Shawn Ryan Show - #220 Simone Ledeen - Fmr. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Middle East Policy
Episode Date: July 21, 2025Simone Ledeen is a national security expert and former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Middle East Policy, where she oversaw U.S. defense strategies for countries including Bahrain, Egypt, I...srael, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, and others. With an MBA and finance background, she served as an advisor to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq and later as Executive Director at Standard Chartered Bank, leading the launch of its multi-national financial crime compliance program. Ledeen has held roles at the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis and is a Senior Fellow at the Strauss Center for International Security and Law at the University of Texas at Austin. Her expertise spans technology, special operations, intelligence, and geopolitical issues, as seen in her 2025 discussions on Israel-Iran conflicts. The daughter of historian Michael Ledeen, she advocates for innovative defense solutions and public-private partnerships to address global threats. Based in Austin, Texas, Ledeen consults through Maven Defense Solutions and Vantage ROI, focusing on strategic advisory in defense and finance. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://americanfinancing.net/srs NMLS 182334, nmlsconsumeraccess.org https://tryarmra.com/srs https://meetfabric.com/shawn https://shawnlikesgold.com https://ketone.com/srs Visit https://ketone.com/srs for 30% OFF your subscription order https://lumen.me/srs https://patriotmobile.com/srs https://rocketmoney.com/srs https://ROKA.com – USE CODE SRS https://USCCA.com/srs https://ziprecruiter.com/srs https://betterhelp.com/srs This episode is sponsored. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/srs and get on your way to being your best self. https://drinkhoist.com – USE CODE SRS Simone Ledeen Links:X - https://x.com/SimoneLedeen LI - https://www.linkedin.com/in/simone-ledeen Website - www.simoneledeen.com Maven Defense - www.mavendefense.com Strauss Center Profile - https://www.strausscenter.org/person/simone-ledeen Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Summer is what you make of it, and Tim Horton's fruit crunchers have something for every mood.
So choose from a variety of fruity flavors in sparkling, frozen or lemonade.
Order yours on the Tim's app today at participating restaurants in Canada for a limited time.
It won't take long to tell you Neutrals ingredients.
Vodka, soda, natural flavors.
Vodka, soda, natural flavours.
So, what should we talk about?
No sugar added?
Neutral. Refreshingly simple. Simone Ladine, welcome to the show.
Thank you. Great to be here.
It's good to have you here.
I've been wanting to have you on for quite a while, but I think right now is the perfect time.
So thank you for coming.
Thanks for having me.
Hey, it's my pleasure.
It's my pleasure.
But, um, yeah, lots of things going on in the news right now.
I saw a tweet talking about Intel analysts and stuff that I'll read off here in a
minute that really caught our attention.
And, um, so I really, I want to dive into that, um, because just a lot to talk about.
And that, that tweet was, tweet was, it caught me.
So I'm going to start you off with an introduction here real quick.
Simone Ledin, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for the Middle East, national security,
counterterrorism and intelligence expert with a career spanning decades across the Pentagon,
Treasury and global battlefields. and intelligence expert with a career spanning decades across the Pentagon, Treasury, and
global battlefields.
Iraq and Afghanistan war vet, you led efforts to follow the money fueling insurgencies of
former senior civilian leader in the Pentagon during pivotal moments like the Abraham Accords
and operations targeting Baghdadi and Soleimani.
A pioneer in counter-threat finance, coordinating the
SWIFT program at the Treasury and exposing terrorist financial networks, testified before
Congress on the chaotic Afghanistan withdrawal and managing director at Maven Defense Solutions,
a senior fellow at UT's Straus Center and an advisor shaping the future of defense technology.
Am I missing anything?
That's good.
That's quite the resume there.
That's quite the resume.
Thank you.
But, so a couple of things real quick here.
Everybody gets a gift.
Awesome.
Thank you.
Vigilance Elite gummy bears. Gummy bears. Legal in all 50 states.
You still passed your drug test.
So, but yeah, so getting into this tweet that caught my attention from you, at a fundamental
level, a lot of our analytic corps need to be completely destroyed and rebuilt.
A lot of these people are coming from you know which schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools.
You know what schools. You know what schools. You know what schools. You know what schools. You know what schools. At a fundamental level, a lot of our analytic corps need to be completely destroyed and rebuilt.
A lot of these people are coming from you-know-which schools.
So they're totally indoctrinated
and they don't know what they're talking about
because they're not properly educated anyways.
That really caught my attention.
And so I wanted to, I know we're going to dive into this more in a little bit,
but I just, what was, what was the premise of that?
Well, I said that in the aftermath of the leaked intelligence assessment right after
assessment right after our strike against Fordow. And it seemed like there was this intelligence product,
this assessment that was leaked that said,
and it was like within 24 hours or within 12 hours
of the strike occurring, that there was no significant damage.
And now I understood later after that tweet that they did, the analysts did characterize
it as low, that they had low confidence in their assessment and that was not included
in the original, I think it was CNN that originally published that.
They left that out.
But be that as it may, you know, if you're looking at a satellite image of a bunker buster,
you just see the entry point for the bunker buster.
You don't see down, down, down where it actually exploded and you don't see what the damage
is.
So there's no possible way of knowing within that time period what the damage was or was
not.
So that was kind of the context of my tweet.
But I also wanted to make the point more broadly because it's a problem that I've seen for
a few years now.
And I don't look at, I'm just a normal person now, I don't look at our intelligence assessments
anymore on a regular basis.
But I do know these schools, these universities are institutions of higher learning
where people go, it's very hard to get in still,
they get a brand, right?
You're stamped with a brand of one of these schools
and that means you're supposed to know something.
That means that people are supposed to listen to you.
And that's been one of the pillars of our society,
That's been one of the pillars of our society really has been we have our different institutions right that we have all bowed down to and have all said, yes, these are the people who are
our leaders.
These people become our presidents and our senators and our titans of business. But we've also seen in the past few years
that they're completely indoctrinated
by, I always say Marxists.
And they come out saying these political platitudes
without actually understanding anything
that's behind what they're saying.
Because they're not learning how to think critically.
This is really the point.
Universities are meant to build critical thinkers, people who can look at a topic from many different
points of view and then come to a conclusion.
Instead of only being taught one way because all the other ways are offensive
or all the other ways are, you know, put a label on it.
The professors that used to teach
a lot of those different points of view
have been driven out of these universities.
And what are you left with?
You're left with this one perspective.
That's what these students are taught.
And then they are released out into the wild.
Some of them become intelligence analysts.
And what we're left with is intelligence analysis
from people who have not been taught
how to think critically.
Now I'm not, I don't want to cast aspersions
on like our entire intelligence community, all analysts
in the community, because I have some good friends who are absolutely brilliant and please,
you know, don't ever leave.
But there are a lot of others, unfortunately, and it's a struggle.
And the more you have decision makers, this is also how the problem plays out.
You have all these decision makers
who come from different backgrounds,
who don't understand these nuances
that nerds like me and these Intel analysts know.
So they look at a piece of analysis and they're like,
oh, well, the intelligence community says this.
They don't understand the nuance of we assess with low confidence. That doesn't matter to them because they don't
know how to read that. And everyone knows that. So everyone who's writing for them knows that.
So that really was the motivation behind my writing that.
And there's a lot more to it.
And I'm actually grateful to have this conversation
because a lot of people know this is true.
I'm not the only one.
I know it's true.
Exactly.
I mean, I don't think it's just the universe.
I think it's, I don't think it's just Ivy League universities
are doing this.
I mean, I think this is, this is a broader problem.
This is, I mean, everybody wants to live
in their own echo chamber and they only want
the perspective that fills whatever they're,
their wants and maybe not needs,
but you know what I'm saying?
And it's, man, it's become just like such a problem, man.
I mean, I just had Gavin Newsom on my show last week
and I got blasted for it.
And I knew I would get blasted for it,
but I mean, I'm just so tired of being,
it's just everywhere. I mean, there's, you're either
right or you're left, you're either MAGA or you're not, you're, I mean, the algorithms of the social
media platforms, X, Instagram, Facebook, all of them. I mean, you only get one perspective
because the algorithms are so good at, you know, segregating those two camps.
And, and, and so, you know, I wanted to, wanted to talk to you
side and just ask some questions and, and people are outraged about it.
It's crazy to me.
It's like, I don't know how to get through this.
I mean, nobody's doing it.
Nobody's talking to the other side on either side.
I mean, how are we supposed to have any civil discussions?
You know what I mean?
When it's that tribal.
We don't, I mean, we don't have,
and then we don't have civil discussions right now.
I mean, as you see the way you're being attacked,
then with respect to Gavin Newsom,
I mean, my perspective is he just says whatever.
And he's trying to build a larger platform for himself
outside of California.
It's probably why people are mad at you,
because they might feel like you're giving him
that opportunity.
But also, why are people not critical thinkers anymore?
Can you not hear him saying what he's saying
and understand what's behind that?
That's pretty shocking, to be honest with you.
I agree that there should be a plurality of voices out there.
And I mean, just for going back to intelligence analysts
for a minute, their entire job is to ingest lots
of different types of data perspectives
and come to a conclusion based on all of the data
and all of these different reflections.
It's quite alarming.
I served in the first Trump administration and I still don't understand what a lot of
people believe MAGA to be.
I ask three people what they think MAGA is and you'll get five opinions.
But the person who started MAGA was Donald Trump.
And so does he get to kind of say what MAGA is and not?
I'm not like deep into the US politics, for a good reason,
which is I don't want to be attacked like you've been attacked.
But I mean, it's like, it's weird. I don't get it.
I, yeah, it's a mystery to me too.
I campaigned for him and everything, but I don't know. I'm certainly grateful that he won and Kamala Harris lost.
I mean, how do you fix this within the intelligence agencies?
I mean, is this a total gut job?
Well, that was-
And then where would the new ones come from?
This is the problem.
I mean, we can't, what are we going to do?
We do need a new generation of critical thinkers.
And I'm grateful there are different institutions out there now that offer alternatives to some
of these woke schools.
But also what's great is the government is now going
after some of these schools and saying,
if you're only going to teach,
and this isn't only Ivy Leagues,
but the problem is especially bad in the Ivy Leagues,
is if you're going to discriminate
based on, you know, XYZ categories,
like that's against the law.
You will not get federal funding for that.
And that is going to cause change.
That will, they must change
because the amount of government funding
to some of these schools is like,
they can't survive without it.
So that's really motivating.
That's how you start to change this.
But also, I mean, people that are reading intelligence,
you can grade what you're seeing and say,
like, this is not useful because XYZ.
But again, a lot of people who ingest that,
who are what they call the customers,
don't actually always understand that they're seeing something that's filtered through this, like, woke mind virus.
And so, yeah, so it's a problem.
But that's why also you're supposed, you have these senior analysts,
you have the leaders who are seasoned,
but they're also captured in many cases.
They're also captured.
And it's hard to fight against a system
that only wants you to put out certain things. And you will get in trouble if you say other things.
And I've seen people fired for making truthful, publishing truthful assessments that were very
unpopular. Could you give me, could you just give a specific
example of that? Just so I want the audience to understand with examples of how this could affect
intelligence. Sure, back in the day, you were not allowed to say that al-Qaeda leadership was living in Iran.
You could not say it.
Why?
Because we might have had to do something about that.
We were in the global war on terror at the time
and we were going after al-Qaeda everywhere it was.
We didn't want to, I believe our leadership
did not want to acknowledge
that al-Qaeda leadership was in Iran
because then perhaps we would have had
to do something about it.
So yeah, I saw reporting on that
that was like highest level of classification.
So only very few people could actually ever see it.
And so also because it couldn't be published
in like broader assessments that
were going out to more people at lower classification levels.
And then, you know, fast forward a couple of years, like I got out of government, went
and did other things, came back in and it was like just a thing that everyone acknowledged.
Oh yeah, Al Qaeda is in Iran.
Al Qaeda senior leadership is living in Iran.
They've been there for a long time.
It blew my mind.
I'm like, oh, we're just saying that now?
Like that's crazy to me.
There's someone I know got fired for writing that.
Wow.
Wow.
So basically what you're saying is when hard intelligence facts are gathered, if it doesn't
fit whatever narrative that is in play at the time, then that will never get reported
to who it needs to go to.
I wouldn't say that so broadly, but yes, there are, there are definitely times when things
are purposely not promulgated out there. Maybe it's like point to point, you know, only a few
people know about it because it's so dangerous for that information to get shared more broadly.
That's one of the problems that we have. People are working off of sometimes misinformation
or not all the information, even though we have it.
It's just very, very tightly held for a variety of reasons.
Sometimes to be fair, it's not because it's like
politically damaging potentially
or puts the United States in an uncomfortable position,
but because the source, you know,
we wanna protect the source,
or how we collected the information in the first place.
So it's not always that way.
I wanna be fair, but it's not always,
just to protect sources and methods either.
Well, I mean, talking about Al-Qaeda camping out in Iran,
I mean, Iran just got bombed.
Lot, a lot of controversy over Israel right now
and what's going on over there.
So I wanted to unpack a couple of things
that are going on in, and so so let's start with I mean I
woke up this morning pulled up X first thing I saw Israel bombed Syria so
Israel's bombing Syria Israel's bombing Iran Israel is killing lots of people in
Gaza I mean what what is going on over there?
Let's start with Syria, the latest.
Okay, I would just contextualize all the things
that you've, like that list that you just ran down.
Contextualize that with October 7th,
which is really was the gen, like,
this is where all this started and where Israel was like, right, we're done.
We're done with kind of the way we were doing things before kicking the can down the road kind of like trying to deal with situations rather than just completely, you know,
rather than just completely, you know, turn Gaza into a parking lot. But it changed their perspective.
And by the way, if you look at internal polling, Israeli internal polling,
they're very pro what's going on now because they suffered tremendously.
I mean, it was horrific.
October 7th was terrible.
So I just want to wanted to provide a little bit of context for this.
So Syria, Syria.
This is not a short answer, Sean.
Syria has been.
There are so many players, Syria is not just about Syria. Over the past since the quote unquote Arab Spring, which was, as we know, not a spring
at all, there have been a lot of different forces in Syria fighting each other, plotting external
attacks.
Some of them, Iran had a very serious foothold in Syria through Hezbollah, and they had like
cut a deal with Assad who was threatened.
I mean, Assad wouldn't have survived the Arab Spring if it hadn't been for Russia and Iran.
And so he became beholden to them.
Where is he today?
Moscow.
So he became beholden to them.
He became like their puppet. Also, if you consider the geography, like where Israel and Syria meet, there's only
a small area, the Golan Heights, where they share a border.
But Israel's been concerned about this for many years.
First there was Hezbollah kind of massing there, getting ready to do something, who knows.
There's ISIS, there's all these different forces in play that ultimately threatened the state of
Israel. And again, after October 7th, this became like, we're going to have to do something eventually.
like, we're going to have to do something eventually. I don't think that Israel ever thought they would have the opportunity to address these
Iranian proxies one by one.
I think they always, their plan was always, how are we going to fight everyone at the
same time?
So it's worked out well for them and they've been incredibly masterful at how they've kind of addressed each one of these Iranian proxies.
But, you know, now there's a new manager in town, formerly a guest of ours at Camp Bukka, the new leader of Syria, Jalani. He has turned a new leaf as he is portraying to the world.
He's no longer wearing his jihadi garb.
He wears a suit.
He's been welcomed into the international community.
Our own government really,
we want a new Abraham Accords with Syria,
joining the Abraham Accords. We've lifted a lot of sanctions. We want to do business there.
And I hope personally, I hope for that. I hope that that happens. However, you got Jelani in
Damascus, and then you have kind of his lieutenants or loosely aligned groups
that are still sort of running things outside of Damascus.
And he needs to get better control over that.
Now there's a debate about,
was he responsible for what's happened
over the past few days, which is horrific,
horrific attacks against the Druze community. What community?
Druze.
What is that?
They're minority.
They're a minority group.
And they're not just in Syria.
They're in Israel as well.
They're actually very active in the Israeli security services.
They serve in the IDF.
And they play an important role in Israel and Israeli national security.
So they were attacked in a pretty horrific way.
There's videos all over social media about murders of hundreds of people that were filmed, the humiliations that were forced
on the Druze before they were murdered, including some of their religious leaders. It's like bad.
It's very bad.
So these are basically the Druze is basically Muslim Israelis.
No, they're not. Is that correct? They're Druze. So they live in Israel, they live in Syria,
they're spread out. If you consider Kurds who live in a bunch of different countries,
they're kind of their own tribal network, that's the Druze. They have their own tribal network,
they're spread across Syria, Israel, and maybe more than that. I cannot say I'm like a deep,
deep Syria expert, but what I do know is that they were attacked pretty badly, and there were attacks against Christians prior to that,
inside of churches, murders, rapes. And this was the second attack against the Druze
under this kind of new Jelani government. And actually, it is a Jelani government. And I don't actually, I don't want to, it is a Jelani
government that that's, they've been acknowledged into, you know, by our leadership. So anyway,
all that to say, Israel acted in defense of the Druze.
Okay.
And that's, that was what they did this morning. Apparently, they'd been messaging
for a while, like, cut this shit out, this is really bad, we don't like to see this, but it didn't
stop. And they had a problem too, which was, I read a report that said over a thousand Druze from
Israel knocked down the fence between Israel and Syria
and just like went into Syria
to fight with their Druze brothers.
And Israel was like, whoa,
we don't want our citizens to get killed in Syria.
They didn't want any bigger problems.
Do you know what I mean?
Everyone wants us to calm down, quiet down.
We're going in a good direction.
Please stop killing each other.
And that was the point of this attack,
the Israeli attack today.
Okay.
I really, I hope that's the end.
What would you think if US got involved in that?
Do you think it's our place?
No, definitely not. Do you think it's our place? No, definitely not.
Do you think it was our place with the Iran stuff?
I think specifically targeting for Dow, nobody else could have done it but us.
And President Trump had said for so many years, Iran will not get a nuclear weapon,
that he had his own credibility riding on that, and he had to.
But yes, I do also think it was the
right thing to do. I never thought that this would turn into American boots on the ground. It won't.
It can't. We're not doing that. You don't think so? No.
That's good to hear because that was my worry. And look, I'm not an Israel expert, I'm not an Iran, I'm not a Middle
East expert, but you know, I mean, Trump ran his campaign, we're not going to get into
any more forever wars, and that seems to be kicking the hornet's nest in my book.
And you know, and the thing is, I'm not saying Israel was right or wrong in doing what they did with Iran, but you
just mentioned it, and I know we're going to dive in a lot more.
I mean, Iran has used terrorist organizations as proxies from what I know throughout the
entire 20 whatever year war.
Right?
Yes. We never did a damn thing about war. Yep. Right? Yes.
And we never did a damn thing about it.
Nothing.
My fucking friends were getting killed out there
by this shit.
Nobody gave a fuck.
You know, now Israel gets involved
and all of a sudden it's like at the snap of a finger,
fuck it, we're bombing them.
And then to me it's like a slap in the face.
That's like, so when it's Americans that are getting killed, we
don't do shit. But when Israel's involved, then we're going to step in and do something.
I don't understand that at all. And I'm not getting into the conspiracy stuff about all
the shit that you read online, but that's just how I feel on that. And that's how a very large percentage
of the veteran population feels is what's going on?
Like, why weren't you there for us?
I mean, I could not agree more in the sense that.
And that goes through Trump's last administration
and Obama administration and the Bush administration.
That's all of them.
Yeah.
And the Biden administration.
I mean, we, I was tracking, like, we saw Iranian money moving through, like, in early days of Iraq.
We were just watching it and there were a few things that happened where
it's just a deep sigh because of all of the terrible loss and missed opportunities.
But I was there during the Bush administration, there was a policy decision,
even though we knew what was happening,
what they were building, who they were dealing with,
we let them and then they started killing us.
And essentially we let them with very few exceptions.
And I agree with you, that is messed up.
And I mean, we should all be incredibly angry about that.
I will also say that, I mean, I'm not making excuses for anybody. Like, I demand accountability
like everybody else. You know, we have had none and we deserve it.
And our dead friends deserve it and their families.
But I will say, this is like, this is not the same thing.
Like you want this regime that creates these terror proxies
that we know have killed Americans,
like aggressively gone after us.
You want them to have a nuke,
you want them to give that nuclear weapon technology
to the freaking Houthis and whoever else, I don't.
And so just because one thing was wrong
doesn't mean this is right or this isn't right.
I just like having Iran have a nuclear weapon,
like their ballistic missile technology,
it's worth saying this to you.
Their ballistic missile technology was so sophisticated.
They were building missiles that could go farther
and farther and farther, not just to hit Israel.
What were they going to do with those ballistic missiles that could travel so, so far?
They weren't targeting us, or eventually.
So it was in our national interest to make sure that they never got a nuclear weapon.
And I think if Israel had had the technology to do it themselves, I think we would have
let them and we wouldn't have gotten involved.
But unfortunately, we are the only ones that have that technology.
We have the B2, we have these bunker busters.
Maybe we'll start selling those to Israel.
Great.
But it's in our interest too.
They are coming for us too.
I know they're coming for us. I'm not saying
that at all, but there was a couple other things that came out of it. I know you have
a lot of friends and acquaintances still in intelligence and probably a lot more than
I do. I still have a couple. But I talked to one person, they said, not one of our 18 intelligence agencies reported that
Iran had nuclear capabilities.
In fact, March 2025, Tulsi Gabbard, this is her, the IC continues to assess that Iran
is not building a nuclear weapon and Supreme Leader Kamene, sorry, I butchered his name,
has not authorized the nuclear weapons program
that he suspended in 2003.
And then in June of 25, quoted, America's intelligence that Iran is at the point that
it can produce a nuclear weapon within weeks to months.
If they decide to finalize the assembly, President Trump has been clear that can't happen and
I agree.
And so I mean, how does that, how did this all change just within a couple of months?
They had no capability.
Now all of a sudden, I mean, after years and years of Intel, all of a sudden in a couple
of months, oh shit, they've got nuclear capabilities.
We need to take care of this.
That didn't come from us that came from Assad
Why wouldn't we trust our 18 intelligence agencies?
More than we trust of foreign governments
Well that foreign government had completely penetrated Iran and we had it we we see there are operations
potentially ongoing even now
So targeted, so specific.
We weren't where they were.
And they saw things that we didn't.
And I love a good conspiracy as much as the next person.
But like, they have to get this right. I mean we
We did not have we did not have in my opinion
based on what I saw previously we did not have that level of penetration that they did and
and that's
That was a game changer. Okay. Well, that's good to know
it's just things that I don't understand because I don't have a full picture and
you know with a lot of the stuff that you can read on the internet
I mean it just gets you real.
No, but it's like it's tough Sean because people hear that and they're like, oh the Israelis told us so we just believe them
And then we're gonna go take out their biggest enemy, you know, I get that and it like it sucks
It also happens to be true. So I don't know,
I don't know what to tell you. I mean, it is. I wish that we had better collection inside of
Iran that we had had better collection. Now, things are changing, but not in terms of us,
but what's gonna happen with the regime?
I don't know anymore,
because they're totally defenseless right now.
I mean, just going back on our earlier conversation
when we were talking about analysts and intelligence folks,
I mean, not knowing what they're doing
because of where they came from,
from the Ivy League schools. I mean, do you think that played into why we didn't have that type of
intelligence? I think that's part of it. Yeah, I think that's part of it. I think just our general
risk aversion is overwhelming. And you know, you were in the CIA, you saw like institutionally,
CIA, you saw institutionally, they're risk averse. Hopefully now things are changing there, but I don't know.
I know I was extremely frustrated by how little was going on.
Four years ago, we could see the trajectory of this whole thing with Iran, with them building
the nukes.
Whether you want to parse that they're this close or that close, the intelligence community started playing these games
where they're like, well, they can make a new if they decided to make a nuclear weapon, they could
do it within, you know, a very short period of time. It's like, with medium, I think at the time it was like medium,
what do you call it? Sorry, they had medium confidence of that assessment.
I'm like, so you don't know anything, basically.
Like I'm supposed to make decisions off of this
or I'm supposed to advise my boss's boss about,
like based on that, that's not that helpful.
And of course, having been an intelligence analyst before,
I know like, I get it and I don't wanna like
be the dead horse too much.
I mean, sometimes you have what you have to work with,
unfortunately and, but I think at the end of the day,
the president in his first term,
President Trump made it clear, no new wars.
Um, he didn't want to go to war with Iran.
He wanted a deal.
There were things that we could have done back then, like beneath the
level of armed conflict, we have authorities that we can use to do certain things
that are in the gray zone, Sean,
you know about all of that.
We could have done that.
And I didn't really see anyone
who could have done it do it.
And unfortunately, it led to a scenario
where there was no other option.
The only option was this big kinetic public thing.
Could we have potentially avoided that earlier
with a little more risk taking?
I think so.
And again, no accountability for any of that at all.
I've spent years on the show pulling back the curtain and trying to reveal what's really
happening in this country.
And the truth is, there's a double standard here in America.
You see time and time again, people defending themselves, defending their family, and then
the judicial system goes after them.
It's a double standard.
And if you don't believe me,
check out episode number three with Don Bradley.
That is a perfect example of what I'm talking about.
Because it's not just about what you did,
believe it or not,
it's how the legal system interprets it.
And that's why I'm a USCCA member.
The USCCA has over 860,000 members
because they know the reality is, after you stop the
threat, the real fight begins.
Your membership gives you the education, elite training, and self-defense liability insurance
you need for the second fight, the legal one.
Plus, every member also gets access to a 24-7 critical response team and attorney network
in the event of a self-defense incident.
Violent crime happens too often in America.
This isn't about living in fear, this is about being prepared when things go sideways.
You don't get to schedule danger, and with the world changing so fast, you have to do
what you can to protect your family.
Check out the USCCA's risk-free membership at USCCA.com slash SRS.
That's USCCA.com slash SRS.
Protect more than just your life, protect your future.
Go right now to USCCA.com slash SRS. Whether you're
juggling tasks or trying to stay clear-headed throughout the day, Ketone
IQ delivers clean brain fuel that can help you think sharper, longer, and
smoother. No caffeine, no crash, no over stimulation. Thanks to the folks at HVMN
for sending me their Ketone IQ product to try.
I really like taking Ketone IQ before I work out.
It's not an energy drink, but it gives me a ton of energy.
I wish I had this when I was on active duty.
When I take it, I have more endurance,
but without the crash.
Ketone IQ uses ketone dial for a fast acting,
natural, slow release effect with no artificial
sweeteners or fillers. It helps support high-focus tasks by directly powering
neurons and stabilizing cognitive output and it's military tested. Originally
developed to support elite cognitive performance in the field. HVMN has an
amazing offer just for my listeners.
Visit ketone.com slash SRS for 30% off your subscription order
plus receive a free gift with your second shipment.
Fun surprises like a free six pack, Ketone IQ merch
and more.
These statements and products have not been evaluated
by the FDA.
These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure,
or prevent any disease or condition.
Yeah.
Is it, is it...
Is it true that in Trump's first term,
he took the inspectors of the nuclear facilities out?
I don't know. I don't know about that.
In Iran?
Okay. That's something I. But in Iran? Okay.
That's something I've been wanting to dive into.
But anyways, let's move on.
So I want to do we have a lot of stuff to discuss and I really
am excited to get into the Iraq war with you, but I thought
it would be good to do somewhat of a life story and then we
can go down rabbit holes along the way.
Great.
So where did you grow up?
Well, my parents are American, but they met and married in Italy.
So I spent my, or I was born in the US, but I spent my early years in Rome.
And actually, Italian is my first language.
Is it really?
Yeah.
Nice.
It's beautiful, but not that helpful
and outside of like restaurants and going on nice trips.
But yeah, so we moved to DC when I was like four.
My father was a university professor at the time, and he started getting death threats
from the communists.
There was the Red Brigades, very active in left-wing terrorists, communist terrorists,
very active in Italy, and they had killed a bunch of people there. And, um, he got, he got a death threat and, uh, I was very young and he was like, we out.
So, uh, so we, we came to the U S he got a job at, uh, at a think tank at Georgetown
university.
And, um, and so I, I grew up in, in DC, in the DC area, swamp creature.
Swamp creature.
Yeah, my mother worked, my parents ended up both working in the Reagan administration.
My father went to the State Department and eventually to the National Security Council.
And my mother was working at the Pentagon doing technology transfer,
like trying to keep the Soviets from getting
our best technology.
So yeah, that's why I grew up.
And then I ended up, my father, unfortunately,
at the National Security Council,
ended up working in the same office
with Oliver North and Bud McFarland,
and was swept up in the Iran-Contra affair.
I was 12 when all that happened,
and I had a pretty uncomfortable exchange
with the principal of the school that I was in,
who asked me if my father was guilty.
And I went home that day and told my mother
and she was like, well, you don't have to go back
to that school ever again.
And so kind of mid-year, I switched to a new school,
very bougie, all-girl school,
where everyone's dad was way more important than mine
and no one cared.
And I only learned later how much of a struggle
that was for my parents to be able to pay that tuition
because it was like one of those borderline things
where they didn't qualify for any kind of scholarship.
And frankly, I wasn't a good enough student to get any kind of scholarship, but, and frankly I wasn't a good enough student
to get any kind of scholarship, anything,
but they, yeah, they had to,
they sacrificed a lot to pay for my education
and I'm very grateful, but anyway, yeah,
so I went through high school there
and then, yeah, off to college.
Where'd you go?
I went to a school called Brandeis University
in Massachusetts.
And I did not do particularly well in school,
in high school.
But when I got to college,
I realized that I knew more than a lot of other people
just because my school was so good.
And it all started to make sense. Like, why did I have to go there and not just public school?
So, yeah, I remain very grateful for that.
But yeah, I went to Brandeis University, majored in European Cultural Studies,
just so that I could get credit for a full year overseas.
Pretty much always wanted to travel, live overseas,
had the wanderlust.
And so I went to Italy and did like, in my mind,
I had this eat, pray, love thing.
I went to Florence and thought it would be this great
adventure, but I made a critical mistake, which was I actually did a program at the
University of Florence, which was like hard as shit. So I had to do it. It was in Italian.
The way they do it there is you go to lectures, you read this whole pile of books, they give you the reading list. And like, you have one exam at the end of the year, and it's an oral
exam in front of a panel of professors. And it's like half an hour and they can ask you
anything. And that sucked. I had no e-pray love situation. I had like study, study, study. But I learned a lot and Florence was
beautiful and I got out of Brandeis, which already was like crazy left, crazy
left. Coming from DC, I wanted nothing to do with politics. I just wanted to be
like normal kid, normal experiences. I mean, when I was young, I remember in D.C., we had like Jean Kirkpatrick over for dinner
one night.
And she, my father was like delayed at work.
So it was like me and my mom with Jean Kirkpatrick, the ambassador to the United Nations.
I mean, if you ever look her up on YouTube, she was like a serious person.
Okay, serious person.
And I guess our oven broke.
My mom was putting some like frozen hors d'oeuvres or whatever in the oven to warm up and the
oven was broken.
So she sent me to next door like to use the next door neighbor's oven.
And I got stopped by the Secret Service because I'm running back and forth with food.
They're like, what are you doing with the food?
And that was my, you know, I had a weird childhood.
It was not like a lot of other kids.
So when I went to college, I just wanted to be normal.
And but instead, it was just all this craziness already.
And like we had, I forget what year it was, maybe my sophomore year,
we had a big student event, which was Angela Davis was invited as a speaker. Angela Davis,
former vice presidential candidate under the Communist Party. She was briefly on the FBI's 10 most wanted list
for like busting her boyfriend out of court.
I think a judge was killed in the process.
Wow.
So she was invited to speak at my school
and she was being paid out of student funds.
And I was like, absolutely not.
And that was also, I ended up kind of speaking out
about that a little bit, because I'm like, this is crazy
and you're not even telling the students who this person is.
Like, she's bad news.
And anyway, it was, even back then, it was a problem.
And I'm 50 years old, so this was a few years ago.
But yeah, so I just, I went overseas for a year,
just kind of did that thing and came back.
I wrote an honors thesis and got out of there.
And I don't think I've ever been back to Boston since then.
It was like way too cold for me and just not great memories.
But I got through it and I finished, which was my goal.
And then I came back to DC, got a job briefly
for a tech company.
Just kind of feeling my way around,
didn't really know what I wanted to do with my life.
And I got this job working for a guy
who had invented something that was acquired
by a company called Lucent Technologies,
which doesn't exist anymore.
But he made like over a billion dollars off of it.
And he decided that he was gonna start up
all these related tech companies
that would like be each other's customers.
And I worked for him.
I mean, I was like basically one level above intern,
but it was cool.
And anyway, from there I went to business school.
And I went to business school in Italy, but that was right when 9-11 happened.
It kind of changed my life.
Yeah, I saw that. How did it change your life?
Well, one of my mother's like best friends was on the plane that hit the Pentagon.
And at the time, I was a few blocks away.
I was in Pentagon City.
And so you could feel the apartment building shake when the plane hit. And we already knew,
we'd already heard about what had happened in New York City.
And I didn't know till later that day
that Barbara was on that plane.
Barbara Olsen was her name.
And she, it turned out that she had switched her flight
at the last minute.
She was supposed to, It turned out that she had switched her flight at the last minute.
She was supposed to, she was like a political commentator.
She wrote, her last book was about Hillary Clinton,
not a fan, and she was on her way,
I think she was supposed to go to Bill Marshall,
that's why she was on that flight,
it was going to Los Angeles.
And her husband's birthday was September 11th.
So at the last minute, she changed her flight
so that she could be with her husband
on the morning of his birthday.
And when he got to bed that night,
he found that she had left him a note as well.
But yeah, that changed my life.
It changed the life of our entire family,
my two younger brothers as well.
So I was already about to leave.
I was about to leave for business school in Milan
and everything was grounded
and I had time to think about everything,
go to Barbara's memorial service
and just kind of be with her widower with Ted
and just think about like,
do I even give a shit about any of this anymore?
Like I had all these plans to go, whatever,
have more European adventures or whatever.
And I'm like, I don't care about any of that anymore.
adventures or whatever and I'm like, I don't care about any of that anymore. I came from, I've been so lucky.
I came from a great family, I have a great education, I need to serve my country now.
I didn't know how, but I, kind of the seed was planted. As I thought about it, I realized like, what is school?
You go to school to learn a certain set of tools
that you can use however you want.
So that's when I started to get the idea,
like there's gonna be somebody tracking terrorist money.
So I'm gonna go to a business school,
I'm gonna learn about international finance,
and then I'm gonna figure out how to help do that.
And that's what I ended up doing.
Wow.
And you deployed to Iraq?
I did, 2003.
Yep.
How was that?
Early days.
Well, it was a shit show.
It was-
You were there for the invasion? No, no. Okay. It was a shit show. It was, it was.
You were there for the invasion?
No, no.
Okay.
They, they trucked us into Kuwait in September
and we were, we were in Kuwait, or was it late August?
I can't remember.
We were in Kuwait for like a week
and they had started up this like bizarre
week long training in a classroom for civilians who had never
done anything like this before.
And it was kind of like, mob gear, it's important, but you're not going to have any.
Flak vest, also important, yours doesn't have any plates.
So it was like, cool. But at the time when we got there,
I think it was sometime in September that we got to Baghdad. It was still, it was before,
right before things started blowing up, like right before the UN, the UN thing was like a big turning
point when the head of the UN mission there got blown up.
So when I first got there, you could still,
they had like government,
Suburbans at the Four Heads Palace is what they called it
because it had four heads of Saddam Hussein
on top of the palace, the presidential palace,
as it's now known.
We could just sign out a car and like drive into
the city, like go buy some pistachios. And that was, it was like that for about five minutes
after I got there. And then things started going boom pretty fast. But we, you know,
we were housed in the palace. They just put cots in, I don't know if it was like a ballroom.
So it's one of the huge rooms.
They just put all these cots out and the lights were on 24-7.
I saw a baby being made
right there in front of like a lot of people.
They eventually, the mother and father eventually got married, but there's a lot
going on there. A lot going on. Yeah. But we were trying to do the work that we were given,
so I was an advisor in the coalition provisional authority. I was an advisor to the Ministry of Finance. Okay. What does that mean?
They basically, what they told me my job was gonna be
was Excel spreadsheets.
And like having just finished my MBA,
I was like, I know how to do that.
At the time, there were a lot of countries
that wanted to donate to the rebuilding of Iraq.
And a lot of people forget this now, but in the early days, there were also a lot of other
countries that were there, not in combat, but in like, they wanted to show up and lend support.
Now this, like fast forward to Afghanistan, and you see all these, there were foreign nations that were there who fought with us
and bled with us and died with us.
In Iraq, people showed up,
but then pretty quickly this war became very unpopular
in their countries and we were kind of on our own.
And I saw a lot of these foreign troops kind of peace out.
But yeah, so we were, we were,
we were specifically, my team was on a,
what they called a budget execution team,
which was basically like executing the budget,
paying out the money.
In an environment like that, it's really hard
because everything was cash.
And they also decided, the powers that be decided, the old DNRs that had Saddam's face on them had to be,
you know, they needed to be phased out and there needed to be new DNRs made and they were being made in England.
And this was after a few months, they were trucked in
and we had to trade out the old ones for the new ones.
And we had to make sure like the teachers got paid.
But I remember when,
there's so many things to say about this.
I really don't even know where to begin,
but I remember when Bremer announced
that they were disbanding the Iraqi army.
And at the time they said that the Iraqi army soldiers
were gonna be given three months pay and that's it.
Like go figure out your new life.
Mm-hmm.
I mean, I've read books where people tracked like when did the insurgency really start.
And I remember there were riots.
I mean, when they would show up to get their payments and people like CPA people, not me, but others
had to tell them like, we're done,
you're not getting paid anymore.
They would riot.
And then they started making threats.
And then they started following through with those threats.
It wasn't hard to see.
It's just, you know, there was a very concerted political effort to ignore it. So,
for example, I learned later that, going back to our intelligence assessment discussion,
intelligence analysts were not allowed to use the term insurgency until Donald Rumsfeld left as Secretary of Defense. What?
Unrest. They had to call it unrest. They couldn't call it insurgency.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah. So that happened. There were new ministers for all the different Iraqi ministries that were installed.
And, you know, there was this idea of like trying to be fair because obviously the Ba'ath party was also knee and they wanted to put in Shia and kind of make it fair. Well,
a lot of the Shia were turned out to either become problematic
or Iran related or just weak and not popular with the people.
So they didn't hang around for that long.
But I mean, I remember working
with the Iraqi Minister of Finance.
So our team, we were out of the green zone like every day.
We would travel to the Ministry of Finance
For anyone who knows about security, let me paint this insane picture for you. So we were in a
soft vehicle in a
suburban
With a Humvee of soldiers in front of us and behind us
You were in a soft armored vehicle? Yeah.
No armored vehicle.
For many, many, many months,
there were no armored vehicles available for us
because we were like GS9.
What year is this?
04, 03, 04.
Holy shit.
Yeah.
And no, we had flak vests with no plates in them.
So, and we, but we were out like every day.
And I felt badly personally, we felt badly, I know my teammates did, because these soldiers
were there like protecting us.
I'm like, my life isn't worth more than his life.
Like why?
Like it didn't make sense to me.
Why are we doing this? Like, why can't we all just get in like a Toyota,
you know, and drive over there, no one will know who we are.
Like, why are we doing this?
It just seemed crazy.
And then we'd be stuck in traffic
and there'd be all these like apartment buildings
all around us and, you know.
So none of that, nothing ever,
none of that ever made sense to me.
But we would have, over time, a decision was made because these Iraqi ministers, they requested
security.
They'd say, I'm unsafe, our ministry is not safe, there's no Iraqi army anymore, the American military is not guarding,
had no interest in guarding ministry of whatever.
So they wanted their own security.
So the decision was made by the CPA Bremer, I assume,
to provide them with their own security force.
They could pick their own security force.
And in many cases, like, so
we could train them, we could equip them, give them firearms. And I mean, imagine this,
like new Shia, I mean, these were like, they became, some of them became Shia militias
and we started them. When I left Iraq in 2004, one of the people that I worked with, he was an advisor in the
Ministry of Interior. He was working with this, it was called the Facilities Protection Service,
FPS. He gave me an armband from the FPS. And I still have it. I have it in my office at home just to remind me, like, we are a big part of what is wrong.
We did it.
And a lot of what we're seeing today
is like second and third order effects
of the very poor decisions that we made
and the fact that we refuse to acknowledge them
at the time
and try to address them and try to find some accountability.
Did you elaborate on how we created that problem a little bit more?
Yeah, so like I was saying, the FPS in this specific case,
the FPS became like militias, like they grew.
The security forces around these different ministries grew and there were some ministers, the Shia ones,
that some of them were, it turned out,
talking to Qasem Soleimani.
Qasem Soleimani was already the head of the IRGC Quds Force,
was already like running networks inside of Iraq.
And he influenced networks.
And this was like a point that he picked up on,
an opportunity.
But it also came out,
I think it's important also to talk about Ahmed Chalabi.
So Ahmed Chalabi-
Who's that?
He was a big figure in the run-up to the invasion.
He was someone, he was the head of something called the Iraqi National Congress and was
one of the main people saying, when you invade Iraq,
like the people will embrace you and throw flowers on you.
And he was really embraced by,
you know, group like American, like neocons.
And of which my father was one.
My father was, you know was friends with some of those people
and some of the big kind of pro-Iraq invasion people.
And I grew up around them.
And so when I got to Iraq,
there were people who worked for him
who were like, oh, Simone, hello.
And this was a really big pivot point for me personally
when I just started to see what was going on.
And he had this car scheme at the Ministry of Finance
where it was basically like a money laundering scheme
of getting cars from the coalition
and then selling them and making money off of it,
and it was just money laundering.
Wow.
And the Iraqi Minister of Finance one day
when I was there working called me into his office
and he had like, turned out Chalabi had like someone
outside of his office just sitting there watching who came in and out all day. And he called me into
his office and shut the door and he was like, you have to help me, they're going to kill
me. And I'm like, who? You know, I'm 28 years old again, I told you my background. I'm like,
what are you talking about? Who? And he wouldn't say the name, but he's like, you
see this guy outside, like, they're trying to make me do all kinds of things. Help me.
So I didn't know what to do. I mean, I went back to my leadership and I was like, wrote
my little report. And, you know, that guy wasn't finance minister for very much longer. But I started to see what was going on and what Chalabi in particular was doing.
And I told my father, I was like, this is not a good guy.
This guy is not one of us.
He's not doing pro-America stuff.
And in fact, he's doing a lot of really shady things.
And my father from day one believed me, but a lot of his friends, who I'm sure are going to see this,
they always argued with me and they said he was misunderstood.
But now a lot has come out, and I think it's clear that he was an Iranian asset from the beginning.
And I think Soleimani was his handler.
He traveled to Iran so many times and always tried to explain it away like, of course I
have to deal with them too.
Bullshit.
So again, this is our own willful blindness and
There's been no accountability for that either
But so many people know about it. So many people are angry, you know, we've been betrayed and
Like
We're just sitting here with our anchor You know what I mean? And and yet the the the region and Iraq is not our friend, Syria's
doing Syria. I mean, it's still a cauldron. Although things have changed, but not because
of us. Not really.
Do you think we should have been in Iraq to begin with?
No.
Why? What makes you say that?
I agree with you. I'm just curious.
I think Iraq had nothing to do with 9-11.
And, um, I was, I was totally radicalized by 9-11.
We lost Barbara.
I was like, let's go.
I recently actually went to the George W. Bush Museum
at SMU in Dallas.
I don't know if you've ever been,
I actually, I don't know if I would recommend it
to like GWAT veterans, it's strange.
It made me really angry because there's a whole
like GWAT exhibition there or whatever.
And it has all these speeches,
all the speeches that they gave,
like leading up to the invasion.
And I got so angry.
I'm like, I was, but I was mad at myself.
I'm like, how did I ever believe this?
How did I ever believe there was any connection
between 9-11 and Iraq?
There was none.
What were we even doing?
KBR.
You know?
Do you think that's what it was, Dick Cheney's?
I think it was bigger than that.
You think it was bigger than that?
What do you think it was?
I think it was, I think that might've been part of it
because the years of like waste, fraud, and abuse through KBR
was just so egregious,
and no one really ever did anything about that.
Maybe that was part of it, but I also think,
there was this hanging,
George Bush Sr. didn't really finish the job in Iraq.
Like, you know, he got Iraq out of Kuwait.
Iraq had invaded Kuwait.
He launched the Gulf War to get Iraq out of Kuwait,
which was successful.
But a lot of people wanted him to go the step further
and regime change Saddam Hussein, and he didn't.
wanted him to go the step further and regime change Saddam Hussein, and he didn't. But a lot of people in the George W. Bush administration thought, now's the opportunity
where we can finish that, where we can right that wrong.
I think that's very real.
And so I think both of those reasons. But it's also important to say that there was a belief
that Saddam was trying to, was building some-
Weapons of mass destruction.
Weapons of mass destruction.
I don't think, I think a lot of people did believe that.
And like in retrospect, kind of good for him
because there had been this long, you know,
Iran-Iraq war, they were mortal enemies.
And he wanted the Iranian regime to think
that he was holding on to this like huge store
of weapons of mass destruction.
You know, it got him in the end.
But there, at least it was enough of a thread to pull that they built this whole narrative around it.
And I know, I mean, of course, he didn't have weapons of mass destruction.
He had a large amount of yellowcake uranium that they eventually put on a ship and sent to Canada.
But that was not weapons of mass destruction.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, when you talk about some of the waste, fraud, and abuse of KBR,
what are you talking about?
Oh, man. I mean, I saw this in a lot more detail in Afghanistan than I did in Iraq, but
just like I remember the, just because I was in Iraq in the
early days and all that stuff was just getting going where like I said initially we were housed
in the in the presidential palace and then eventually they started you know bringing in these
these trailers and the first trailers didn't have bathrooms so then those trailers were moved
out and they got the new trailers that had bathrooms and then i personally knew a couple
of soldiers that were somehow had gotten vehicles through kbr and're like sending them back to CONUS.
Yeah, I mean, obviously breaking the law.
And I didn't like, I found out about it much later
when I didn't even know where anybody was.
But it was like, it was stuff like that.
There was a lot of deal making, a lot of like people kind of,
I don't even know.
I mean, and then-
Can you talk about the connection between Dick Cheney and KBR?
Well, he was the CEO before he was vice president.
Well, he was the CEO of Halliburton, of which KBR was part of Halliburton.
And then they spun it off because it looked really bad,
didn't it?
Yeah, it looked bad.
Yeah.
It's so hard to paint a picture of how much money
was wasted, I mean, when you're talking about the trailers,
you're talking about basically a mobile home,
thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of mobile homes
that were put out with no bathroom.
And then all of a sudden they're replaced with ones that have a bath.
I mean, the amount of money.
And that was just the-
And it's the biggest, I mean, they ran, from what I know, they ran all logistics, all logistics
in Iraq and in Afghanistan.
And he was the fucking CEO of it, who's now the vice president, who obviously has major
poll.
Correct.
Yeah, correct. I mean, I remember at a buy up, Baghdad International Airport, we used to go,
we used to go there once a week on Fridays when we didn't work. And we used to literally insane to
think about today risk our lives to go there to get like Burger King so we wouldn't have to eat,
to go there to get like Burger King so we wouldn't have to eat whatever,
just to get out and try to feel like
we were doing something normal.
But yeah, there was a Burger King there.
There was, they were building all kinds of stuff there.
And there was still also the duty-free.
So we were not under general order one.
We were civilians assigned to the CPA,
which was like basically, it was a DOD entity.
But anyway, whatever, people bought booze at the airport.
But even just in the eight months that I was there,
I mean, there was such a huge change
in terms of like building things out. And the only thing that I was there, I mean, there was such a huge change in terms of building things out.
And the only thing that I saw during that time that was completely egregious was the
trailers.
And of course, they weren't...
We started getting mortared and rocketed pretty quickly after I got there.
And so there was no protection for that at all.
Over time, they started putting sandbags.
So at least like if someone got hit,
the shrapnel wouldn't hit someone else.
But I mean, it was,
that's how it was in those early days.
Pretty crazy to think about today.
Yeah.
When I finally got home from that deployment,
I didn't realize that I was a little rattled,
but I remember I was at
my parents' house for dinner one night and there was like a window that was up
and it kind of fell down behind me and I was like under the table and I didn't
even before. I was like, where's Simone? So, you know, going through all
that, it wasn't like I was in combat or anything like that,
but we got a lot of incoming over time.
It just kept getting worse and worse.
And a couple of my friends, we had a couple of terrible experiences.
We worked very closely with awesome translators.
We had these two girls who were, became good friends of ours.
And I remember one day they were coming on base for work and there was, the security was so bad,
like no one really cared about the local nationals that were working with us. It was really sad.
And there was a huge line of cars, of their cars, waiting to get in through security
into the green zone every morning.
So one day, some terrorist, like, you know, in an SUV bid,
just placed himself in the middle of that line of cars
and detonated himself.
And all the cars caught on fire
and people were burned to death,
including one of our
interpreters and her friend who was in the car with her made it out.
We tried to go to the hospital later to just pay our respects and visit and the families
were like, get out of here.
We don't want to see you here.
Get out of here. And that was like, you know, that was a pretty low, pretty low moment.
We had, we had, oh, I know this is kind of a, this is another kind of sad story, I guess.
But when I was leaving, I'm not always a rule-of-sweller. And when we were, in order to leave Iraq as a CPA person,
you're supposed to take the rotator out to Kuwait
and then back home.
But I knew this guy who, also an American,
who was working on the kind of political side of CPA.
And he had lived in the Kurdish region for a long time before the war and had friends up there
and was leaving around the same time that I was.
So he offered me to go with him.
And basically his buddies were just going to come pick him up outside the green zone.
And they were going gonna drive around,
spend like a week in Iraqi Kurdistan
and then like leave through Turkey,
on the border, like just by foot.
So I thought that sounded awesome, idiot.
And so I did that and we got stopped.
Oh, shit.
First of all, I got in so much trouble for that because it was actually really sad.
This woman Fern Holland, she was trying to help Iraqi women who were victims of domestic
violence.
That's a lot to unpack there. who were victims of domestic violence.
That's a lot to unpack there, okay? But she was there doing that, and God bless her.
She was killed.
And she was killed right when I kind of like wasn't,
when I had left.
And so for a while, there was this Marine Colonel
who was kind of in charge of me.
He had, he didn't know, he thought that might have been me, So for a while, there was this Marine Colonel who was kind of in charge of me.
He thought that might have been me, basically.
I didn't give him a lot of information.
I think I just left.
I'm very sorry about that.
So we get to Bakuba and we got pulled over by police maybe or just random criminals wearing
Iraqi police uniforms.
And we had to, they asked us for our IDs. And my friend just gave them his
like library card from the school that he had gone to because we were not going to show them our
CPA or any US stuff. And they got really mad. Anyway, long story short, I think
the Kurds who are kind of driver shooters
kind of passed them some money.
And we went on our way.
But it was, we went all over Erbil, Dahuk.
We went to Sulaymaniyah and just had an amazing,
did picnics with some of his Kurdish friends and met a lot
of people.
I actually learned a lot on that trip.
And then as we were exiting, we were going into Turkey, I forgot that I had had one spent
round in my bag, it was a shell casing that fell into my trailer
the night that everyone was celebrating in Baghdad
when we caught Saddam.
And what goes out must come down.
Some of it came down into our housing.
And when I was sleeping in the palace that night,
when I came back, there was this one spent round.
And so I thought it was cool, I'll keep it.
And the Turks at the border crossing
were not stoked about that.
And I had a little bit of a problem getting in.
But anyway, that was my Iraq experience.
And I will say, I did not, it's taken me years to,
to I think properly understand my role,
but also what I witnessed.
There were some really also just sad things
that happened there, like in addition to what I said,
there was a Colonel that I had worked with a lot.
He was getting ready to rip out.
And his last day, he brought this woman,
this Iraqi woman, beautiful, beautiful young woman.
And I understood pretty quickly
that they had had something going on.
And he was trying to find a job for her
because he was leaving, he was abandoning her.
And, you know, it was just, it was a terrible,
he's like, well, maybe, you know,
you guys have space for an interpreter or something.
And I'm like, no, we don't, you know, piece of shit.
And this woman, probably her whole family
knows what you've been up to,
and now what's her life gonna be, you know?
Stuff like that just made me really angry because I'm like,
we're leaving, you know, we're not going to stay here. And anyway, yeah. Yeah.
What are some lessons that you think? What are some lessons you learned from that war?
some lessons you learned from that war?
I think I'm still learning lessons from that war.
But the most important one for me was
how easily, like how you can get your blood heated,
how I can, and how easily in a way I was,
I believed something so strongly that was wrong.
And that is something that I hope
like has guided me in the rest of my life
because I so believe that was the right thing.
And it's so clear now that it wasn't.
And I also want to help to teach people that about that because it's not just, we have so many bad feelings about the specifics
of what happened and how it happened,
but in the broader strategic context,
what a huge mistake it was for us.
And we're living with the consequences today,
we're suffering from what that did to us as a country today.
Would we be where we are with China?
If we, you know, if we,
we knew what the threat from China
was gonna be back then even.
But maybe not to this extent,
but there were people,
there were smart people who understood
where China was headed.
Maybe it wasn't clear that they would achieve their goals, but it was clear where they wanted
to go.
But yeah, that was the most important lesson of all of that.
But there are many micro lessons, too.
Do you think that war was all for nothing? I mean, I want to say no.
I want to say no.
I'm with you.
And I'm sure maybe if we sit here long enough,
we can come up with reasons why it might not have been.
Can you think of any positives?
Well, I think
it's
It's always I don't like being totally negative about anything
I think there's always good in everything. You can always find it if you look hard enough
But this was so bad it was so bad and
and I'm thinking in particular about a
It was so bad. And I'm thinking in particular of a friend of mine
who died by suicide last year,
who was a two-time Iraq veteran.
And I was in his wedding and he was a mentor to my brothers.
Both of my brothers served in the Marine Corps,
one in Iraq and one in Afghanistan.
And, you know, that,
And, you know, that...
I know that he was very angry about everything and about the war.
And I think in his later years, he actually,
he was a Naval Academy graduate.
I think he regretted joining the Naval Academy,
regretted his entire military career.
And, you know, that was really tough.
He was struggling for a long time.
And I know there are a lot of other people who are going through that too.
Unfortunately, he was also an addict.
And I think that addiction really got a hold of him. who are going through that too. Unfortunately, he was also an addict.
And I think that addiction really got a hold of him.
And he wasn't someone who really sought help easily.
So, but yeah, I mean, it's, we have a lot of,
and my brother who served in Iraq, he went through a lot too.
And thank God he got help. He's doing amazing now. But he lost Marines.
And I just have a lot of compassion and love for veterans. And I kind of staying in the mix, you know,
and why when I had the opportunity to go back into government in a role where I could potentially
take these lessons that I've learned
and like maybe try to turn it into something good,
that was what I wanted to do.
I don't know if I did, if I managed to,
but that was kind of my thought process.
And that's, it kind of guides me today.
So I don't know.
I mean, everything bad we go through,
we're supposed to learn from it, right?
If it doesn't kill you.
So hopefully it's made us wiser as a nation.
I love to see all these,
I love to see all these people commenting now
about like, no, no war, no.
And I like, I agree, but I also think
not every military action is a full-blown war.
I think it's important to make that,
I think that difference is important. And I also think we live,
like the United States is in the world.
We can't just totally bury our heads in the sand.
And when we do, things get worse.
And then in the end, we end up having to do something.
Like I was telling you with the Iran stuff,
then we end up being trapped into
actually having to take some action if we're not kind of like managing things early on.
Well Simone, let's take a quick break. Great. We'll come back. We'll get into Afghanistan.
Why are elite athletes and high performers using Armora colostrum? Because Armora colostrum is nature's first whole food with over 400 bioactive nutrients
working at the cellular level to help build lean muscle, accelerate recovery and to fuel
performance all without artificial stimulants or synthetic junk.
Armora can help strengthen immunity, help ignite metabolism and so much more. I've been using Armora ever since they sent me some to try. I have more energy
and faster recovery after long days and workouts. Whether you're running a
business, training hard or just want an edge, Armora can help optimize your body
for peak output. I've worked out a special offer for my audience. Receive
30% off your first subscription order.
Go to armora.com slash SRS or enter SRS to get 30% off your first subscription order.
That's armra.com slash SRS.
These statements and products have not been evaluated by the FDA.
These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease or condition.
These statements and information are not a substitute for or alternative to seeking care from your health care providers.
Two words that don't typically go together.
Speed with quality. Like you don't hit the drive-thru and expect a gourmet meal to go.
But there's one exception to this unwritten rule. If you're hiring,
you can find candidates fast who are also extremely qualified for your job. Just use
ZipRecruiter. And right now you can try ZipRecruiter for free at ziprecruiter.com slash srs.
With ZipRecruiter's advanced resume database, you can find and connect with qualified candidates
in minutes.
320,000 new resumes are added monthly,
so you can reach more potential hires
and fill roles sooner.
And if you find a candidate you love for the position
and wanna schedule an in-person meeting with them,
you can unlock their contact info instantly.
Experience hiring speed and quality with ZipRecruiter.
Four out of five employers who post on ZipRecruiter get a quality candidate within the first day.
And if you go to ziprecruiter.com slash SRS right now, you can try it for free.
Again, that's ziprecruiter.com slash SRS.
ZipRecruiter, the smartest way to hire.
Sign up for the 4-day free trial to begin your paid subscription.
For restrictions, terms, and conditions, go to ZipRecruiter.com slash SRS.
The news just doesn't stop.
Between the national debt and the economic uncertainty, it's hard to know what to do.
But, if you look above the noise, you'll see many high net worth individuals and central banks are stockpiling gold.
In fact, gold has broken another record, climbing past $3,500 an ounce.
I still remember when it was under $2 thousand dollars an ounce just a while ago. It's clear too that now is the time to learn
more about how gold and silver can help you. So reach out to my partners over at
GoldCo. They're a great award-winning company I trust and they've got over
7,000 five-star reviews so you know you're working with the best in the
industry. Visit SeanLikesGold.com to get a
free 2025 gold and silver kit and you'll also learn about their unlimited bonus silver offer.
If you qualify, it's a great way to get started. Go to SeanLikesGold.com. That's SeanLikesGold.com.
Performance may vary. You should always consult with your financial and tax professional.
All right, Simone, we're back from the break. We're getting ready to get into some Afghanistan stuff.
So, you get home from Iraq and then you roll back to Afghanistan.
Yeah, a little bit of a funny story.
So when I was in Iraq, I met the Assistant Secretary for Defense for Special Operations,
ASD Solik, who was Tom O'Connell at the time.
And he was just a legendary guy in all respects and became a mentor of mine.
But anyway, he asked me what I was doing after Iraq and I had no idea.
And so he offered me a job at the Pentagon.
And so that's what I did when I came back.
But funny story, you know, it takes a long time
to get a security clearance if you've never had one before.
And I'd spent some time in Europe and whatever.
So I was not able to do any work in that office
until I got like a high TS clearance.
And I only had a secret clearance.
So they put me in another office, which was the office of Iraq reconstruction or something
like that.
And I ended up getting stuck.
I mean, it was that job was so bad.
I ended up getting stuck responding to congressional inquiries about like, just hostile congressional
inquiries.
I was like, you lost $8 billion of Iraqi money.
Where did it go?
And so I just spent my entire day, every day responding
to really aggressive congressional inquiries.
So I volunteered to go to Afghanistan.
I was like, that's gotta be better than this.
What?
Wow, I've never heard that comparison. Afghanistan's gotta be better than this.
Interesting state, was it?
Yes.
Good.
It was.
Good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, I went in 2004 to Afghanistan.
I was there almost the entire year.
Working with, at the time, the US command was CFC Alpha,
Combined Forces Command Afghanistan.
And the commander was Carl Eikenberry,
who later became our ambassador to Afghanistan.
He was a three-star at the time.
And so I went there.
I was embedded in the plans shop.
And the reason I was there was because there was someone, it might have been Doug Fythe,
I don't know who, someone in the Pentagon
who was important, had this idea about, so they were at the time trying to solve this
problem which never got solved.
How do we leave Afghanistan with some money?
What's their revenue going to be?
Because with Iraq, that wasn't gonna be a problem.
Their revenue was oil.
But what does Afghanistan have?
They have like heroin.
Yeah, they have opium.
So what are the alternatives?
And-
Lithium.
Well, at the time, that's right.
But at the time, the thought was customs revenue.
Afghanistan is kind of the waypoint between East and West historically, like the old Silk
Route.
And what if we could actually, so there was no real customs revenue being collected at
the border for the country.
It was just like all the Afghan border police,
you know, taking bribes and boxiation,
like putting it in their own pockets.
But what if we were able to change that up
and actually collect revenue for the country?
Could that work?
Could that cover the budget of the country?
So the plan shop built this pilot project
and I got embedded into that to basically do the numbers and kind of see like what were we collecting before, what were they collecting
before, what are they collecting now.
And I was working with some military guys from the plan shot marines and a ranger who had a whole they
did a whole thing i mean they picked a border crossing point which was islam kala which is at
the border uh in the west with iran near harat and uh they replaced the border police commander
They replaced the border police commander with a border police commander from the East. So he wasn't part of the Western tribal network.
So it was harder for him to be corrupt, was the whole idea behind it.
And then, you know, he brought a new force with him that was also from the East.
They were better trained, they were better equipped, they had more fuel, they had more money for food and stuff.
And so the idea was, let's see if we do all this,
will they bring back customs revenue in a meaningful way?
And so I was the one who kind of documented it
and did all the numbers and the budgets and everything.
And the answer after three months was yes.
And then general, I can bury, and by the way, like it took a long time to get this up and running.
But we did get it up and running three months later.
And there's a lot of stories to tell in between like the trip that the guys took.
I didn't go on that trip for obvious reasons, but they drove from Kabul to Harat on the ring road with these Afghans, the Afghan border police.
And it was kind of, you know, they like to talk about, well, there are a lot of stories from that, but they, you know, they were really part of, I mean, they,
I don't know what I'm trying to say here.
Anyway, the bottom line is it worked.
So basically what you were doing is you were replacing
Afghanistan's income with customs issues.
You're replacing the opium trade with customs issues you were you're replacing the opium trade with
Customs the opium trade the the revenue from the opium trade went to like the drug traffickers
And the problem that we were trying to solve was like how does the government of Afghanistan gonna make money?
That's not ours. That's not like the US taxpayer money. You know, like they need to be self-sufficient like fast.
So how are we gonna, somehow that became our problem. That's a different conversation.
I just got there when someone was trying to figure out
the answer to that question.
So, you know, again, I was like, yes, whatever. But, but that was
that was the job. So trying to document how much money did did the government collect
at the border crossing points when they were, you know, when things we were really focused
on them, and we train them and all this stuff.
And so within a three month period, which was the period of the pilot project, it seemed
like at least the initial numbers were pretty good.
And the old guys had been moved away, they'd been fired and kind of moved off the border
because they weren't effective.
They were just corrupt corrupt like everybody else.
And that was that that worked?
It did.
How many people are coming in and out of there?
I mean, so many was unbelievable. So many. Day and night, mostly day. I mean, we
also would have people come up to us because the like the Marines that I was
with, obviously they
took off their jackets that had their name tape on it and stuff.
People would come up to us and be like, are you guys going to invade Iran?
Probably Iranian collectors for all I know.
They're like, yeah, tomorrow mean, it was, there was a lot of money.
And it was, you know, for that period of time, we made an effort to actually capture the
amounts and look over their shoulders a bit. And I think at least the concept was proven,
but one of many kind of tragic things that happened
was that the commander, we briefed him on the program
and how it was successful.
And he was like, is this Doug Fythe's idea?
And I'm like, I don't know.
I don't know who don't know who you know
we didn't know whose idea it was it was like we were told to do this so we're
doing it but he immediately got political which was to me kind of like
a red flag like so what it works and and then he you know he decided that this
wasn't a security mission that it was was, it was a board, well, it was customs
and therefore it was a,
we needed to transition it over to the embassy.
This was not appropriate for the military command
to be doing, even though border security,
I don't know, classic security,
I mean, security is literally in the name, but okay.
So we had to transition it to the embassy,
which meant that the guy that was assigned to it,
nice guy, I guess, like older gentlemen,
not part of having trained this guy,
the commander whose name was General Ayyub, wasn't part of that.
You know, they pulled all of our military assets
that we kind of had, just as a show of force,
kind of around the border police facility.
All of that was gone.
His partner, like this guy, Tony,
who was his kind of trainer and partner, also pulled back.
So, uh, predictably, within a pretty short period of time,
he was killed. Um, the commander was killed.
And, you know, over to, there was reporting that he was,
like, he'd started to take a little on the side
and do all that, but it's like, man, we abandoned him.
We totally abandoned him.
And all of the people that from that region
and the drug traffickers that he was going after,
they did some really significant drug busts
during that time.
They, I mean, they, everyone knew what was going on.
They all knew.
And that was, that was the end for him.
And, and really I went back.
I went back to, so I came home like in November of 04,
and I went back to Harat in like 2009, my next deployment.
I just went out there, I was based in Kabul.
I was at ISAF headquarters that time. You couldn't travel outside the base without an MRAP like you had to be in an MRAP then
Because the security situation had changed so much but in 2004
You know, we would we had our like Hilux's we just drive into Harat. We did like tourism one day
We saw Alexander the Great had a, there were still remnants of-
A wall.
Yeah, and we went and visited that,
we did like some carpet shopping,
you know, drank, had some tea,
and it was just a totally different experience.
And I do think the two are related.
I don't think, of course, when I got back there, the Iranians had built all this.
They built electricity, they built a lot of new Shia mosques.
In Herat?
Herat was beautiful, by far the most outside of Kabul.
And it might have been even more beautiful than Kabul.
Do you think Kabul was beautiful?
Compared to the rest of the country was built up.
Let me put it that way.
It was built, but parts of Kabul were beautiful.
Yes.
I didn't see those parts.
I spent a lot of time in Kabul.
I mean, I guess it is what you make it in a way, but the things that I thought were beautiful there were,
they have all these fruit trees and there was
a lot of flowering things there that I thought made it nice.
But obviously, I'm sure you did too.
We were testing the air quality when we were living there and it was like 30% fecal matter
or something, Weston.
I remember the air, especially in the wintertime, whenever it was burning tires and shit to
stay warm.
Literal shit.
They were building burning shit.
Yeah. I remember spitting in the sink and my spit was gray and I could barely open my eyes if I went out
Especially at night in the winter because that's you know
Yeah, yeah, I'm probably romanticizing it a little bit
Maybe just a tad. Yeah, you're right. Yeah
but so
What were you doing?
How does this fit in with special ops?
What you were doing?
Well, that was, here's how it fits in with special ops.
Great question.
So I traveled around the country to as many border crossing points as I could doing my assessment.
I went with teammates when they could go, but a lot of times it was just me.
A lot of the border crossings around the country at the time were like I had to go meet up
with ODA,
ODB, whatever they were the ones that were controlling
that territory.
So I was not allowed to go south.
They said it was too dangerous and I never got to see,
I never got to see the border crossing points in the south.
But yeah, I went out east in particular.
I spent some time with our special forces out there,
Green Braze, and there's one instance I remember.
I think it was Assadabad, not Abbottabad,
which was Pakistan, but Assadabad.
I went out there and had the opportunity to meet up with
this ODA and the ODB commander as well, the major.
And they took me to, we went to the AfPak border,
just pretty barren, pretty crazy. And they took me to, we went to the Afpac border,
just pretty barren, pretty crazy. I don't really know why I was,
I probably shouldn't have been out there in retrospect.
I was gonna say, that's a pretty dangerous area.
It was, it was.
And we drove through, we drove across this road
that was, it was not paved, it was like pebbles.
And they, one of the, they were telling me the story
about how they lost their buddy,
for Sergeant Jeremy Wright.
He had been blown up by an IED there,
and that like, there's no way,
just because of the way the road was,
there was really no way to tell if there was like,
you couldn't tell if it
had been disturbed or not. And they were, I mean, I could see they were still in mourning
and that he had been like a great dude and it was awful. And the thing that was really
bothering them aside from just losing their friend was that that road was a USAID project. Paving that road was a project
that had already been approved and paid for by USAID, but the contractor was a Turkish company
and they hadn't shown up yet to do the work. And so these guys, every time they wanted to go to
the border, which they had to go there a lot,
had to drive over the same like page of earth.
So I feel like this might've been the only actual good thing
that I did my entire deployment.
But when I got back to Kabul, one of my friends there,
she was a USAID rep or whatever, and I told her about it.
And I actually truly don't know if there was a connection,
but I heard from them pretty soon after
that the construction company came and paved the road.
But I was like, why aren't they here?
Why haven't they done this?
Someone got killed here already.
Why wasn't this moved up in the priority?
And they're like, oh, everyone's late on everything.
It's all late, everything's late.
And then I came to find out one of my trips to Herat,
the USAID guy, who was the USAID rep in Herat,
who was, he was the USAID rep in, in Harat. He,
someone showed me some reporting that he had accepted
like gifts of 40 carpets from these,
from these fuel, where are they?
Like oil and gas traffickers.
Basically they built like a underground pipeline, which was not
legal and not approved.
So they could move fuel from Iran into Afghanistan.
And this guy just let it happen.
No kid, I had no idea that was going on.
Yeah.
And so that, I mean, it was small, it wasn't like a huge operation, but it was still, anyway.
All that, I mean, I saw that,
but that was the work that I did with Special Operations
was they supported me when I was going to do my assessments
and collection for this border crossing project and trying to understand
so if someone comes across, how do you assess a customs duty? Who is the one who assesses that?
No one who's literate, no one who's... I mean, obviously, you know the kind of people they had
manning those border crossing points was anyone who would agree to put on a uniform and his tri-boy.
So like, yeah, I mean, that was my experience.
But I had met some of their colleagues in Iraq,
because in Iraq we started getting calls
from military units that the money movement,
like we were moving in US dollars
as well as these new DNRs,
and they were finding pallets of US dollars
that were still shrink wrapped from the Fed in
insurgent rates.
And the different military units would call us at the CPA and be like, what do we do with
this?
We found this, says it's like half a million USD, like, what should we do with it?
And yeah, it's like we have no idea what we're doing.
We have no idea.
Wow.
Where was this money supposed to go?
Had a barcode on it too.
They all of those things that came from the Fed,
those pallets of cash, they all had barcodes on them.
But anyway, yeah, so I ran into some of the people
that I knew from those days. I ran into some of the people
that I knew from those days.
I ran into some of them in Afghanistan,
and then just kind of kicking around.
There's not a lot of me's out in places like that.
And Firebase, Torkham, I remember that place.
That was on the old Silk Route, actually,
kind of a cool place because like off in the distance you could see an old English outpost.
And again, I'm like, here we are again.
You know, we hope it's going to go better this time, I guess.
But there was so much traffic coming.
I mean, so much traffic and learning about,
we basically had no idea who was coming.
There could have been like WMD for all we knew
being trucked in and the roads were just,
were completely packed all the time.
So, but my focus at the time again was like,
how do we, how can attacks be collected against this?
It's absurd to think about today that we were actually trying to do that.
Absolutely absurd.
But that was with the mission.
Interesting.
So you left Afghanistan, was this 2004?
And then went back again in 2009.
What did you do in between there?
So I did, my clearance did finally come through.
So then I did go to Solik, ASD Solik,
and that was when I started working
on counter threat finance.
So the Tom O'Connell,
he was ASD Solik at the time,
former Green Beret Vietnam veteran, served in CIA as well,
just a legend.
And he believed strongly that Klauswitz and his centers of gravity, his enemy centers
of gravity, he felt strongly that money was an enemy center of gravity
and we should be focusing on disrupting
their financial flows.
And that was like, I'd always wanted to do that, right?
That was my original, this is what I'm gonna figure out
how to do, so very cool opportunity.
And when I finally got clear to know everything,
I learned that it was a big interagency effort
that had already gotten started.
And there was an Iraq threat finance cell
that was underway,
that was like a treasury department thing.
But there were a lot of rice bowl issues
because the commander on the ground was like,
no, I'm not gonna have the Treasury Department leading an effort in my battlefield.
Like I'm in charge.
It's like, cool.
You don't actually know anything about how to do this, but like, awesome.
Good, good job.
So there was a lot of, there was just a lot of drama over those kinds of things, but it
was really amazing effort, both you had not just like Treasury and DOD,
but you had like intel people,
you had law enforcement people.
There was, you know, when things really got going,
they had like FBI and IRS criminal investigators,
like going inside the booth, like interrogation booth,
when military units would roll up, like financial people, they would help with interrogation
and really get amazing information.
Turned out that the money guys didn't get the same kind of training to withstand interrogation
that the operational guys did.
No kidding.
And so they talked. And it turned out a lot of them kept two sets of books too,
because they were also skimming. And so then we had leverage. And so it was a really cool
and very successful effort. I would say the kind of pinnacle of that in Iraq was this operation, it led to this big
operation at the Beji oil refinery, where months of work determined that AQI was making
a ton of money off of fuel smuggling from the Beji oil refinery,
which is like the big oil refinery in Iraq.
And they were like, the trucking company was AQI, and like this dude and that dude were
being paid off by AQI.
And anyway, you know, the team did a phenomenal job of doing a whole network analysis and being like, here are the key nodes.
And the military came and rolled them up and stopped it. It was amazing.
Of course, being AQI, they found new and exciting ways to get money.
What were some of those ways? being AQI, they found new and exciting ways to get money. But that was...
What were some of those ways?
Kidnapping for ransom, drug smuggling.
I mean, that's just a few.
I mean, anything you can think of, anything and everything.
But fuel smuggling was by far for them, like that was the real winner.
That was when they were making big money.
But they still like they would tap into the pipeline, you know, break open the pipeline
and just siphon off some gas and sell that.
So yeah, I mean, they're incredibly, incredibly creative, basically all kinds of
criminal activities that you could imagine. That's what they did. And that's what most
of these terrorist groups do. They're criminals, but they have this ideological component.
They're engaging in criminal activity for some of them for ideological purposes, although
a lot of them are just straight up criminals and they're just like acting as if they're some kind of religious, you know, some type of like highly moral religious
figure. But so we, yeah, so I started working on that and that was amazing. I was doing that out
of the Pentagon, but I got to go back to Iraq
and kind of see what everyone was doing
and just advocate for it.
And at the time, there was,
the ASD wanted to kind of codify it
because it seemed like such an important part of the effort
and everyone was so complimentary
and the commanders were really happy
about what we were turning out.
So yeah, I got tasked with, this is going to be boring for a lot of people, but writing
the counter-threat finance policy for the DOD.
So that took forever because the DOD is such a huge bureaucratic monster.
And when you're writing a new policy, you have to get everything coordinated with everyone, he changes every word, and everyone gets in fights,
and it was a huge thing, and it took a couple years.
But there were so many successes behind it,
it was undeniable.
So in the end, I think today,
it's been through a lot of revision since my time,
but I think there still is a counter-threat finance policy.
And we call it that because originally, it was just, it was gonna be counter-terrorism, Today it's been through a lot of revision since my time, but I think there still is a counter threat finance policy.
And we call it that because originally it was just, it was going to be counter terrorism
finance, but the terrorism, like the legal definition, like basically requires, like
you're talking about designated terrorist groups and in Iraq there were all kinds of different terrorist groups but also insurgent groups that hadn't necessarily been
named and designated in that way but they were also included because they were still killing
people and killing Americans in some cases and definitely the enemy. So counter threat finance
and definitely the enemy. So counter-threat finance was the term that we ended up with.
Did you work directly with General McChrystal
and General Thwin?
I did.
How was that experience?
I worked for them in Afghanistan, 2009, 2010.
That was spicy, spicy.
Why do you say that?
Well, I loved working for General McChrystal.
And I learned a lot working from General Flynn,
working for General Flynn.
I learned a lot from him as well.
But I'll tell you, you know, it was, uh...
There was a lot of drama always, um...
with Flynn. I mean, he was...
He was a great boss to me.
He understood what I was doing.
He supported me.
Um, and, you know, I'm not, like...
just understanding what we were trying to do myself and our whole team of counter-threat finance people.
He was very much on board with that and so was McChrystal.
But there are things that either you're comfortable with or you're not. So these are guys that, you know, from JSOC,
like they operated in a certain way
and you either had to be comfortable with that or not.
Personally, I was the thing that I remember Flynn
always saying was like, this is war, like we're in a war.
So we have to do everything that we can to win the war.
And that included sometimes sharing information,
sharing intelligence that was like,
well, a very small group or sometimes not even REL,
sharing that with a foreign partner on the battlefield.
And by the way, that's a, like legally,
that's a decision that they're entitled to make.
Like they're legally allowed to do that. But there were some people on the J-2 staff
who were uncomfortable with that,
and I remember one of them actually going home.
Who were you guys sharing intelligence with?
Other, like, countries that were fighting with us.
Why would they be opposed to that?
Because it was, like, you know, not,
oh, it's not real their country.
So we shouldn't be sharing it with them.
Like, well, they're going down range with us tomorrow.
So they should probably know that this thing is happening.
Yeah.
Was it major pushback about it?
I mean, I guess so.
They sent somebody home.
No, someone like voluntarily asked to leave. He has to leave.
But so it was kind of like,
this is how we're prosecuting this war,
either you're on board or you're not.
It was very clear from the beginning
that like this was, this was what I believed.
And again, I was wrong because we were,
we were still there 10 years later,
but I felt at the time like, this
is either going to change the tide and work,
or we're done here.
And I felt that was kind of the sense
that I got from the command was like,
we got to turn the ship around right away.
But then things started happening,
like that email, and I regret I don't remember his name now,
but there was an email like halfway through that year
from a soldier to General McChrystal.
So McChrystal and Flynn and the CJ-3,
they would do like battlefield circulation all the time.
So they would travel to different parts of the country
to kind of talk to people and see what was going on.
And this was after the whole counterinsurgency strategy
was implemented, which meant a change
to the ROE, excuse me.
That change to the ROE meant that our people were taking more risk and in some cases getting
killed because they couldn't respond to something
unless all of these conditions were met.
And I know a lot of people were very,
I had nothing to do with that.
A lot of people were very concerned about that,
very angry and felt it was the wrong thing to do.
And I don't know enough about combat to be,
I wouldn't presume to have an opinion,
but I'm sympathetic to that point of view,
just because of what I saw.
So I remember there was an email that came through to,
like everyone on, in the,
McChrystal's team who saw his email saw this note
and it made its way around.
I think it got leaked in the media somewhere where there was a soldier who was like, you
know, your ROE is a piece of shit basically and like here's like the 50 reasons why.
Like this is terrible.
You know, we can't win like this.
Do you remember what the ROE was?
I think I was in country when this came out, but.
I would have to look at it specifically, but. I mean, I remember, this is, if I remember correctly,
this is when there was gonna be a major push in Marja.
Am I correct?
Do you remember that?
I do remember that.
Lashkar Gah, Helmand Province was really hot at the time.
And I remember, and it was right after the coast bombing
at the CIA base.
And the ROE suddenly changed to basically
you can kill an enemy combatant to if you're shot at
and the enemy drops his weapon,
then you're not allowed to fire.
And that came out right before the Marines were gonna do
that big offensive push into Marja.
I believe it was Marja.
And they said that that would be the second biggest
offensive that the military had done since Fallujah.
It was huge.
I mean, detrimental.
And not only that, I mean, demoralizing your troops.
Was demoralizing.
Demoralizing them. Like, we don't have your back. We don't care what happens. They drop
that weapon. You can't shoot. So to have that going on playing in your head, you know, if
I take the shot, am I going to prison for the rest of my life? On top of all the
other decisions that you have to make in combat. I mean, it was, I was so pissed off about that.
And I wasn't even in the military anymore. I was contracted for CIA. So it didn't really affect me.
Man, I fell for those guys when that shit came out.
man, I fell for those guys when that shit came out.
I mean, I didn't truly understand until I read that email what it meant.
And I also fell for them.
And I didn't understand why,
that feedback was received loud and clear.
It was discussed and it didn't change anything.
It didn't change anything.
They were going to proceed.
But one-
That didn't come from McChrystal and Flynn, correct?
That ROE?
I think it came from McChrystal.
I thought that came straight down from Obama.
It might've come from Obama.
He absolutely micromanaged every aspect of that war.
He did.
He absolutely did, yes.
Through the NSC, which grew to like an astronomical size
because they were micromanaging everything.
I mean, I was working in counterterrorism in the Pentagon
before I went back to Afghanistan. And so I started to understand,
because I was like, part of my job was just like briefing
all my seniors every week about new things.
And this was like at the height of we were designating terrorists and we were targeting
terrorists based on financial intelligence.
So there was, you know, these weekly briefings to the joint staff and our political bosses.
I was in the room for all those things and And I heard, and so I learned a lot about how the chain of command is supposed to work.
And when Obama came in, they just added so many layers and it was like commanders couldn't
make decisions anymore.
They had to ask permission from the White House. And it screwed up a lot of things.
It made a lot of operations impossible,
just ended them before they started
and just made them so much more dangerous as well,
because I mean, you know, like sometimes
you're dealing with a fleeting target,
you gotta take the opportunity when you have it.
And there was just no appreciation
for that. But I will say something that happened that might be interesting. So while I was
there during that tour, General McChrystal was at a certain point very interested. There'd
been a lot of rumors about someone named Ahmed Wali
Karzai, who was the brother of President Karzai. And there were a lot of rumors pretty factually
based that he was a narcotics trafficker and was involved in a lot of really bad things and also
involved in a lot of really bad things and also tied to the Taliban.
And so McChrystal set us on a deep dive,
like the entire, like all of his kind of intel team.
You guys go out into, you know, go out into the wild
and see who has what on AWK and, you know, come back.
I think I forget how much time we were given like
a month or something and like let's everyone get together and let's figure out like is
this guy is he really bad what are we going to do about it let's do this deep dive. No one, there was nothing, like no smoking gun tying AWK to anything.
But also I will say there was so much circumstantial evidence that it was obvious that he was all
of those things. Um, the ceiling, like you had to meet an impossible level of certainty
that we weren't able to meet. We weren't able, like, no, he never got up on a call and said,
I'm going to traffic some drugs today. Hello, my Taliban friends. Like that. Yeah. I mean, that,
that never happened. And he did, I mean, all of his activities were through lieutenants and sub commanders and stuff. So I remember a huge effort to get everything together. And then it just like, and he was assassinated shortly after that. So the problem went away anyway. But that was, at the time, really disappointing
because I'm like, it's obvious this is a super bad dude
and it's a problem for the United States.
And he might have also been working with us in some way,
I don't know.
But the other-
Who assassinated him?
One of his rivals, I guess.
Do you think it was us?
I have no information that it was us. Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know.
But I think that, well, yeah, I have no information on that one way or the other, but I know it
solved a problem.
With respect to, you mentioned Marja, so one of the other things that I really, that I
remember from that deployment was another kind of directive that came down
from McChrystal where he wanted, he wanted a deep dive on Taliban finance.
And he said, look, there are all these rumors that people have been saying for years, you
know, Gulf, like they're getting all their money from the Gulf.
And there's a whole, I mean, there's a whole, a whole rabbit hole that we can dive down in that, but it's interesting to
like 10 people.
But he wanted a deep dive on Taliban finance.
He's like, is their money still really coming from the Gulf or are there other sources of
money?
How would it be coming?
How's it coming from the Gulf?
Well, they would go to the Gulf, the Taliban and Al-Qaeda would go,
and other terrorist organizations as well,
would go to the Gulf, different Gulf countries
and individuals who supported what they were doing.
And they would go specifically during Ramadan
was like a big fundraising period,
where Muslims are encouraged to give to charity.
And so they would raise a lot of money as a charity towards their terrorist causes.
And they frame it as they're advancing radical Islam and they're fighting the great Satan
or whatever. And so, yeah, they raised a lot of money that way.
They also, I mean, they were in the early days,
there were, these were groups that were later designated
by the Treasury Department, the State Department,
but they were like humanitarian,
they were masquerading as humanitarian, like Islamic relief or stuff like that, but they
were terrorist fronts and they were raising money through those avenues.
And they raised a lot of money.
And it also became a political hot potato because the US government's designating Islamic relief,
like, oh, are you Islamophobic?
Like, no, I'm terrorist-ophobic.
But there was enough political will for a period of time to do that, and then it went away.
But fast forward, so as JSOC commander, obviously McChrystal was focused elsewhere, but I'm
sure he had enough information to know that when he was JSOC commander, a lot of these
funds were coming in that way.
So he wanted to know, like, here I am, commander at ISAF,
how is the Taliban today making its money?
And so we got, and there were some colleagues of mine
from the Treasury Department, and by that point,
there was an Afghanistan threat finance cell.
And so there were all these interagency folks
that were there doing amazing things,
and put together
a really compelling assessment that the Taliban is actually getting its money from us.
They are making their money from us.
If you consider our logistics supply chain into Afghanistan, they were extorting money
on every single link in that supply chain.
So we were paying the Taliban.
Are you serious?
Yeah.
Can you be a little more descriptive of how that was happening?
So you have supply trucks coming in for Supreme, for our food, our fuel, our sustainment, anything
for sustainment, anything for sustainment,
it all went through Pakistan.
Because it couldn't go, I mean, if you look at a map,
there are only a few ways that that stuff
can enter into Afghanistan.
So it all came in through Pakistan.
And the Taliban are in Pakistan,
and they were not just there, but also in Afghanistan.
They had locked down these trucking companies
and also in not just the trucking companies,
but also the individual drivers.
And sometimes the like subcontractors
to big American primes that were like
not necessarily American, they were also being extorted.
Wow.
All this came to light in 2010.
And you uncovered that?
Not me personally, like I was part of a team,
but yes, we did uncover that, yes.
What happened after that?
Well, not relatedly, McChrystal got fired.
So he did, oh, his other question, by the way,
that I failed to mention was,
is the Taliban making its money off of the narcotics trade?
Is that like a key part of their finance?
And we did find that it was a lot less
than everyone thought, that this extortion racket was really,
that was the key method of how the
Taliban was raising its money. But it did give him, this whole analysis and link chart that the
team did really gave him a lot of insight into where the key narcotics trafficking nodes were. And so those were included in this Marja operation.
It was part of it.
So to disrupt Taliban financing,
that was part of the end goal of that operation.
How did they act when you got the information to them?
I mean, I was in the room when he was briefed on it
and he was shocked.
Did they take action?
Yeah.
So in addition to this kinetic targeting,
there was also, like he put his logistics chief, the CJ-4,
he put him like like, in charge of
doing this whole, you know, deep dive into the subcontractors
and how do we do a better job of vetting and all that.
And I'm sure, like, I helped him with it for a bit,
but then McChrystal got fired and I went home.
And I know when Petraeus came on board, he brought General McMaster, who stood up like a very public anti-corruption
task force. That was because of what we had found. But I will say that when,
But I will say that when, and I'm grateful to him, when McChrystal got fired, General Flynn kind of took me aside and he was like, you should go home now. And he was like, nothing good's going to happen now. You should just get out of here, just go home. And I heard later that, you know,
it wasn't pleasant for the, all the McChrystal,
you know, those who remained.
I think Petraeus had a not good view of that team
and made sure everyone knew it.
So I was kind of grateful that I got rescued from that.
But I was, I
was so like, I just felt when when McChrystal got fired, I was like, what's over? You know,
it's over. I mean, I knew Petraeus from Iraq days. And I was like, what are we going to
do in this country anymore? Like it's the only, to me the only hope was McChrystal
because he also was dealing with Pakistan
and you can't, there was no hope in really changing anything
in Afghanistan without addressing the real problem
which it seemed to me was Pakistan.
So, and the ISI specifically.
So anyway, I was pretty,
I never at that time would have imagined
that we would have been there another 10 years after that.
And we never really addressed any of those problems.
And we kept paying like in a way,
secondarily the Taliban who kept killing us 10 years after
that and we knew.
This is the thing that astounds me and I'm like, we still have no accountability.
Like all these people knew and did nothing.
Oh man, every time I dive into this, I just start getting more and more angry.
So I mean, especially we were just talking offline about the
40 to 87 million dollars in cash that
We would send Taliban every single week. Thank God Tim Burchett got it passed through the house
Thank God and Senator she he's supposed to be introducing it to the Senate. Hopefully that happens soon
but
now man, I just,
I don't even know what to think anymore.
It's hard to know what to think,
because at a certain point, you have to ask,
this is all too many coincidences
of us helping our sworn enemy.
Like, are we really, are we trying to do that?
Do you think it was,
that's actually what I was just gonna ask.
Not then.
Are we trying to prolong the war?
I mean, what was that?
I wonder too, I wonder too.
I wonder too.
I wish I had answers, I don't.
But you have to ask yourself when you see what I saw and everything just kept going.
It was like nothing.
What else do you need to know?
I mean, just putting things together
because this is all in the 2009 timeframe, you know?
Slash the ROEs, cut our troops legs out from under them,
continue to finance them.
I mean, then everything that happens later.
And this was Obama years.
And so Obama, you know, was very publicly, like, try...
You know, should we surge or should we just, you know, leave?
And this was very public and obviously decided,
wanted the public to know that he decided that he was going to surge.
And this, the whole catastrophic withdrawal under Biden was Biden being like, you know,
finally getting his, he always wanted us to pull out.
This was again, the narrative, he had always wanted us to pull out.
And now that he was president, it was gonna happen.
And regardless of, you know, we had all the things
that happened that could have been prevented,
didn't matter, we're out and that's a victory
because that's what he had always wanted.
But yeah, that's been the whole narrative
that's been provided to us.
I don't have any more insight than that.
I have the same questions that you do.
Let's move into the SWIFT program.
What was the SWIFT program?
Well, SWIFT is a,
it's a way to move money, to move funds and banks use it today all the time.
Um, you're basically making electronically transferring funds from one bank to another.
Um, and it's, you know, it's an international system that's used by many, many countries.
This was a very highly classified program for many years that was part of the Patriot Act, but part of the classified part of the Patriot Act. And it got blown in the New York Times
And it got blown in the New York Times years ago. It was very successful because you could track, you know, if you knew who had which bank account
number and which bank, you could see who was doing what, who was sending what they were
sending, where they were sending it.
But it was specifically only for counterterrorism, could not be used for anything else.
And once the program got blown, a lot of our international partners, especially in Europe,
they have very different privacy laws in Europe than we do in the United States. And they were very upset.
And but, you know, we over the years, it's been
a very successful program.
Like when I was when I was at Treasury managing this program,
we were able to I don't know if you remember this
horrible child killer in Norway,
this guy Anders Breivik, who just went to,
just psycho, went to an island of a kid's summer camp.
Oh, I do remember this.
And just murdered all these kids.
I do remember this.
And there was a big question about,
is this a lone wolf guy?
Like, what's his motivation?
And we were able to look at his bank accounts
and tell the Norwegians for sure,
this man was saved money for 10 years
to be able to fund this operation.
There was no one else involved, it was just him.
But so that program is, again, purely for counter-terrorism
purposes, very misunderstood.
But, you know, but-
How is it misunderstood?
Well, a lot of, because it was secret
and then it got blown and like,
it's not like our government is gonna to come out and explain everything that it
was doing. Um, I think people assign kind of their own,
uh, they make up stories and obviously a lot of people are,
are, are like to think of the United States as kind of this big, bad entity.
And sometimes I feel, I feel the same, but no.
Sometimes I feel the same.
Sometimes I wonder, no.
But the reality is, in Europe in particular,
if you're European and you've never been here,
you don't really understand America,
you just read the news, you could think that someone accused us, for example, from a European government of trying
to track who is gay in Europe.
And I'm like, I can promise you, first of all, when you fill out your form to open a
bank account, that's not part of it.
So that information doesn't exist, number one,
tied to a bank account.
And two, like this is for counter-terrorism purposes only.
And the company, the Swift, the company,
has very strict controls over that.
And they actually oversee a lot of that as well
to make sure that every request is for meets
a meets a threshold. How does it work? I don't know how much I'm allowed to go into that anymore
but I think that it's very safe to say there's a very formal coordination process
formal coordination process where there are multiple layers of approval and oversight. And again, you can't introduce other targets that don't relate, that don't have a direct
connection to counterterrorism. or terrorism. But when you see new entities designated as terrorists, for example, the
cartels, that's one of the authorities that is now available.
Interesting. So basically, use the SWIFT code, correct? And you can breach into any bank account,
see where money's coming, where it's going to.
Is that it?
Am I on here?
It's way more specific than that.
Like you basically, if you have a target,
you need to figure out what bank account they're attached to.
And then you request any swift transactions
from that bank account and then you see what comes up.
Okay.
So you can't just say like, I wanna look at all transactions
from Iraq to Iran or vice versa, no.
You have to, and then you have to write a whole,
and again, my information's very, very old now.
This is many, many years ago that I was doing this, but you had to write a whole justification
for why.
And you had to include reporting as part of your justification.
This is who this person is.
This is what their bank account is.
Here's why I know this.
This is why they're a terrorist. Here's the justification for that.
I'm trying to find out this.
This is why I'm trying to find this out.
Do you have anything?
Gotcha.
It's very, very controlled.
You know, while we're on the subject of Afghanistan,
I've got a Patreon.
It's a subscription account,
and we've turned it into quite the community here.
And one of the things I do is I offer them the opportunity
to ask each and every guest a question.
And so this is from Jim Harmon.
Why does it appear that our government intel agencies
appear to ignore obvious threats to national security?
For instance, the fact that Hamza bin Laden is alive is disputed by officials.
So we wanted to go into this and, you know, we were talking off camera about my friend Sarah Adams,
who says that Hamza bin Laden is still alive, that he is the leader.
He's basically over all of these terrorist organizations, which have united.
Then she went on to say that the, I believe it was the UK government also reported through
their intelligence agencies that he was alive.
Now I know you have a different opinion on this.
Yes.
Hamza bin Laden actual is not alive.
He is dead.
However, I do not dispute the fact
that someone calling himself Hamza bin Laden, perhaps even a bin Laden cousin,
is doing all of that. But Hamza actual is not alive.
How do you know that?
He is dead. Because I have asked multiple people who would know that I trust,
and they have told me unequivocally he is dead.
Did they tell you where he was killed?
Yes, and I don't remember right now.
I know that's a cop-out, but it's real.
When was he killed?
Uh, man, 2019, is that right?
Why do you think the UK government is saying that he's alive?
I mean, there's clearly someone calling himself Hamza bin Laden that is like organizing a lot of bad stuff. And I don't dispute that. I just think, like, do you remember in
The Princess Bride, the dread pirate Roberts, that there were like multiple,
when one guy would retire,
there'd be another guy that came up
and now he was the Dread Pirate Roberts.
And you're just kind of like living off of that infamy.
That name is so powerful and is a brand in and of itself.
And therefore, someone's using it to rally,
you know, rally the terrorist troops. But no, I will say, like, he's dead.
But yes, there are serious concerns about a person calling himself Hamza bin Laden,
who's organizing some
some very problematic and troubling things.
Oh that's an interesting twist that seems like a very realistic scenario.
I mean both things could be right.
Mm-hmm. How do you think the Afghan withdrawal went? Not well, not well and former DOD civilians.
And I found out later also active duty folks
in special operations who were coordinating with us
when they were not supposed to be, but God bless them.
Someone reached out to me right when things started to get chaotic and a lawyer
friend of mine and she had a client who was just trying to, you know, trying to get into the airport,
trying to get out. Could I help? So I don't even remember who I reached out to, someone
and someone I thought might know something.
And they added me to the Signal Chat group
that took over my life for weeks.
And I know a lot of people had those kinds of experiences
where all of a sudden I just dropped everything
that I was doing.
And I do know people and I have my own network
and actually was able to help a couple of
families that, DIA families actually, Afghans that were working for DIA that had worked
for DIA for a long time and were being abandoned.
And amazingly because of the people on the ground and their heroic efforts, their willingness to work with us,
they saved a lot of lives.
So, but the things, even sitting in my living room,
on Signal, just being part of this,
I mean, it was so weird because you do,
I did feel like I was there sometimes.
There was one family we were trying to help.
I wanna be careful because I don't know
what happened to them, but they didn't make it out.
I know that.
It was a father and some kids and they were,
you know, it was so hot those days
and people were waiting outside for days and days
like passing out, babies dying.
And this, there was this particular man
who had worked for us and was trying to get out
with his kids and there was someone on the wall,
like a PJ on the wall looking for him.
And we had already given everyone,
you say this, he'll say this,
he had a sign that had a word on it,
he was holding up the sign,
and he was right outside,
they were right outside of Abbey Gate.
And I have a picture of the man
and his two beautiful children
right before the explosion happened.
And we found out later one of the boys was killed.
Oh man.
And that wrecked me, that wrecked me like for a while.
Just looking at that little boy's face,
you know, and like, it was so close.
They were so close.
And we couldn't get anyone to open the gates.
You know, there were all these, like,
oh, send them to the block gate.
Oh, send them to this gate.
And they would get there and there was no gate open.
There was no one there to open the gate.
There was so much chaos.
And then the civilians, there were Americans trying to get out. There was no one there to open the gate. So much chaos.
And then the civilians, there were Americans trying to get out.
They were also being given this bad information.
People were supposed to help them and they weren't.
So they were getting information from people in my group.
And they were getting beaten by the Taliban badly.
They were getting their US blue passports taken from them.
And I thought your interview of Sergeant Tyler Vargas Andrews was so powerful.
And I want to thank you for that and to thank him because there are so many of us who were like at home that day
just trying to help and that feeling when that explosion went off and that guy clacked
himself off and 13 service members, like it breaks my heart to this day.
I had the opportunity to meet some of the family members and I can't imagine,
you know, I have, again, my two brothers served in the Marine Corps and there but for the
grace of God.
Like I just, it was so pointless, it was so unnecessary.
That's how we, that was how we left.
And that's how the world saw us leave, after 20 years of blood and treasure.
And so it also was such an encouragement
to global jihadists, jihadis globally.
We lost the jiwá and they know it
and we just haven't admitted it to ourselves.
That's the accountability that we still need.
We need to be able to say that we lost, and we need to understand why.
But the...
It's just, like, there's still, I think, in the early, like, the year or two after the withdrawal,
there were still some people who were, you
know, a lot of us know a lot of Afghans who like really competent, really competent fighters
who served in the Afghan military, like either the SOF units or like the zero units. I mean, they're just incredibly competent
and some of them really wanted to organize and go back.
I mean, I don't really see that happening anymore.
And especially when our own relationship
with the Taliban is sort of unclear.
But I just wanna point out that we gave a Bagram.
Like we could have pulled out and kept Bagram,
but Bagram we need for China.
And China knows it.
And for China to have,
people talk about China and Afghanistan,
like they get control over all these rare earth minerals
and stuff.
That's not the biggest problem.
The biggest problem is the geography.
And how are we, look at a map.
Like, how are we going to do this when we don't have Bagram?
Bagram would be a great, Bagram would have been the place.
And it just, again, makes no sense.
It makes no sense. It makes no sense. And all of the after action stuff
where like people at the embassy were drunk
and not wanting to leave, I don't know if you saw that.
There was one of the interviews that was done later.
One of our, I think one of our service members
was like just knocking on doors at the embassy at the end,
just like making sure everyone was evacuating to HKIA.
And someone opened the door, it's an account,
you can find it online.
Someone opened the door and was like wasted off their ass.
Like, this is, okay.
And when you learn more about kind of the, who was in control
or who was in charge of that effort, it was the State Department.
It was the civilians, not the military.
So anyway, I have a lot of questions.
There's a lot of blame to go around.
And I'm complaining about a lot.
Someone said to me a while ago, the response to one of these op-eds that I wrote was like,
what about you?
What about your own involvement in this stuff? You know, I think we can all stand to look at what we were part of
and what we were, what our activities were.
And I think accountability should be spread far and wide.
And I'm not afraid of it, but at the same time,
like, I don't, I wasn't part of that.
What I do know is at the end of the first term, the first Trump administration, we were
in a very different place.
And Trump did not order withdrawal.
Trump was comfortable with a small force there that was really doing like advise and assist and we were
doing intel support for the Afghan special operations units who were
extremely capable and were conducting operations very successfully. So if we
had just, you know part of me feels if we had just continued that, I mean if you
look at when was the last casualty
prior to Abbey Gate, it was like a couple years
because we weren't doing what we were doing before.
We were transitioning.
So yeah, the whole thing is just like,
mental health crisis, really.
I mean, there's just so many, I just, man, it just seemed like no thought at all
went into that. I mean, we have
all these jihadist groups that want to kill us.
We have zero
intelligence on the ground over there anymore. We gave up a strategic air base, which not only for China, but also
Air Base, which not only for China, but also Iran, you know, because they did use or, or, or still do, you know, use terrorist organizations as proxies.
The rare minerals.
I mean, the fact that we abandoned another ally, or I guess I can't say an ally, but
abandoned another, just like Vietnam.
Yeah.
We just, we, we trained them up.
We were turning it over.
They fought alongside us for what, 20, 21 years?
21 years.
And then we're just mic drop.
We're out, done.
That's it.
I mean.
And.
What?
To add insult to injury,
we trucked all these random Afghans here,
some of whom turned out to be like watchlisted,
and people who actually like earned the right to be here,
who worked with us, worked for us, were abandoned.
And we have, we still have a lot of people here that we don't even know who they are.
How do you think that should have gone?
They knew. This is where I start to get, you know, they knew months in advance that they were going to
leave. They knew they are government. They knew that we were going to leave through HKIA, not through Bagram. So in that moment, like, they knew we weren't gonna bring anyone out except for us.
You know, they had never had any intention of rescuing,
of like, saving our partners.
Even though they said they did.
I mean, those factors, like, look at the...
HKIA's in the middle of the city,
you know, and in order to have airlifts for the number of people who needed to
be brought out, and then also the, like, the immigration kind of requirements, like all of
the paperwork and stuff and vetting and all that, should have begun months and months and months before.
The fact that they didn't do that meant that they never,
they were never gonna save anybody.
And no one ever, I mean, there were lies
during the entire six months,
from when they announced the withdrawal to when it happened.
Just lie after lie.
And yeah, that's just no one's, you can point it out and it doesn't matter. It doesn't change a thing.
Sim raging.
Yes.
You know, back to the, the swift thing. Were you able, I mean, was that instrumental in changing
how we target these guys?
In some cases, by the time I was working on it,
it had already been blown.
So I think the enemy had,
they'd already changed their TTPs a lot.
But for example,
bank accounts are one were one way to move money. But they have this whole underground
system.
It's like the easiest way to explain it.
And like you can go to, a hoala is not a bank
and not even necessarily,
it's not a licensed financial institution in many countries.
But if you can go to like a corner store somewhere and
the guy's a hoala, a hoaladar, and you can say, well, I want to send, you know, $5,000 to my boy
in Islamabad. So that guy will call up like some hawala in Islamabad
and they basically arrange between the two of them
because I pay the guy here $5,000.
They arrange between the two of them
how the money is gonna be transferred.
But again, it's not necessarily money.
It can be carpets, it can be gemstones,
it can be other items of value.
And then my buddy in Islamabad will go to the place
in Islamabad and get $5,000.
So you can't track that through
like the formal financial system.
So it's like a Western union of commodities.
Yes, yes.
Exactly.
So that's been a challenge for the intelligence community for many years and law enforcement
to try to understand the Huala network, global Huala network, how it works. I was working in banking in UAE for several years
and I worked for a big bank
and we had a relationship with several Hualas
that were like banks.
They were huge and they had their own compliance,
people that were working on doing stuff that bankers all
know KYC, know your customer, kind of trying to understand like, oh, this is your name,
your name does not come up on any watch list, this is your address, your address doesn't
come up on as any known bad person on the OFAC list.
I mean, there's a whole process
that's very involved. But the bottom line is, some of these wallahs are very big. And
they're used like they're across the Middle East and the Islamic world. So they're used
very, they're in places where banks don't really operate because for a variety of reasons.
And from an enforcement perspective, it's a challenge to figure out like, well, these
guys are clearly running like bad money through their hoala, but that's also the only way that this entire region, you
know, of this country can get access to money.
So interesting.
I did not know that.
Yeah.
Interesting.
Well, Simone, let's take, let's take a quick break.
And when we come back, we'll get into DIA.
Great.
If you take your health as seriously as I do, you know how important hydration is.
That's why I want to tell you about Hoist.
Hoist is made in the USA and has three times the electrolytes and half the sugar compared
to other sports drinks with no artificial dyes or preservatives.
Hoist is on military bases globally,
serving war fighters and operations and training.
I wish I had had Hoist as an option for hydration
during my military career,
especially the brand new flavor they just released,
five-star punch.
Through December 31st, 2025,
Hoist is donating a minimum of $10,000 to Folds of Honor, a nonprofit organization
that provides educational scholarships
to family members of fallen service members
or first responders.
Hoist is now available in all Publix locations.
You can use the store locator on their website
to find a store near you,
or you can purchase directly from drinkhoist.com
where you can use my code srs to save 15
percent on their website go check out their website that's drink hoist.com and use my code srs to save 15 percent
everybody knows there are things they can do to reduce monthly costs and improve their finances.
But who has the time to go through all of their expenses and decide what to trim?
That's where Rocket Money comes in.
If you see a subscription you no longer want, Rocket Money will help you cancel it.
Their dashboard lays out your total financial picture, including bill due dates and paydays.
If you've got a goal you'd like
to save for, Rocket Money can analyze your accounts to find the best time each
month to put extra money aside. Rocket Money will even try to negotiate lower
bills for you. The app automatically scans your bills to find opportunities to
save and then goes to work to get you better deals. They'll even talk to
customer service so you don't have to.
Rocket Money's 5 million members have saved a total of 500 million in cancelled subscriptions,
with members saving up to $740 a year when they use all of the app's premium features.
Cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster with Rocket Money.
Go to rocketmoney.com slash srs today. Go to rocketmoney.com slash SRS today.
That's rocketmoney.com slash SRS.
Rocketmoney.com slash SRS.
Alright, Simone, we're back from the break.
We're going to move into your career over at Defense Intelligence Agency,
DIA. So how did you fall into that?
Well, I moved over there. Basically, General Flynn became the director of DIA, and I went over there with him.
I had been at Treasury, obviously, before that, on the intel side, the Office of Intelligence
and Analysis.
And General Flynn was standing up.
A lot of commanders have their kind of directors advisory group or
whatever they call it. And so he was standing his up and I had the opportunity to go and
be part of that. So yeah, so I'm that's, that's how I got over to to DIA.
Right on. What kind of stuff were you doing?
Well, his big push was, when he got over there,
was the reorganization of DIA.
But I think it's not a surprise to anyone who knew him
to say that he was on a kind of revenge tour
after his experience in Afghanistan.
He wrote, fixing Intel, talking about how
the intelligence assessments that were being produced
or the information that was being collected even and shared was not helpful to the to people on
the battlefield that you know it was they weren't collecting things that we needed to fight the war and
to win the war.
And he wrote this very controversial, I mean, everyone agreed with it, but the way that
it was released, I think Gates, Secretary Gates, he was the sec def at the time, and others were critical of how
it was released, i.e. it was released publicly through a think tank.
But that was how General Flynn operated.
So he didn't really care.
I think he wanted to just get it to the widest audience possible because he wanted to make sure
that people understood how broken it was. It was really like he could only jump up and down for
so long yelling about the same problem. So, you know, people have a variety of opinions on that.
And I don't know if it was the right thing to do or not, but it certainly got a lot of attention.
And I don't know if it was the right thing to do or not, but it certainly got a lot of attention
and it did get things to change.
So when he came back and took over DIA,
he wanted to move a lot of people out
who had kind of stood in his way
and really were not helpful in prosecuting the war.
So there were these announcements that would come out
pretty regularly about like senior DIA employees
who were like moving to different jobs
and other agencies kind of thing like,
oh, they're gonna be the liaison at DHS
and things like that.
And it was, I mean, he was moving people out that he did not view as kind of
teammates, people who are going to be helpful in what he wanted to do with DIA.
So, so there was a lot of kind of like rearranging personnel stuff.
rearranging personnel stuff.
But the really big effort during that time was reorganizing the agency
and putting the collectors and the analysts together
in one, so like the collection operations
for let's say Russia and the analysts for Russia were not,
like they didn't even know each other.
They were in different parts of bowling,
they were different parts of the world sometimes,
and they weren't working together in a coordinated way.
So he reorganized DIA to have like Russia House,
to have like China House.
And so the Americas was another one where you have,
again, the people working together
so that they can coordinate effectively.
So collectors are actually, you know, going after intelligence that
that is that the analysts really need to answer the key questions. So I mean for
for people who don't know it's the, you know, our senior leadership and our
government puts out the collection priorities. They put out like here are the
main things that we want to know.
Then the intelligence community kind of does an assessment of like, well, what can we answer
and where are the gaps?
And the gaps are really what the intelligence collectors go after.
And they need to be working closely with the analysts who are going to really
fill those gaps with that information and that intelligence.
So it was pretty revolutionary at the time.
No one had ever thought about it like that before.
CIA reorganized itself in a similar manner not long after that.
So I think it was clearly a great idea.
And so, but to be part of that,
you know, DIA is kind of notoriously bureaucratic
and a lot of people have a lot of bad things to say about DIA.
And, but I worked with a lot of people
who spent a long time deployed and who really are patriots
and put everything out there, left it all on the field, did their best.
So I was there for pretty, not for that long, like two years.
But I learned a lot during my time there.
I worked with some great analysts.
I finished out my time, so I did that,
was working on the reorg for a while under General Flynn,
and then I moved to running a small,
like a small unit of analysts, really.
We were focused on something that no one at the time
cared about at all, transnational organized crime
in the Americas, cartels, and no one paid attention to us,
no one cared, had a great group of analysts
who knew a lot about the subject matter.
Nobody paid any attention to that or cared?
No, no.
How?
Not at that time.
No, not at that time.
I mean, it was like checking the box, you know, but we were all focused.
Everyone was focused on the Middle East.
And we had, I was there, this is really what led me to quit government completely was Syria, the
Obama's Syria red line.
So first I was, after all my experiences, Iraq, Afghanistan, I was pretty disgusted
by everything, but I still wanted to serve and I loved what I was doing on a micro level.
I loved the people I got to work with.
I thought we were working on important things.
The fact that I had this kind of financial intelligence background made me a little bit
unusual, which I like to kind of niche.
But I remember, I mean, I don't think I'll ever forget it. Obama gave that famous
speech about red lines and Assad not, if Assad uses chemical weapons against his own people,
like that's a red line and we will act. So I think it was on a Friday when Assad, for
the first time, used chemical weapons against
the Syrian people.
He did it many, many times after.
But the first was, I think, on a Friday because we all showed up to work on Saturday.
No one said, come in.
But we just showed up because that's, you know how it is.
That's like what you do.
Okay, it's going to kick off.
We'll just be here to be helpful."
And we sat there for hours and finally one of the bosses came out of his office and was like,
y'all should just go home. Nothing's going to happen. And it really had a crisis at that time and just realized I was like nearing 40
and I just thought, what am I doing with my life?
You know, I've been so focused.
It wasn't just a job for me.
It was like a life.
It was my life.
And I just felt like, what am I doing?
I don't know what am I doing?
I don't know what am I doing this for? This is crazy.
And I just, I knew I had to leave.
I knew, I started paying attention to,
I don't know if they still do this,
but at the time, DIA would have these email announcements
when someone dies and they tell you,
so-and-so passed away.
People were, I don't know if this is true,
but it seemed like people were dying at their desks.
And I was like, no way, no way.
What do you mean people were dying at their desks?
You know how it is in the bureaucracy
where people just like, they're going to hang
on till retirement no matter what.
Like got to get those last years in before you hit retirement.
Like that's such a thing.
So you get all your benefits.
People were dying at their desks waiting to hit that retirement.
It's not funny, but it's not funny, but it's real.
And when I remember telling people that I was out, I was leaving, and no one could believe
it because I had all my tickets, I had polygraphs and everything, I had it all.
And they're like, you know, your clearance is worth over $200,000.
And I'm like, there's more to life.
There's just more to life.
I'm not gonna do this anymore.
So yeah, that was.
So you didn't believe in the mission anymore.
And your values weren't aligned with what was happening.
What was the mission, Sean?
You're asking the wrong person that.
I'm still trying to figure that one out.
I mean, I didn't see it.
I didn't see it.
And, you know, I just felt I've given years of my life
to this and, you know, I wasn't married, didn't have kids.
And I was like, there's more to life.
So, yeah, so I had no job to go to, but I just I did have
they were offering early outs, you know, they called it Vera Visa basically the
they pay you a lump sum for your retirement and that's it you're done and
that and your billet is gone. So I was expensive. By that time I was like a GS-15 Step 5,
which in the DC area is a lot of money, relatively for the government.
It was like a hundred something, like a hundred, I don VRVSIP was like a lump sum payment.
And I just, after tax, took the money and left.
I went to Italy.
I had a friend that I had reconnected with, one of my brothers got married in Italy, and
I had reconnected with this friend of mine there.
And he was a friend from business school days.
I went to business school in Milan.
And he had this luxury villa on the Amalfi Coast.
And he's like, do you want to help me?
And I just thought, I mean, are you serious?
Because I seriously, yes, I would.
So I ended up doing that.
I just went, I went to Sorrento, Italy,
and it was funny in retrospect,
but it was really what I needed.
And I just helped him run his luxury villa.
We started this boat tour company
where we would take like guests to Capri on day trips.
And I was like the first maid on the boat
and worked for tips.
It was awesome.
Wow, quite the change, huh?
I needed it, yeah.
Needed like swim in the ocean every day,
beat outside the skiff, just beat, experience life.
You know what I mean? So it was good. Until I ran out of money around later in the year and I got,
had to actually go back to real job and real life. But yeah, it was amazing. And I think in
retrospect, seeing how a lot of my friends kind of have flamed out when they've had
the kind of similar realization that I had.
Were a lot of people leaving?
Like you?
In different ways, yeah, in different ways.
What were the discussions like?
I mean, when I was telling my friends in the intelligence community that I was leaving
and why, I mean, maybe people I worked with didn't fully, like all my team didn't understand,
but my friends understood 100%.
And some of them had already left. Yeah, people got it.
I mean, if you look back now, on the analytics side,
the analysts, senior analysts that we have who served in GWOT,
very, very few.
Almost everyone's gone. who served in GWAT, very, very few.
Almost everyone's gone.
Like there was on Iraq specifically,
everyone cleared out, everyone.
Man.
There's no, but how sad is that too,
because there's very, very limited institutional memory
of so many things.
Things that are important for the institution to remember.
That's one of the big challenges, I think.
And sure, the army did Iraq, the after action, deep dive into Iraq, what went wrong.
I've heard there's one on Afghanistan, but it's classified.
Go figure.
That's great for the army, but it's so specific to the military and there's a lot more to
it than that.
I mean, there have been so many people have written books and they've covered different sides of this.
But yeah, no, the basic fact is
the people who are mentally healthy enough,
and I feel like I was borderline at that point.
I was not mentally healthy at that point.
I knew it enough to not even try to find another job
just to clear my head, you know,
and try to just get myself back a little bit.
And then also the reality was I was doing really well.
I would have advanced to an SAS,
but I had to do another deployment probably to Djibouti.
And I just had zero.
I was like, I'm going to burn my sleeping bag.
I am not doing that again.
I was done.
You want to burn my sleeping bag.
I was, that thing smelled so bad, but it was, it was just time.
You know, it was just enough.
It was enough.
You know, you and I both know people who that's all they can do now with their lives.
They can only exist in places and situations like that, and they can't live in the normal
world.
I kind of recognized that I was slapping up against that, and I didn't want to become
that.
And talking to other people that I had served with, everyone kind of understood that
because the adrenaline is real
and the feeling that you're working on something important
and you're, you know, the mission and all that.
And so it had to get really bad for me to understand
that I had to just pull the rip cord and save myself.
And that's why I did.
Where did you go from Italy?
I went to the UAE and I got a job working for a big bank that had gotten itself in trouble
violating Iran sanctions and
It was I
Mean they egregiously violated Iran sanctions. So they created a manual for their clients on how to
like hide
Details about transactions like holy shit. Yeah
And you were working for that bank afterwards. So I guess they forgot about the NSA
couldn't like find that sort of thing.
And so, so they got in, they got in very serious trouble
with OFAC and the DOJ.
So they had to pay over a billion dollars in fines.
They almost lost their US dollar access
and they had to create a whole new compliance program
focused on our laws, the Bank Secrecy Act.
And so how to, like the controls around US dollars,
US dollar transactions.
And so my job, I covered Africa, Middle East and Pakistan
from Dubai, I was based in Dubai.
And so I was like all over the region for years
doing my job, which was basically conducting investigations,
doing like training
thousands and thousands of bank employees, and then interacting a lot with our regulators
as well.
Just kind of like letting them know what was going on, answering questions, stuff like
that.
So you're living in Dubai?
Yeah.
Okay.
How was that?
We just went there about a month ago, I think, ish.
I've been there several times. Yeah.
It's like all expats.
It is, it is.
What did you think?
Did you like it?
I love it there.
Yeah.
I think the architecture is amazing.
I think it's one of the most impressive cities in the world.
I don't know what I would do there if I lived there
other than shop,
cause I got some great shopping.
They do.
But yeah, what's it like living there?
I mean, I loved it.
I was on the road a lot.
So I can see what you're saying,
but I loved it.
I just thought the people were so nice.
I made a lot of friends.
It was beautiful, it's safe.
And it's just incredibly impressive.
The first time that I was there was like early days,
like maybe 2004.
Oh, okay.
And so to see what it became so quickly,
what they built there, what they made,
it's just really, it's like got a vibe, you know?
And it's, now that I'm older, you know,
I kind of like Abu Dhabi, it's a little more chill.
You know, I'm like in bed at nine o'clock person now,
so Dubai can be a lot, but it's amazing.
It truly is amazing.
And I really enjoyed my time there.
My job was super interesting too.
I mean, I got to do, we were in Zimbabwe
when the Mugabe regime was falling.
We were there, myself and some of my colleagues from New York City, because at the time we
were the only bank that still had access to US dollars.
But because the Mugabe regime was sanctioned by the by OFAC, by the Treasury Department,
we had to like wall off, wall them off from any US dollar, anything. So we were just anyway,
we were there during like kind of a crazy time for the country. And I had never been there before.
And so it was it was really interesting. We found out, I think the secret police were like on the two floors above us in our hotel.
And yeah, it was just, thank God, you know, nothing bad happened to anybody, but it definitely
could have.
It was, you could tell it was one of those situations where things could pop off in a
second.
And I was the only one that had my sort of background there.
So I brought a ton of cash with me.
Also because I knew, I saw that, you know,
there were lines for the ATMs and like,
you can't rely on an ATM in a situation like that.
So I brought a significant amount of cash
and it turned out that all my banker colleagues from New York City had like zero cash so but how do
you wall how do you wall a bank off from US dollars? Well you know there's it's
all electronic but so the bank itself wasn, obviously our bank was not walled off,
but like a certain set of bank customers
who could have access to other denomination,
not denominations, but other currencies,
but just not US dollars.
So you can mark like it's, you know, inside the system, I haven't been in a bank system in a long time, but
you can say this account is for this currency and that currency, and this account is for
that currency and that currency, and then these accounts are US dollar accounts.
Gotcha.
You can, for example, have multiple accounts in the same bank for different currencies
or one account that has multiple currencies.
Interesting.
And then you get appointed to the Pentagon.
Yes.
In 2019.
Yes.
How did that happen?
Well, General Flynn called me.
And we had been in touch since I left.
I mean, kind of the big communication that he and I had had was when I was in Italy,
I got contacted by a reporter friend, one of the few, who called me to tell me that Flynn was going to Russia
and going to this RT dinner and I should talk to him about that because it was a bad idea.
And I was like, no, he's not.
There's no way he's doing that.
Like shut up.
Yeah, he did that.
And I did call him and or text him I don't
remember anymore and he he told me that it was thank you very much for your
concern I know what I'm doing it's all under control. So and I I really pleaded
with him and I just said you know know, you're retired, you know,
I know you're probably excited to,
you're free and you can do what you want,
but like you're a retired three star.
Like you still have those three stars,
like mean something and like, by the way,
don't F all the rest of us that, you know,
had in some way like were tied to you.
I mean, I worked for him for like five years
in different capacities. So I was kind of like trying to save myself at the same time. But
yeah, he did him. And he did that. And but anyway, fast forward, he put me up for an Assistant
Secretary job at Treasury at
the time.
Here's what happened.
He called me.
I was in Dubai.
And he's like, I need you.
What jobs do you want?
And in the past, I'd been like, yes, sir.
But this time, the way that banking salaries you know, salaries and stuff work is you get your salary
payment, but then you get a bonus.
And the bonus, if you're lucky, is like a lot of money.
And because I was living overseas, you know, tax, your taxes aren't like taken out automatically
like they are here.
So my bonus was going to pay for all my taxes.
And the bonus is paid out in March.
So the election was in November.
And so I was like,
can I come a little later this time?
Like, I'm not gonna be there day one, thank God.
And so that's what happened. So the Treasury job
went away because Flynn went away and all the Treasury deciding people were like, I
basically was, you know, I was like stray, kind of stray voltage on the Flint thing,
which was fine, which was fine.
So I just continued on doing what I was doing.
About a year later, I got this opportunity at the Pentagon.
I guess my name was kind of still on list,
my resume was still in there.
So I got contacted by the the DoD liaison and to the
White House and he said this opportunity, they were looking for someone for the office
where I had started back in Solik in ASD Solik, that they needed a deputy like under the DASD
to run that special operations and combating terrorism.
So I thought, how cool.
And I had been overseas during the whole election, so I didn't know anything really about Trump.
I got my information from overseas news, and I just assumed that Hillary would win and when she
didn't win I was like whoa great now like cool but yeah so and then when when
you know everything got crazy really fast, obviously.
That's a pretty damn important position.
Yeah.
Yeah.
At SOCT, yeah.
I got there, the DASD was still there.
He moved on a little bit later.
But yeah, we were in the thick of it and it was really,
I mean, it was the greatest privilege of my life
to work with that group of warriors.
I mean, what kind of stuff were you doing?
So SOCT, Special Operations and Combating Terrorism
during Baghdadi and Soleimani operations.
I mean, that's like...
Yeah, I...
Impressive.
All impressive to the men and women
who executed those operations.
You know, I got to see the video of Baghdadi,
the Baghdadi app, like afterwards, you know,
they had this whole, those guys are very good at, you know, they had this whole there there those guys are very good at
You know their marketing marketing themselves to the right people. So they they made a video of their operation
it's classified but um, you know you get to go down they even had really cool music and so um
That was but but being part of it
But being part of it really meant- So were you in the planning process, Liz?
No, no.
I wasn't.
That's all the military.
The military does the planning.
If there's any approvals that sometimes there's ancillary things that need to be approved,
they need to go up a chain.
But the big thing that I had to do with the Baghdadi operation was briefing Congress
after the fact and briefing members and the staffs.
And what was really awesome,
I mean, this was my favorite part of it.
And I sound like a fan girl, because I am,
was going, it was myself, my joint staff counterpart, he's a very highly decorated
ranger and the director of CTC at the agency.
And it was really, for the most part, the two of them explaining in detail what happened. So I really can't say very much, but the CTC guy, the CIA Counterterrorism
Center's director, I mean, that's some movie shit what happened there. And the first time
that I learned it, just being real, was like when I heard him briefing on the hill. And that's right, I had Zirini to know about how they got to Baghdadi and how they figured
out it was him and how they got Aizan.
But I didn't-
Share any of that or is that all sealed up?
I mean, I wouldn't want to be the one to tell that story. That's someone
else's story. Okay. But God bless them. And what was amazing, one of the many,
many amazing things about that operation was they had, I mean, it was boots on the ground and no one was even injured.
The dog.
Oh, super funny story about the dog.
Okay, I can tell that.
So Conan, Conan the dog.
So there's a huge public interest in Conan the dog that was part of the operation got injured in the
operation but was fine mostly. So when the time came to give the unit an award there was some kind
of there was something I don't even remember what exactly but there's some type of ceremony
at the White House. But, you know, that unit,
that's a special mission unit, so none of those guys can be identified. So, oh, but they wanted to
showcase the dog. So the dog had a different handler for that event because the real handler, you know, couldn't be on camera. And we were watching in the office
and he was standing, the dog was,
the vice president was standing next to the dog
and the vice president started moving his hand
like to pet this thing.
This is not the dog that you pet.
Do you know what I'm saying?
This dog has titanium teeth and is like,
probably definitely ripped many throats out.
And the vice president's like,
we just watched his hand like,
we were all like, no.
But, and not with his regular handler either. So like, oh my God, but it all worked out.
And Pence has both his hands still.
But that was, that was just to be, just to be part of that in a small way and help like
tell the story of what these guys did was truly amazing.
And we all knew the story of Kayla Mueller
and what she had endured and what he had done to her,
turning her into just a not let's not even say it,
but just so horrific, was so meaningful to be able to,
you know, we couldn't save her,
but we did like bring justice for her family
at the end of the day.
And like, I believe in that.
I was really proud to be, even just be the explainer
at the, like at the end of that,
explain to our lawmakers what happened. That was awesome.
And then Soleimani, well, I'll just say there were a lot of people in the first Trump administration
who said a lot of things about being involved and they're on a lot of lists now. And, you know, I was not involved. Other than that, I was in that office when it happened.
And so like, yeah, we knew about it.
I knew about it.
I don't think my team did until I told them,
but you know, it was a task force operation.
And so like, you know, we were,
And so like, you know, we were,
we were apprised of it and we had to deal with a lot of stuff after the fact, but I remember this,
like how stressful it was with all the different
operational details as we were learning them.
Like there was just so many,
so many things that could have gone wrong, as usual,
on an operation like that, and to see at the end
his hand on social media, his hand with his famous ring.
And knowing, knowing the story of Qasem Soleimani
and how much American blood he had on his hands, And knowing the story of Qasem Soleimani
and how much American blood he had on his hands,
how many Americans he'd been involved in killing
over the years, and of him really being
like this evil mastermind and removing him
from the battlefield was really profound.
And I had nothing to do with it other than to be in that job at that time,
but was very, very proud and I just,
I know a lot of the folks who were involved
and will never take credit or talk about it
and they're amazing, yeah.
But yeah, that also not my story to tell,
but just an amazing, amazing operation.
And we got a bonus too.
We got, I'm sorry, I'm blanking on his name.
He also was responsible for a lot of them.
Mohandas, Mohandas was in the vehicle with Soleimani,
which we didn't know in advance,
but that was his day too. in the vehicle with Soleimani, which wasn't, we didn't know in advance, but, you know,
that was his day too.
Who was he?
He was a terrorist leader, an Iraqi.
So, you know, Qasem Soleimani basically ruled Iraq
after we left in 2011.
From the politicians really answered to him in many
ways.
But he also had stood up.
So there were a lot of different Shia militia groups.
Some were directly like Quds Force affiliated.
And then there were some that were more like Iraqis Shia, but still funded and aligned with Iran and the Quds Force.
And they became the PMF, the Popular Military Front, which still to this day, I believe,
gets paid through the Iraqi budget. They're part of Iraq's military force now.
Iraq became a satellite of Iran after we pulled out, I don't know if you know that,
but after we pulled out in 2011, that's what happened.
And that was really in large part thanks to Qasem Soleimani.
But he was a mastermind from the beginning,
these EFPs, the explosively-
Oh yeah, I remember those.
The foreign projectiles that killed a lot of people,
a lot of our people, that was like, that was his,
you know, that was his mastermind.
So, and Mohandas was one of his lieutenants in Iraq.
And so to see them both taken out was just,
Well, you know, yeah just, felt good.
Yeah, it felt great.
And knowing everything that they had done
to so many of our friends,
it just, it felt good.
There was a lot of backlash over that,
if I remember correctly, wasn't there?
Yeah, people freaked out and were like,
World War III is the same.
It was like 2020?
Yeah, yeah, 2020.
They freaked out and said, it's gonna be World War III.
It was definitely a ballsy move.
And it definitely, look, the president,
when the president asked for options,
there are a lot of options
that are provided to the president.
But on that particular day,
that was the option that he picked. And like, was everyone shocked? Pretty much. Yeah. And because, yeah, because
no one had ever, I mean, no president before Trump would have made a decision like that. How would that have...
Back then, I kind of lived in an echo chamber, so I didn't really explore any of the other
ideas.
How would that have triggered World War III?
In my mind, it wasn't going to, but there are a lot of people in Washington
who are always advocating for a diplomatic approach,
which by the way, I don't discount the efficacy
of diplomacy in the right situation,
but Iran had just killed an American.
That was the backdrop for this.
I think it was a US contractor that was killed
on a base that Iran, a US base in Iraq that Iran attacked.
If I recall correctly, drone?
I don't know, I'm sorry, my memory is not great.
But what I do remember is an American contractor was killed
and President Trump was going to do something about it
because enough was enough.
And you can't just get away with killing Americans,
which is right, by the way.
Thank you.
So he's presented with a list of different options.
The military puts that together.
At the time it was, I guess, Milly and...
We went through a bunch of sectiffs at that time.
Esper.
But yeah, I believe it was Esper.
So they put together these options,
probably mostly Milley,
but together presented them to the president
and the president decided to go with a strike on Soleimani.
Not all of them, by the way,
are necessarily like individual, you know,
take this guy out or take that guy out.
Some of them are like more strategic, but yeah, that was that he want.
He went with that one.
And for, you know, there were people in our government who had been tracking
Soleimani for years, like many, many years.
And the Israelis were tracking him for many, many years
as well and shared a lot of really vital intelligence
with us at that time.
So they did not take, they did not to my knowledge,
take part in that strike other than perhaps
providing some intelligence.
But we can see today how deeply they penetrated
into Iran, into Quds Force, into their multiple terror proxies.
It's pretty extraordinary.
I'm super jealous.
I just wish that we were, you know, that could really.
How many terrorist organizations is Iran using as proxies?
Do you have any idea?
Well, there's Iraq.
I mean, you want to call these little groups in Iraq like one.
There's a couple like kind of key ones, but they've changed, merged, etc. over time.
But you've got the Houthis in Yemen, you've got Hezbollah in Lebanon, you've got Gaza,
you've got Hamas, which is funny because, not funny, but a lot of people were saying, oh, well, they're Muslim Brotherhood,
i.e. Sunni, so therefore they can't be aligned with Iran.
They can't be accepting money and training and stuff from Iran because they're Sunni.
Well, go back to what we were talking about, al-Qaeda leadership being in Iran, like those guys work with each
other.
And this was another example where Hamas was clearly taking, they were clearly partners
with Iran and Iran was clearly providing funding and training and equipment. So anyway, those are like the main ones,
but you know Hezbollah is a global organization. Obviously they're based in
Lebanon, but you have Hezbollah operating Venezuela. They're operating in
that tri-border region and historically they have been for a long time.
And then, of course, you have the Quds Force, which is the only Iranian-Iranian one.
And they're...
Oh, and I'm sorry, Hezbollah also operating in Syria.
They had a big operation in Syria.
So yeah, I mean, they've been wreaking havoc globally for such a long time. And this is
the same organization Hezbollah killed Marines in Beirut in the 80s, held a station chief hostage
and tortured him and murdered him. I mean, this is the same. Anyway, all that to say,
I mean, this is the same anyway, all that to say they built and Qasem Soleimani was the mastermind behind this.
They had Israel essentially surrounded.
They built this huge terror network, but it wasn't only for Israel because they used it
to attack us a lot.
And there was no real successor to him. There was no, there was no, there was no real successor to him.
There was no, there was no one else like him.
So taking him out was quite significant.
But yeah, a lot of people, a lot of people freaked out and said it was going to be World War III.
And that never happened.
And there's like very little reflection I've seen
from those people who said that
about why that didn't happen
and what does that mean about their own assumptions?
And maybe I should revise what I think
because when we attacked Fordow recently,
it was like the same thing all over again.
Oh, World War III, ah.
I mean, obviously-
Who attacked, who, sorry. Ford, World War III. Ah. I mean, obviously- Who attacked?
Who?
Sorry.
For Dao, the Iranian nuclear program.
When we bombed their nuclear, when we bombed for Dao, there was like another round of people
freaking out about World War III.
Well, I mean, I can, so I can, if you don't mind, I'd like to share my opinion on that.
But I mean, I think it was just a different, you know, the Soleimani days, the geopolitics
was a lot different.
And you know, today we have, I think a lot of people know about BRICS, you know about
BRICS, you know, throwing the US dollar off the world reserve currency
And we have Russia Ukraine going on we have China. We have the China problem
also China Taiwan then we have all the shit going on the Middle East and if you look at the
Bricks Alliance, I mean it's Russia. What is it's it's Brazil Russia India
China South Africa and the last time I checked there were like 22 other countries that had joined that and
You know and and so right there Russia
China Iran, I believe is part of that. You know what I mean? So China Russia Iran
It's I think the
At least for me, you know when I look at it, I'm like, oh shit, like,
we're not just messing with Iran right now.
We're also messing with China, with Russia, with India, with all these other players,
you know, that are also nuclear powers. And so it's not just, but I wasn't as tuned in back then
either with Soleimani as I am now. And so that's my fear is, it's maybe a little bit of a bold
statement here, but I mean, it seems like the counter to NATO.
You know what I mean?
And what do you think?
How close are we to World War III?
I don't know.
I mean, hopefully very far away.
What do I think of BRICS?
I mean, I think they're trying to make Bricks a thing.
I don't think it's yet still developing.
I think there are a few, if I recall correctly,
there are a couple of countries
that have actually pulled out of Bricks recently.
I haven't heard that.
I think they have, which is great.
So BRICS is TBD.
I mean, we're still the United States.
We're definitely weaker.
We're definitely in a,
we've been headed in a bad direction.
But when an American president says
this country cannot ever have a nuclear weapon,
you kind of put yourself in a situation where the American president has to, if they're about to get that, the
country is about to get a nuclear weapon and the American president has said they can't
get a nuclear weapon.
You kind of put yourself in a box.
And again, I'm glad he did for all the reasons
that we discussed, but BRICS doesn't mean
that any one of those countries is gonna be like,
how dare you attack our great partner?
They don't have a, it's a economic partnership right now.
There's no real like military alliance behind it.
Like there is with Article 5 in NATO,
where like if you attack if anyone
attacks a NATO partner then all
NATO partners are supposed to like come to their aid which in my opinion, I don't actually know if that would ever happen
Sorry, I mean you I'm not gonna disagree with you there, but do you think that
China Russia could
have used, let's say that, I'm kind of alluding the fact that Iran would have blown up a little
bigger than, you know, that situation would have blown up a little bit bigger than it
would.
I mean, do you think that China and Russia would have used Iran as a proxy to get, you
know, to smuggle weapons in there, to aid them,
to train them, to outfit them, you know,
if that would have turned into something bigger
than what actually happened.
I mean, they have proven themselves to not be allies.
They just, they're like, it's a cynical partnership.
How have they proven not to be allies?
Well, they didn't come to their aid, did they?
Israel was hammering them for like months and months
and achieved air superiority over a period of days.
And like China and Russia didn't come and help Iran.
So if they were real allies,
then they would have come to their aid, right?
That's what an ally does.
So I think it also showed that the fear
that a lot of people have of this,
like they signed this 100 year agreement
or something, didn't they?
Iran and China and Russia,
I believe they signed, 50 years maybe.
I don't know about that.
They signed an agreement.
They made, there was like very public
that they were gonna cooperate on all kinds of things
and they were now they're real partners.
But it's turned out so far to be economic in nature
and nothing else.
I mean, even China, so China,
what does China get from a partnership with Iran?
It gets-
A proxy against us.
It gets a proxy against us, yes.
But it gets like directly, it gets energy.
It gets like, you know, oil,
but it doesn't get the majority of it from Iran.
I mean, China has enormous energy needs.
It gets the majority, it gets its energy from Iran,
but mostly Saudi Arabia.
So even if they lost completely Iran's like access to Iran's oil and gas, they still would be okay.
So that's also a calculation for them.
It's like, is it worth it for you to go into like a full on kinetic situation with the United States right now?
Like they want to do that at a time and place of their choosing.
And like this ain't it.
They have their grand plans. But they would love to see us drag down into the Middle East again,
because that was so beneficial for them the last time. That's why we can never do that again.
How was it beneficial for them?
We drained our blood and treasure.
We're very demoralized.
A lot of the infighting that is occurring here in the US is all beneficial to them.
We're fighting ourselves.
Have you noticed that X is so crazy recently?
Have I noticed?
It's so crazy recently. If I notice it's so crazy.
But how many there's so many foreign bot operations
and they're focused on like dividing us.
And I wish like,
Elon, please put like I think there's a way of identifying, even if they use VPN, like of identifying where these accounts are coming from, it would be so helpful
if they could start being flagged.
And at least we would know like,
MAGA America American flag, American flag
is actually based in China, you know, super helpful.
But anyway, I think it's not, I'm not saying
that these countries are not in a real partnership, but so far it hasn't extended to anything military.
And they're certainly not going to risk their own positions for Iran. Um, you know, also very helpful to highlight the fact that Russia's air
defense system completely failed against our stuff, which the Israelis have.
And I mean, the Israelis obviously have their own stuff, but against
like our F-35, we won.
Good to know.
I mean, I don't know.
Did you just, I'm not even saying a kinetic operation,
but I mean, you know, the China sends all the precursors to fentanyl into Mexico and that comes
up. And I mean, I think all of this stuff plays into some type of a, you know, some type of a
master plan.
I wouldn't be surprised if it did. I mean, China is really focused
on these gray zone operations and they're killing,
I mean, I guess bad analogy, appropriate analogy,
they're killing it.
I mean, look at all of these people folded over
all over our cities, that's China.
And they're very effective at what they do
and they've been partnering with the cartels
and they're not only are they providing precursor chemicals,
but they're also the money launderers for the cartels.
How so?
The cartels launder their money through these Chinese gangs.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, and sanctioned by the CCP.
Yep. And now-
Did you know- you had mentioned you were- was a DIA, you were doing the Americas.
Did you know this all the way back then?
I didn't. No, I've learned that in the last couple years.
I don't know if they were doing that back then, honestly, but they are now, big time.
It's hard to think like them because we're so reactionary and immediate and they appear
to be very good at a longer game.
What they've been doing is very deliberate.
And that's why it's important.
That's another reason why I'm, I really support what Israel's been doing against
Iran, because we need to not have to worry about that anymore.
And just like willing it away doesn't change the fact
that there is a real threat there
and they have been killing Americans
and we can't take our eye off the ball,
but we have another bigger problem.
And I don't disagree.
I mean, there's so many,
especially like veterans of our era are like enough,
no more, like no more Middle East.
I feel you, you know?
And I would like for this to be resolved
and I see a way that it can be resolved.
So hopefully soon, hopefully soon.
But yes, we need to be as deliberate as China's being,
but there's a number of things that we still have to do that we were not doing yet, unfortunately.
You know, Bec, I'm sorry I'm switching gears.
I just have all these things popping in my head.
But we talk about with Sarah, you know, she says that there are at least a thousand sleeper
cells terrorist organizations within the US borders right now.
Do you have any insight into that or opinions or?
I mean, I don't know.
Anything's possible, but even at their height,
Al Qaeda and ISIS didn't have those numbers.
So I'm skeptical. Do you think they're strengthening again? They
absolutely are. They absolutely are. Why do you think so many GWAT veterans are
they don't want to go back to war? They don't want to go back over there?
They're done with the Middle East? What do you think that is? Do you think it's
because of all the shit that we just talked about with Iraq?
It was all for nothing?
Yeah.
In Afghanistan, which was a loss?
Yeah.
100%.
I mean, I think that the GWAT generation is just so frustrated with, you know, we talked
about stricter ROEs.
We talked about all kinds of stuff.
And then when you do that, it's like, now you want me to go over there and do this fucking
job again?
We funded the Taliban.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah.
And apparently we still are.
I don't know.
But I think-
Now, I think Rubio stopped it, but it's temporary.
But it has to get through the Senate.
So Tim Sheehy, please-
Please. Hurry up and get that damn thing pushed through the Senate. So Tim Sheehy, please, please hurry up and get that damn thing pushed
through. Amen. Amen. But yeah, I, I do think ultimately that that we can't do that again.
And it was in many ways a huge waste
and created bigger problems.
But that doesn't mean that we can't address,
like we can't, we now should stop addressing any threat.
There's a balance and we just can't, we now should stop addressing any threat. You know, there's a balance and we just can't,
we can't send big armies to address threats.
It doesn't, first of all, it doesn't work.
We're not good at it.
And second of all, we have bigger, you know,
we have bigger fish to fry, but again,
maybe I'm like trying to thread the needle too much,
but what I'm trying to say is,
I'm not isolationist.
I look at where we've come from, what we've done,
all the things that I personally saw and learned.
I agree with you and with everyone else
who's been speaking out about no new wars, but I
don't think that's what this is.
I think taking a targeted strike is different from that.
And the fact that Israel is doing all this other, that's what partners are for.
They're helping us.
Let's let them finish what they're doing. Now
doing that in the most humanitarian way possible is means finishing it as quickly as possible.
The more this drags on, the more people suffer, the more people die. You know you have this horrible
tragic situation unfolding in Gaza.
People are doing their best.
We have, you know, US humanitarian workers there now,
which, you know, it's hard to see
the way things are organized right now,
how that's gonna be successful
and not like a PR disaster ultimately for us. But I hope for the best, you know what I mean? Like I'm rooting
for us. It's just, it's just fucking crazy, man. I mean, here we, I mean, I'm sure all these other
terrorist organizations have ties to Iran. I'm sure the Taliban has ties to Iran some one way or another as well. We're funding them
who are funded probably by Iran, but we're bombing Iran and it's like, dude, pick what,
what fucking, what are we doing here? Like we're fucking funding the people that killed us for 20
fucking years. Like who are, who are tied to Iran and then we go and bomb our, it's, I just.
You said it.
Like, what the fuck are we doing?
Like what the fuck are we doing, man?
It just makes no sense.
Like, how about you stop the fucking funding, and like.
Or it's not.
It's just asinine.
Why don't you tell the American people why you're continuing it?
Why don't you justify it?
You know?
That's the other thing.
Like, I would love to hear from people like, we're doing X, here's Y.
No one does that anymore.
Remember when we used to have like the, you know,
our leaders address the American people
and explain I'm doing this, here's why.
I would love for that to,
not that anyone would probably believe in anymore
because we all have like zero,
we have problems with authority now
given everything that's happened to us.
But you know, I still think at least give it a try. It's hard to know who to believe these days. It really is. I'm challenged
by that as well. I just, we got to keep going. And this is still worth fighting for. As messed up as
things have gotten, you know, our way of life is really important to continue.
And we're still a beacon. That doesn't mean we're defending everyone or paying for everything,
but we have to, we have to, you know, retain that.
We are the beacon.
Yes.
We are the beacon.
Yes.
The only fucking beacon.
Amen.
So, yeah.
Doesn't mean everyone can move here, though.
Amen. So, yeah.
Doesn't mean everyone can move here though.
Oh man.
So then you got promoted.
Yeah.
To DadsD.
I did.
What is that?
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Middle East.
So it's just like what it sounds like basically the DOD is kind of policy lead for the region,
for the Middle East.
So in reality, just a staff officer job at a higher level, but I still had many, many
people in my chain of command that I had to prep for meetings and I had to send them memos
explaining things and ask them to do things. So there was
a lot of that in that job. And but it was it was amazing job
amazing opportunity amazing time to be there during the Abraham
Accords. So yeah, but I was there during COVID. So it was
also a little bit crazy.
You know, we had, coming from special operations where COVID didn't change anything.
You know, we all went to work every day,
everyone showed up, no one wore a mask,
we just, it was the same.
But when I moved over to like the traditional policy world,
I had many, most of my office was not there.
Oh, and they started this campaign.
I ended up kind of, I think, making peace
with a lot of the staff, but they're traditional
government bureaucrats, and a lot of them had gone
to these schools that I referred to,
and were very concerned about me coming to be their boss.
And so they actually, there was a story in Politico
about me before I even got into the job.
And it was kind of sad because it wasn't even about me,
it was about my parents.
And it was just like, oh, you know, we're just really
scared about what this means. Okay. So I show up there, there was a guy wearing this mat
literally like, I think it was a rebreather mask or something like, just the most insane.
Okay, hi.
And he, I think he wrote me up at one point because I had my own office and I would go in my office,
I would not wear a mask and I would just do my work.
And that apparently was like an unsafe,
unsafe work environment thing.
And I, even though I was alone in my office,
I had to wear a mask.
No.
And also I had a buddy on the COVID task force
who told me like early days, masks are bullshit.
Like they don't do anything.
So I'm like, this whole thing is like a performance.
It's not real.
So I did my best to kind of like refuse to take part in it, but it was impossible, you know, because people they'll tell you like you have to where's
your mask put your mask on. And, you know, it was it was it was tough. Maybe I should have pushed
back more. I have a lot of respect for people who did. In that environment, it was really, really hard.
But, you know, I...
So it limited what I was able to do.
You know, the travel, usually a lot of travel in that job.
My travel was limited and when I did travel,
it was, there was like, you know, tests every minute and quarantine.
And so it was a huge pain in the butt, but the job itself was amazing.
We still had a lot of visitors and, um, you know, it was there
during the Abraham Accords.
How was that?
I mean, and then some, my understanding of the Abraham Accords is it's, it's
some type of a treaty in between Middle Eastern countries and Israel, basically a peace deal, correct?
Can you elaborate on that a little bit for people that don't know?
Sure.
So essentially, they don't, since the formation Arab League never recognized the state of Israel.
It was never formally recognized.
And in fact, there are two different wars where Israel's neighbors attacked it and Israel
won. But there's never been peace, the only there's been individual
peace with like Egypt and Jordan who have benefited like they benefited
greatly from Jordan in particular from Israel's kind of like security
assurances, whatever.
They share a lot of intelligence with Jordan.
They do a lot quietly, a lot of stuff together.
And in Egypt, I don't wanna,
I think things have gotten a little more challenged
since October 7th.
And since it was revealed that the number and size
of tunnels going between Egypt and the
Gaza Strip, where Egypt was supposed to be maintaining security there. were when several countries, UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan, I think the Sudan, all formally
acknowledged the state of Israel and as such establish diplomatic relations, economic ties, military ties.
So it was such a huge momentous like earth shattering event truly.
We had the opportunity after that to move Israel into CENTCOM.
Israel, because its neighbors were always like either fighting it or at minimum hated it and wouldn't acknowledge its existence.
Israel was always part of EUCOM.
But during the first Trump administration after the Abraham Accords, Israel joined CENTCOM. And so that's also been a huge change
that a lot of people don't realize
where they're doing so many joint exercises now
that they were never able to do before.
And Israel hopefully can become
like the premier security guarantor in the region.
And that is a great thing for us.
So- You were a part of that.
I was part of the, so I just wanna be careful.
This was another thing where like many people
have written books and have claimed that they've,
I was part of the arms deal afterwards.
So yes, I definitely was involved in the like second and third order things that happened
after the agreement was signed.
But no, I wasn't part of the diplomatic effort.
That was, there were only really a few people who were. And just a monumental,
game-changing thing. It's truly extraordinary to see the changes in the region even since
then, just a few years ago. Really amazing and hopeful. And I'm hoping, you know, things
are a little crazy right now. But we were on track,
I think Syria was on track to joining the Abraham Accords. And I know Israel bombed it this morning.
But I'm I know this sounds weird to say, but I'm still kind of hopeful that they will.
Um, Jelani has, has, uh, condemned what his people ostensibly did.
So, um, and, and they've, they've made some kind of ceasefire. So I hope it holds and I hope long-term that, I mean, that's, that's how this is solved.
Like there, there needs to be a broader piece.
A lot of people have questions about what happened
in the last few days against the Druze
and if it was somehow orchestrated by Iran.
I've seen people on X kind of raise that as a potential,
something that could potentially be the case.
Interesting.
Iran is known for doing stuff like that, so it's possible.
They don't have a lot of cards at this time, so instigating this kind of unrest, like obviously
Abraham Accords is the worst possible thing that could happen to them.
And October 7th was a direct result of Saudi Arabia being very, very close to joining the Abraham
Accords.
And Iran obviously scuttled that with the Hamas attack against Israel.
So we'll see what happens.
But man, these people have been in war for so long, and there's just so much suffering. But we need to keep a very clear
eyed view into like what is in our US interests, where do our interests lie, what do we want to
influence and how. While understanding that at a base level, it's not going to involve troops on
the ground. Like that's off the table. That's just not, that's not real. What I do think
is possible though is, you know, we have authorities for other things, you know, we have surrogates,
we have partner units, like maybe not in this case, but maybe in the future and other instances,
that's something that our government could think about. But I don't really see that playing
out right now.
Well, I hope you're right.
But Simone, we're wrapping up the interview.
I know you got a flight to catch,
so I don't wanna keep you too long.
So one last question.
Yes.
There's three people you could see on this show.
Who would they be?
Great question.
Great question. Um, I need to think about that.
I don't have an immediate answer. Do you need one right now?
Round of one off.
Um.
Mm.
I really, I'm sorry. I'm drawing a blank.
All right.
I apologize.
I left it all on the field, Sean.
That was the toughest question of the interview for you.
I got nothing left.
Well, Simone, I just really appreciate you coming here and loved chatting with you and
getting to know you and going down all those different rabbit holes.
Thank you. I loved chatting with you and getting to know you and going down all those different rabbit holes.
Thank you.
I don't think you give yourself enough credit,
but very impressive career.
I want to be careful because you and I
both know that community and God forbid,
I would never want to take any,
like they did the real work, you know what I mean?
I think it's important to
acknowledge that but thank you very much thank you this has been fun all right
cheers yeah
and Give it a week. You have lots to beef about. Take advantage of it. Get up in here. He's the Spitfire of sports smack. She's not my fault. We will get to all of that.
The Jim Rome Show podcast.
Get up in here and we'll beef later on. What's your beef?
Follow and listen on your favorite platform.
You've been warned.