just done a night raid, he would let the dog just eat people's
brains, like, out of their skull. And she was like, oh, my God, that's disgusting. She was
horrified by that, as you can imagine. I just kind of wonder if there was a big body of good
reporting on this that we would maybe make decisions about foreign intervention differently, or
are we just so far gone that like the kind of slaughterhouse like essentially i mean what you're
describing is just like genocide you know i mean this is it's we you can't pretend it's targeted
just because it happens at night and uh you know they they go in specifically uh kind of liquidating
whole households and and such but dude we we've got 250 000 people in the queue for battlefield
six no they this is this is what we play what is happening we play this is real life you can't do
video game, no more skin references. Yeah, I mean, what, what does, what does, I mean, I guess,
like, what does this say about, like, management of empire at this point? Because it just feels
like we've, um, maybe even lost sight of what we're already incredibly callous and cruel
goals. You know, while I was sort of reporting and writing the book, there was a certain
sense in which I was kind of impressed by how well they keep the wraps on all of this. Yeah.
For so long. I mean, there's a very real sense in which they got away with it. I mean, the surge in Iraq returned to it again. There was also a surge in Afghanistan that we can talk about that was like from 2012, 2000, you know, which is just a very, very high tempo of assassination operations for a year plus where the goal is we're just going to decimate the middle ranks of the insurgency. And if we hit 50% are wrong targets, that's an acceptable cost. And in Iraq, it was perceived as having been a huge success. It was never talked about, never filmed.
Keep in mind, those operators don't wear uniforms.
These guys go out at night wearing whatever the fuck they want.
And they're not on film.
Like, you've never seen any pictures of them operating.
Those don't exist.
You never seen videos of them.
You never seen any documentaries.
They certainly don't allow reporters to come around and see what they're doing.
And they certainly don't tell reporters about it, you know, with strategic leaks,
like you see from the CIA and other intelligence agencies that are constantly leaking to reporters.
And then after 2008, attacks on U.S. troops really did drop significant.
in Iraq. And it was considered to be almost, I mean, it was enough that Bush could declare
victory on his way out the door. That's all he wanted was a way to say, look, the violence has
been tamped down. We have the situation is stable. And among insiders in Washington, D.C., it was
Delta Force assassination operations that were primarily CREP J-SAC assassination program that was
considered to be, to have worked. And that's why Obama, when he took over the war in Afghanistan,
decided, I mean, he appointed Stanley, he took Stanley McChrystal from commanding J-Soc
and put him in charge in the entire war in Afghanistan, basically turned Afghanistan into a J-Sach
war, which it remained thereafter.
And, you know, Afghanistan's kind of the same story.
Like, you just was completely out of the news during Obama's term and Trump's first term.
You just never heard about it, even though they were doing this every single day.
So it's chilling to me to think about how they got away with it.
And, you know, the savagery of empire now is different.
It's not the same thing.
I don't think Delta Force is still doing assassination operations in Iraq and Syria and Somalia.
Trump earlier this year, because Biden never talked about it and his people never talked about it.
But Trump, you know, not being Trump, he brags about these things.
And only if you're a specialist, will you notice it?
Because I was reading one of his transcripts.
And it was just a one sentence remark he made where he said, you know, this was a few months after being inaugurated.
And he said, since my inauguration, we've eliminated 68 terrorists in Iraq and Syria and Somalia.
And so a light went off of my head, and I realized he's talking about the expeditionary targeting force, which is a Delta Force group that I talk about in the book that's like basically permanently stationed over there.
Like I knew he was talking about them.
So they're still doing scores of assassinations a month, apparently.
But, I mean, it's not nearly at the same scale as the Iraq surge or in Afghanistan when they're fighting the Taliban.
Now there are other horrors that have taken the place.
like an entire generation of people dead in Ukraine or, you know, the genocide in Gaza that are being
supported not with the direct participation of large numbers of U.S. troops, but are being like managed
by our, you know, military and intelligence sort of superstructure over there. So it's very much a
moving target and a complex organization that has played a very, very significant role in the past
and still does, but it's a role that's constantly adapting. Yeah, you mentioned, you know,
how this has kind of been continuous throughout presidents. And, you know, we're often told, like,
hey, you should vote if you care about foreign policy and if you care about, you know, the lives of
the people abroad that, you know, we're, you know, ending and or affecting. Obviously, this is like
the kind of stuff that leaves a scar that, you know, does not, not heal quickly. You know,
these are, these are countries that then are very often plagued with, like, violence and death squads,
even beyond the American interventionism.
But I wanted to go back just slightly to the demographics involved here.
You know, one thing that really blew my mind every time it came up in the book is just like how
young these guys are and how they were recruited.
So how are we currently recruiting and training our death squads?
Well, they get taken up the pipeline young.
I mean, Billy Levine was 17 when he joined.
He made the cut for Delta selection when he was.
Let's see, 2009, so he must have been 25.
That's super young for Delta Force.
And the time is significant because at that time, the unit was rapidly expanding and needed lots of people.
In more normal times, I think that the actually Delta Force soldiers are typically a lot older than regular soldiers.
They tend to be at least 30 years old.
Most of them are in their mid-30s, and there's plenty of them that are in the early 40s.
And you really don't see that outside.
You don't see that like in the regular airborne infantry.
So they're a lot more mature than other soldiers.
And there's a compartmented element of Delta Force called G Squadron, where I gather that
the guys are most of them are even older than that.
But certainly they start off young.
I mean, at that point, they've been in the military for 20 years.
They've spent their entire lives in the military.
It's not something that you just start doing when you're 35, certainly not.
I was surprised when you mentioned that in their psychological screenings, they actually go
for people who are anti-team and, like, introverted for the most part.
and even those who are creative that have artistic hobbies like painting or playing a musical
instrument.
I mean, the guy who told me that James Reese, I think he was indulging in a little bit of
self-mythologizing.
I included the statement.
I thought, I think it's interesting.
They do like people that are good at working solo, which isn't everyone.
I mean, especially in the military when your teamwork is just beaten into you.
Yeah.
But they absolutely favor people that have the ability to work on their own.
Often there's Delta missions where it's like one.
guy doing stuff by himself, which takes a certain psychological type, like, to go into Syria by
yourself, set up some, like, bugging devices. Yeah. You know, when you were deployed and when you were
out in the field reporting, doing war reporting, did you have run-ins with spec ops and with Delta
Force in particular? And what was that like? Or would you just not even know if you ran into a Delta
force person? I wouldn't, I probably wouldn't know if I saw, if I saw Delta Force. But I did run into
a lot of special forces guys in Syria. But most of them, I think, were regular green berets. You saw those
I saw those guys all over the place.
It's kind of like what I'm saying before.
Like, the stuff that they do isn't publicized.
It's secret in the sense that it's like there's secrecy around military operations.
Yeah, yeah.
But they're not doing things where it's like the point is to disguise the hand of the U.S. government.
Like, that's what Deltaverse does.
It's like if these guys are caught on camera, you won't be able to prove that it was the U.S.
Well, it's actually easy to prove who they are because they just look like they're in a black rifle coffee ad.
Like the way you described each one is beards, tattoos, and fake.
patches yeah so that i think definitely is true of the operators who make up like the four main squadrons
yeah but delta also has compartmented elements where i've been told that you know they're encouraged
not to lift so much weights and do so many steroids in fact in fact there's a there is an in-house
tattoo removal technician at the delta force compound where they will help guys remove their tattoos
over time because to be like in g squadron you need to not be all tatted up you need to not look
recognizably like an operator you know so so this is their job which is already pretty fucking grim now
the name of the book is a fort brag cartel for a reason because there's a whole other side of this
in which they are drug dealers you know criminal kingpins in and around fort brag and of course
this is connected to to a kind of nearby kind of airbase or air strip uh that is kind of infamous
So can you kind of lead us into that aspect of Delta and Fort Bragg?
Yeah, and Fayetteville, too, I think is good to touch on.
Yeah, Fayette Nam, baby.
So having laid the foundation of like the sort of impunity and secrecy that exists
around these units, the culture of drugs and drinking criminality, I try to then go on
to show how certain of these guys, including Billy Levine and his associates, were actually
trafficking drugs at a high level around Fayetteville and farther out in North Carolina and in the
South. And they were working with their, you know, with other special forces soldiers. They were working
with Marines from Camp Lejeune, corrupt police officers, corrupt state troopers. And they were importing
large amounts of cocaine from the Los Zetas in Mexico, cartel that's in the north of Mexico,
which is interesting and kind of takes things full circle because the Los Zetas actually were originally
a Mexican Special Forces Army unit that was trained by the Green Berets at Fort Bragg. Of course. Also at
Fort Benning and also they were trained by Israeli trainers. But that was the origin of Los
Settas in the 1990s. They defected long ago and became this completely independent cartel that
today and modern times doesn't have a lot of military personnel. But that's where it comes from.
And so there was some poetic, you know, irony there in the fact that that's who was, they were
buying drugs from. But this just feels like the natural progression. You come back home with like a set
of skills or, you know, you finish your job with a set of skills. And it's like, well, what am I good at is
like killing people and organizing, you know, kind of logistics to make myself money off of drugs.
It seems so consistent that this is like the fallback or the second stage of your kind of career.
Yeah, it's a natural fit. And not only that, I mean, it's also something that's very stimulating.
A lot of these guys, they need stimulation, like constantly because of their natural inclinations and because of the work they've done for so many years.
They're addicted to adrenaline. They're addicted to being in danger. They're addicted to trying to get away with stuff.
this, people trying to stop them. Like, psychologically, you can see, and I'm not, I'm not saying
this by just inference. I've had people tell me this. Like, I tried to interview as many people
as I could who had been in the military in special ops and then had been convicted of trafficking
drugs. So I had a correspondence with Master Sergeant Daniel Gould, who's in federal prison for
trafficking cocaine, who was a seventh group Green Beret. His partner, Henry Royer, who was trafficking
drugs with him, they were importing bricks of cocaine, millions of dollar quantities from Colombia
on military planes to the United States. And Gould told me straight up. He was like, yeah, the money was
nice but dude i was just bored like i really wanted something to do i was in columbia by myself it was so
easy to get coked and so another thing is proximity and crimes of opportunity because these guys are
often in places that are just flooded with drugs not coincidentally sites of u.s intervention
tend to be places where there's a massive drug production and of course Afghanistan being the being the
preeminent case of that yeah i had a i had a quote from master sergeant gould that i highlighted here
jake do you want to read it jake you got to do this in the voice of
a guy who once personally killed 10 Taliban by himself, like by charging the enemy lines
after he had been shot.
Elite soldiers have access to whatever they have the balls to get into.
Horse, guns, drugs, you name it.
We are far from the flagpole and expected to be incorruptible.
It's such a direct extension to, you know, the CIA, obviously, like, and drug trafficking
and, like, raising money through these kind of back, you know, these backdoor methods.
It's, like, kind of a long tradition.
But then you take away even that tiny bit of oversight that maybe gave us, like, a vision
of, like, you know, how drug trafficking and the CIA work together during, you know,
like the kind of, like, early days in Afghanistan and, of course, like, Iran-Contra.
But, yeah, I don't really know where I'm going with this other than, like, this seems to be a direct extension.
I mean, yeah, absolutely.
And you see like schizzo's on Twitter still talking about, you know, the Dark Alliance or whatever, the Contras.
And it's like, bro, that's Mickey Mouse.
Like, Hamid Karzai was the biggest drug lord in the entire world.
And he just shook hands with the president, like, every single year across three presidencies.
I mean, it was so out in the open the support for the heroin cartels in Afghanistan.
And they produced so much more drugs than, like, the Medellin cartel ever produced or the Contras ever trafficked.
You know, it's actually, you can't even say that they produce all the world's heroin because they actually produce more heroin than the world could absorb.
One weird fact is that there are believed to be massive stockpiles of heroin somewhere, maybe Pakistan, maybe Tajikistan, maybe Iran, that were produced in Afghanistan but never sold because, you know, we know that they produced an amount that outstrip global demand.
And so that's why, even though the Taliban has eliminated all heroin, it's also mixed up with fentanyl, so it's kind of hard to talk about the price fluctuations.
But the price of heroin has not risen despite the fact that the Taliban have eliminated the whole industry.
Yeah, and it seemed like, you know, where you ended up was about the drugs, marketing and the cartel.
But what got you in to the story was the murders, right?
Like this sort of overrepresentation of murders in and around the base.
And starting with, you know, when soldiers came back from Iraq on that first deployment,
immediately like four wives were murdered.
Yeah.
And then ever since then it's just been this cycle of,
overdoses of suicides of murders that seem to outpace every other base. And is it even like the
population at large as well as it overrepresented? Yeah. I mean, it's always been like that.
Fort Bragg's always been associated as a place that has a Fayetteville. You know, it's kind of
infamous for bizarre murders that are linked to the military. You can find those cases going back to
the 1970s. But I think there was a real inflection point around, I mean, you mentioned the case in 2002 of the
Fort Bragg of the four wives who were murdered by their husbands. After that, you really didn't hear
too much about Fort Bragg for years. I think the real inflection point was around 2020, around when the
war in Afghanistan started to wind down. That's when you saw like the drug abuse rates, the overdose
rates, off the charts. And then there was a succession of really disturbing murders. I mean,
the murders of Levine and Dumas were not the only ones in 2020. There was also the case of
Enrique Roman Martinez, the paratrooper who was beheaded. And then Keith Lewis, who killed his
wife and then himself. It just went on from there. I'm tracking something like 24 murders since
2020 involving Fort Bragg soldiers. And as far as how that compares to the civilian population,
that is a question that seems simple to answer. But a coherent answer alluded me to the end because
of the fact that Fort Bragg isn't a civilian city. It's a population that you don't find anywhere else.
It's 50,000 young men. So it's really hard to make apples to apples comparisons. I even resorted to
asking AI about this because I thought I thought that AI would be able to I had a question that
seemed like the type of answer that AI should be able to provide I said I asked GROC or no it was
Chad GBT to identify an American city with a population of 50,000 or less that had a high murder
rate and the answer it gave me it said St. Louis has a population of like 300,000 and has a high
murder rate and I was like it couldn't do 50 yeah zero credit for that answer failed
read the question. I digress. Don't give me start on AI. I'm not qualified to talk about it.
But yeah, it's hard to compare a Fort Bragg to other cities of a similar size. But what you can
compare it to is other military bases. And there is no way that, you know, you can make the case that
there's any other military base that is troubled with these type of issues to nearly the same
degree. One thing that I did want to kind of like bring back up is is the role that, you know,
J-Soc and Fort Bragg plays in training various entities that are quite famous, like, for
example, Fort Bragg attendees training Al-Qaeda. Are we just basically the main exporter of
death squads? And then we just kind of like, when they go rogue, we use them in the media to
get more funding for war. I mean, is this just a cycle? Well, I mean, that's kind of a question of
that's a matter of interpretation, I would say. But certainly, you know, Fort Bragg is kind of a
a black hole of these, I don't know, deep events that are ambiguous and open to multiple
interpretations. It sounds like the thing about al-Qaeda is a reference to Ali Muhammad, the
Fort Bragg soldier that I profile in an early chapter of the book. You know, most of the book
has to do with relatively recent years. I mean, the majority of it takes place from 20,
let's say, let's say 2018 to present. But I do go back all the way to the beginning to the 1980s
in the formation of Delta Force and J-Soc. And as I'm bringing it up to the present day and talking about
9-11, always with an emphasis on Fort Bragg and the role that Fort Bragg's had in these
events. I learned about a very, very interesting character named Ali Abdul-suid Muhammad,
an Egyptian-born American citizen. So for folks who don't know, and there's very little
reliable information about this guy on the internet, don't bother reading the Wikipedia page.
There's really nothing. Just only read my book, please, I got to say. Absolutely. I mean,
buy the book. I mean, buy the book. Because a clear understanding of who the hell this guy was was so
elusive that I dedicated myself to reading everything that's ever been written about Ali Muhammad in order
to present the essential facts. And so he was a guy who was, uh, who was an Egyptian special forces
officer who came over to Fort Bragg originally in the 1980s to train at the, you know, Fort Bragg
does a lot of exchanges with army officers in foreign countries. That's how the Mexican special forces
ended up being trained there. So Ali Muhammad's an Egyptian, he comes here and he's approached by the CIA
because that's a place where that, I mean, that's what they do there there as well. They recruit assets.
is one of the purposes of the JFK school. And he becomes an asset of the CIA. How long that
relationship lasted? No one is quite sure. But that was early on. He goes back to Egypt and joins
Egyptian Islamic jihad and becomes a close confidant of Ayman al-Zawahiri, who of course is one of the two
founders of al-Qaeda, him and Osama bin Laden. But this was before Osama bin Laden kind of came on the scene.
And then having already joined Islamic jihad, Ali Muhammad moves back to the United States,
gets U.S. citizenship by marrying a woman who's 10 years older than him, goes to Fort Bragg and
actually joins the U.S. Army at the age of 34, joins the U.S. Army Special Forces. And then while he's
an active duty member of the Special Forces, he makes dozens of trips to Afghanistan, to Egypt, to
Sudan, and other places around there. In fact, he was in Somalia. Weirdly, he was like in Mogadishu
at the time of the Black Hawk Down incident. Whether there's anything to be made about that,
were not sure, but he was there at the time. What was he doing? Well, he seems to have been
participating, or he definitely was participating in the Afghan jihad against the Soviet occupiers when
the Russians invaded Afghanistan. Now, was he doing that on his own initiative or part of a CIA program,
part of a special forces program? Again, the case is open to interpretation. However, while he was
still a member of the U.S. Army, he became close with Osama bin Laden and trained Osama bin Laden and
all of Osama bin Laden's core group, the group that would go on to become al-Qaeda,
using manuals that he took from Fort Bragg, special forces manuals, they were taken from
the Green Berets. They trained al-Qaeda in terrorism, basically, because irregular warfare and
terrorism, that's kind of the same thing. I mean, one of the things that Ali Muhammad is
known to have taught these guys is how to hijack airplanes, because we have a copy of his manual
that he made using Green Beret materials, using special forces materials. And that was one of the
things that, again, this active duty member of the U.S. Army Special Forces taught Osam bin Laden
and al-Qaeda how to hijack airplanes. I let that sink in, please. Where does it go from there? He was
instrumental in bombing the U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya in 1998. He was also one of his
trainees bombed the USS Cole in the Gulf of Aden. So he was a core member of Al-Qaeda, basically.
And he was an integral part of their operations. And he was also continued.
continuously in contact with his American handlers. Among other things, he met with Patrick Fitzgerald,
who was the federal prosecutor in charge of the Counterterrorism Unit in the Southern District of New York.
So, you know, a high-level U.S. official in the Counterterrorism Department is sitting down with Ali Muhammad in, I think, like, 1996 or 1997.
At the same time, Ali Muhammad is training Osama and Laden and al-Qaeda and plotting the attacks on the USS Cole and the embassies in Africa.
After the Africa bombings, which killed hundreds of innocent people, Ali Muhammad was reeled in, this is the way I put it in the book.
He was arrested in the United States, and then he was charged with terrorism in closed-door anonymized court proceedings that were not reported on.
And he was never, to my knowledge, he was never convicted.
Or if you look at the docket of the case, he was not convicted.
He just disappeared into the bowels of the U.S. government.
Like, they just disappeared him.
So we know that Ali Muhammad is, well, we don't know anything.
about him since he disappeared. The last reference that I can find to him came in 2008 when a former
Delta Force commander said in his memoir that he visited Ali Muhammad at the prison where he was being
held and he said it was like basically a black site, like a secret prison in a major metropolitan
area, 10 feet from a newsstand bustling with business people is how he just, this Delta Force commander
described the location in his book. He went there and interviewed Ali Muhammad about al-Qaeda
getting information out of him. Now, I know I've been talking a long time, but to sum up
Like the significance of Ali Muhammad. If you read mainstream accounts of 9-11, like the sort of canonical accounts of 9-11, of course there is, you know, it's acknowledged that the Operation Cyclone and CIA intervention in Afghanistan contributed to the formation of al-Qaeda. But it said that Osama bin Laden himself is not known to have any, to have had any contact with CIA officers. So there was never any like direct contact between bin Laden and U.S. spies. And you hear that over and over. You hear that.
from, you know, the most mainstream, credible and accomplished writers and historians on the subject
like Steve Cole, like Lawrence Wright. I just heard someone else say it the other day. In any case,
what that leaves out is that bin Laden was in direct contact with a member of the military. In fact,
he was with a member of the special forces. And to the extent that Ali Muhammad gets talked about
at all, it said that he was a triple agent. In fact, the only book about him by Peter Lance
is called Triple Agent, or Triple Cross, excuse me.
And, okay, that's fair enough.
From the known facts about Ali Muhammad, you could say that he was a very adept terrorist
operator who managed to infiltrate the U.S. Army Special Forces and smuggle out all these
training materials and all this knowledge.
But the same set of facts is also susceptible to an alternative interpretation, which is simply
that he was a double agent or simply that he was an agent of the U.S. who was involved
and training all these guys first to fight the Russians and then, you know, for these more,
let's say, freelance endeavors. So, I mean, after 2001 and after 9-11, Israel's role kind of
changes a little bit in terms of relationships to like lobbying and assassinations. Could you
kind of describe a little bit how Israel plays into all of this? You know, I think Israel has played a
really nefarious role in our foreign policy for a long time. And more and more people are seeing that
with the genocide in Gaza and the kind of breaking down of the sort of media institutional
Omerita that is surrounded, you know, Israel's atrocities and, you know, the apartheid nature
of its society. But the relationship goes way, way back. And certainly they have a close
relationship with J-Soc Delta Force routinely has a cell that's constantly in Israel. And in fact,
Levine, one of my main characters, although, you know, he's a relatively low-level guy because he's enlisted,
an officer. He's just an enlisted guy, sergeant first class. On his enlisted record, he has
deployments to Israel. So that tells you that it's not just the, you know, the sort of elite
officer corps that's going over their training with the IDF and sharing intelligence with
them. It's everyone in the unit. It's day rigour for, for Delta Force operators. And I think that
they're especially, they cooperate especially closely with respect to Syria, I think, is where
you have the most intense, like, active collaboration between the IDF and Delta Force. You describe in the
book, you know, a kind of like active involvement of mainstream media in covering up like,
let's say the Afghan opiate explosion and all of that. But could you kind of speak a little bit
about how you see the role of media in relation to Delta, in relation to J-Soc, and I guess
what you've been speaking about regarding the war on terror as well, like the links between
essentially these guys training people to become better terrorists and the attacks that then are
kind of like painted as like, oh, look what they did to us because they hate our freedom.
Now it's time to, you know, invade this country or do this for an intervention.
Well, I think there's relatively few mainstream reporters who even know what Delta Force is or
understand what its function is. And because the unit's so secretive, because they never give
statements, I mean, I'm publishing an excerpt of my book in Politico in a couple of days or maybe
tomorrow. And I saw a comment from the special forces at every step of the way.
but Politico's doing it again.
So they asked them for a statement about some of the allegations that I make in this excerpt.
And the response I just got, the email I was reading before I hopped on with you guys,
you know, they said explicitly something like, you know, they never used the term Delta Force.
That's a colloquial term.
They call it an Army Special Mission Unit.
So every J-Soc unit is what's called a special mission unit or SMU.
So Delta is a SMU and Team 6 is a SMU.
And she said the, you know, this public affairs officer said, you know, because your question
implicates a special mission unit, we can't answer it. This is essentially what she said. And so a lot of
journalists who are working in the space, especially if they're less experienced, you know, they come up
against a total brick wall. And even if they're in the field, they're not going to know who these guys are.
So they're really good at keeping a low profile. I mean, you never hear about them writing books. You
never see them go on TV. I mean, they live by this code of silence. And that silence, I think, is there
even more than the sort of just natural cravenness and jingoism of our of our mainstream media
I think the secrecy and the silence around it is the main is the main thing and your your book is
then claiming that they're running basically a drug cartel out of the base and so I have to you know
leads me to the the cliche question that I'm sure every single person asks you that you know are you
worried for your safety at all or your you know reputation being assassinated I mean I don't
allege that they're running a cartel at a Fort Bragg. A lot of sources that interview say that
and then I also document a lot of cases that would tend to suggest that there is some
a large degree of truth to that. I can't say for sure what's going on there and if it's still
going on since the early 2020s when these murders took place. But I think we can say with a
high degree of confidence that, or we can say with complete certainty that this type of criminal
entrepreneurialism is widespread in the special forces and in Delta Force. How extensive it is,
how organized it is and how high up it goes, harder to say. But they seem to have at a minimum
turned a blind eye to these things, because that airport, you mentioned, the Rafer drop zone.
I mean, it's just crazy to me how much drugs were coming through that little Delta Force airport
right by Fort Bragg. And the guy who was running it, Tim Thacker is now in prison for 40 years,
you know, and prosecutors in North Carolina, federal prosecutors in North Carolina say that he was
the biggest methamphetamine dealer in the state's history. And this is a guy who ran
the airport for them and was a Delta Force pilot on a lot of their training missions and whose father was
an OG Green Beret before Delta Force even existed, who was all caught up with the, you know, the drug-fueled
Shadow War in Laos at the CIA ran for all those years and was evidently trafficking hundreds of
kilos of cocaine up from the Caribbean to North Carolina in the 1980s on the same at the same little
airport. So this is nothing new. It's been going on for a long time. How do you, the second part of that
question though like have you had worries i was hoping you would forget the no i'm not i'm not yeah i mean
there's just no way that they don't have like at least a dossier briefing where they go hey there's an
issue here we got a fucking book being published like we don't even like a single news article to
reference us we now have a book coming out yeah so yeah speak a little bit on that i mean obviously
without um i don't know endangering yourself or whatever you know i was gonna i was gonna ask
Brad to house sit for me this week, you know, if you wouldn't mind going by to water
my plants. Yeah. I'm not home right now. Could you also cut your hair a little bit like
Seth? No, I don't know. Um, I really have not. People ask that question. It's actually
kind of ironic because, you know, before Viking asked me to write this book, I was working in
Syria, in Mexico, in Iraq. And so when they proposed it, I was, I actually thought, well,
this will be relatively safe compared to what I've been doing.
Like, this will give me a chance to not put my life at risk for my work to such a
flagrant degree as I have been doing.
So I originally saw it as something, but then, yeah, at a certain point, it dawned on me.
You know, I talk about a woman named Courtney Williams in the book who was a civilian employee
of Delta Force, who was subject to really awful gender discrimination and harassment.
And she got into this really bitter employment dispute with the unit.
And she said one day she's sitting at a traffic light in Fayetteville and she realized,
oh shit, like I'm involved in this acrimonious legal dispute with this organization
whose whole specialty is like killing people in secret in ways that can't be traced back
to the government. Like is that, you know, am I putting my own life at risk? And then of course
my predecessor at Rolling Stone, Michael Hastings, you know, died at a young age in a car accident
that was caught on camera after he got Stanley McChrystal fired from command of the war in Afghanistan.
I mentioned earlier that Bristol was put in charge by Afghanistan, but he wasn't in charge long because that Rolling Stone reporter, you guys may remember this when he published that Runaway General's article, and then, yeah, he was killed in a car accident.
So I don't know anything more than what's been reported about Michael Hastings' death, but a lot of people think that it may not have been an accident.
But that said, I don't know, man.
I really can't concern myself with that.
Of course.
Because it's outside of my control and it's impossible for me to assess like what are the, I have to think, man, I've got to think that it's a line that they wouldn't cross. I just hope it's the line that they wouldn't cross. To kill a journalist. Like, I haven't been doing anything wrong. I'm not the one trafficking drugs and killing people. Like I'm just, I'm reporting on things that are fucking illegal. Like you're not allowed to shoot people, you know, in the streets in Fayetteville. You're not allowed to traffic drugs. If they want to defend their impunity to do that kind of thing by assassinating a journalist.
on U.S. soil. I mean, that's so off the rails. I just have to still believe, as cynical as I am about
some of the stuff, I have to believe that's a line that they wouldn't cross, not going to worry.
Congrats, Brad, on this question that you want to ask him, which is what didn't make it into the book for
legal safety or personal reasons. Are you literally trying to get Seth killed? What is going on here?
Do you want to also give him like a plane ticket to like a third party country?
No, I just, we've had convos together and I know some some things weren't kosher.
Oh, well, then go ahead, ask it.
No.
I'll tell you what didn't make it into the book.
So for years, every single day I'm reading the Fayetteville Observer, and I'm reading the website
of WRL, the local embassy affiliate.
And over time, I start to notice that there is case after case of, like, child sex crimes
that Fort Rex holders are committing.
And at a certain point, I start saving them because I'm like, this is kind of a lot.
So I start assembling an archive.
And then, you know, the number of cases in there just keeps saying.
increasing and I finally realize, okay, this is a story in itself. This is not normal that you have
so many cases of Fort Bragg soldiers being arrested or convicted of, and often, in many cases of horrific
cases of, because, you know, there's this sort of routine, not to downplay it at all, but there's
a certain routine type of case where you have, let's say, a 20-year-old infantryman and a 15-year-old
girl that get caught in their car or something like that. That's statutory rape and that's a serious
crime but i'm not talking about just cases like that i'm talking about abusive children i'm talking about
like kids kids like young kids and also child pornography and i posted about this a few times and even
pitch this story to you know um to magazines and it's hard to know what to make of it but i can tell you
that it is a really dark and ugly feature of this world as well you know the abuse of of children
in these military communities and that was something that didn't make
it into the book just because it has nothing to do with drugs. It doesn't really relate directly
to the main subject. And because I'm kind of at a loss is to figure out what's behind it.
Yeah. It's so far, I did just before, I guess we should probably, you know, conclude this
interview soon. But I did want to kind of wonder at this nomenclature of a special
missions unit and then you explaining that like they killed over 100,000 people. Like at,
at what point are these operations not so special?
You know what I mean? Like it feels like originally it's like, okay, well, we're going to get these like really, these guys that are very good at what they do. And they're going to go in for like that one assassination. Because we can't kill too many people. Yeah, but, but now it feels like it's just you're kind of using like precision tools, but like on a, I don't know, like a much wider scale to kind of continuously liquidate, as you put it, kind of commit genocide abroad and combined with like this recent Lancet study that shows that, you know, the financial sanctions and.
and all of these other elements, like basically kill half a million people a year.
It's really difficult not to come away from this thinking that we are the bad guys and on a scale that is like historically unprecedented and that the comparisons with, you know, other potential big bad empire actors on the international stage, even like Russia or China that we love to accuse of all these terrible things that we're basically just looking in a mirror or something.
I don't know. What do you make of that on a kind of broader scale?
Yeah, we're definitely the bad guys. And it gives me no pleasure to say that. It really doesn't.
It's not a joke to me. It actually makes me really depressed about my country. And it's not the case that these are such special exceptional operations anymore. That hasn't been the case for a long time. It's been completely normalized. And it ebbs and flows, like I was saying before, like the tempo of operations.
But continuous assassination operations has been a integral feature of U.S. foreign policy for almost 25 years now.
So where, for all we know, they're doing an assassination tonight, like in Derazor, Syria or something like that, or in the scrublands or outside of Somalia.
And in fact, the probability is that they are.
Because like I was saying earlier, it looks like maybe 20, 30 assassinations a month currently in 2025.
And this is a relatively low tempo right now.
So I think that, you know, there's a writer named Alexander Cockburn,
Alexander Coburn.
God, he would kill me if he would pronounce his name that way,
because he's British, Covern, who has written a lot about this.
He's Harper's Washington, D.C. editor.
And he's written a lot about, you know, the logic of assassinations.
And it's an underappreciated feature of our foreign policy that, you know,
it's not always the case that people or that militaries, that countries, that nations at war
consider assassination to be a legitimate or even like a useful tool. And actually for most of
history, it's not considered a useful tool. You don't assassinate the enemy's leaders.
In fact, that's considered kind of dirty. You try to beat them on the battlefield like fair and square,
basically. And the U.S. and also Israel, you know, I think this is definitely something that you can
lay at the feet of this close Israel U.S. alliance. We have adopted this logic and implemented it
continuously where, according to which, the main way of achieving national security objectives
of foreign policy objectives is by killing as many people of the command and control structure
of the enemy as possible. And it's not just in night raids. It's also in bombings and all these
strikes and stuff. I mean, I don't know, man. It's bad. It's bleak. It's really bleak. And it continues
up to the present day. And I just hope something stops it. And it may be that the internal rot of
the military itself proves to be a hard limit on how much longer this can last, because the judgment
of history, I think, will be severe. You know, you talk about that Lancet study. I mean, the people
who are said to have been killed directly by violence in the global war on terrorism is north of
four million, maybe five million. And I'm sorry, but that's like Hitler level shit, because
especially when you consider that they all belong to the same religion, Islam,
and that they all have basically the same skin color.
And, you know, I think that we will be, that this era will be remembered,
even before the genocide in Gaza, will be remembered as, you know,
an atrocious attack on the values of our shared humanity and global peace.
And, you know, as for what can finally bring it to a stop,
I think it's possible that this sort of like internal institutional rot that we see
in the military that gets manifested in things like these operators trafficking drugs and killing
each other, combined with their inability to recruit and the shrinking size of the army and the
morale that's just in the tank, I mean, that you could see a point at which, you know,
the military is actually unable to continue mounting operations. I don't think we're that far
off from that situation. Thank you so much, Seth, for, you know, sitting with us and answering
some of these awful questions that have awful answers. So, you know, obviously if you're listening to
this, you absolutely have to pick this book up. This is essential reading for our era. So we will
have links in the description. Is there anywhere else that people can go and check out your stuff,
Seth, or anything you'd like to plug? Yeah, just follow me on Twitter and then buy the book on
August 12th. It's out. Tomorrow it's out. You can get it at your local bookstore. You can get it
on Amazon. You can get it wherever you buy books. If you don't want to read a book, you can download
the Audible. But look, Viking Press took a risk when they assign me this book. I push against a lot of
the mainstream norms and a lot of the proprieties that other reporters observe. And, um, you know,
the way to reward that and get other books like this commissioned and published, you know,
is to show your support if you can. If you can afford it, please buy the book. Yeah, of course.
And really masterfully done, Seth, like huge undertaking and, you know, really bold. And
thanks for putting it out in the world. Thank you guys for having me. Yeah. It's great talking to you.
Well, that was quite a conversation. Thank you for listening to another episode of the QAA podcast.
We've got a Patreon. That's pitchon.com slash QAA. You can subscribe for five books a month. I'm sure you're familiar with our pitch at this point. We'll get a second episode every week on top of the main. And then, you know, we've also got Cursed Media. We just finished a wonderful series by Liv Egar and Spencer Barrows. You can go and binge it now at cursedmedia.net to find out all of the kind of like history up until today of the anti-trans backlash.
the medical and political forces that have led us here.
So really recommend you go to cursedmedia.net and sign up.
You're supporting a longer-term project for us, and there'll be three mini-series within
the first year of cursed media, and then we'll be continuing from there.
So we really hope to build this into a bigger project, and we appreciate the people
who've already supported and listened.
So that being said, we've also got a website QAAPodcast.com.
And Brad, what you got for us, buddy?
You want to plug some shit while you're here?
You know, it's like I feel like you're constantly coming off some sort of
documentarian tour of duty, like with fucking wide eyes and just wandering into the recording.
Like, what the fuck?
Yeah, no, it's been a lot this last half of the year.
Simon and I were still plugging away at our feature length doc and getting there.
We have a full rough cut of all three acts that we'll send your way soon to get your...
Beautiful.
And congrats also on your Bigfoot erotic...
We still need to find real funding for that, but yeah.
Oh, but yeah, but I mean, what's important is that you got a magazine to mention the podcast.
Exactly.
The rest is for the birds.
But I mean, can anyone maybe that's listening help you with this funding?
Like, what can they do?
Just send me an email if you have a line on anyone interested in...
interspecies romance if they liked busting for bigfoot an episode that jake and i did then if you're horny
for bigfoot and you've recently come across a cache of like gold bullion or something just get hit up
brad yes um but yeah where can where can people like go and find your stuff buds uh yeah i'm just
brad abraham's dot net is good and instagram i'm more active on brad w tf and uh on twitter
love and saucers, but I'm barely, barely on there now.
I'm going to plug my Twitter because they fucking,
they deleted my entire following after I had to go offline to get the green card,
which I now really just would like to just return to the government
and move away to somewhere else.
But there's nowhere good left because it never was anywhere good and it was always just an illusion.
What is my Twitter?
Julian Field, Julian F-E-E-L-D on Twitter.
Jake, you want to play?
anything buts?
Nah, I'm here.
No, this was, this was awesome.
I, you know, I can't wait to listen to the book on audio tape and I, no, I'm just, honestly,
I'm like so depressed listening to all of this.
Seriously, it was, it was, once again, I came in looking for a wild ride.
I thought, you know, maybe I'd get some cool operator lore and I've just left feeling that
like, that nothing means anything.
It's dogs eating human brain
It's like dogs eating human brains
It's like all darkness
And I'm just
I don't know
I guess I'm waiting for the
I'm waiting for the surfboard
To kick itself out from under me
And I just you know
Tumble forever amongst the surf
Have you ever surfed Jake?
I have yeah
Okay
It's it's not all darkness
And I think the human spirit will prevail
And I don't think you can erase
Our links to each other
our love for each other and our support for each other.
Just wanted to put that in there.
We're not a Doomer podcast.
Thank you, Julian.
I need that.
You know what?
I'm honored to be on a podcast that can, like, have a interview like this,
that can have a discussion like this,
that can ask the kind of questions that you and Brad came up with.
And, like, this is cool.
You know, if I hadn't met you guys,
I would never be part of a project like this.
It's just not, this is not where I would end up.
And, you know, I just was sitting back kind of like,
wow, this is really important.
that like I think people should hear this and like wow this is something like
that like I'm a part of. I'm like wow I'm I think I think we're doing something
good and and it that felt good above the the information that we learned which felt
that you keep my heart alive and my loins on fire listener until next week
may the deep dish bless you and keep you we have auto-keyed content based on your
DELTA Force is almost perfect.
That was my sentiment for this game when it released back last December.
It ticks a lot of boxes for me.
The gunplay feels great.
The operators, which I initially was worried about, aren't too reliant on their abilities
while keeping them each unique.
The gunsmith system, which is probably the best of any of the games that I've played
for building weapons, sharing loadouts, the diversity of the builds, the tuning.
I was always surprised that more people weren't actually playing the game.
the game. It really felt like there was something for everybody. It was far more accessible
of this very hardcore extraction shooter while still maintaining an extreme high level of
difficulty. And in seven months since the launch, we've had five major updates each
improving the game even more building upon it.