The Joe Rogan Experience - #2392 - John Kiriakou
Episode Date: October 10, 2025John Kiriakou is a former CIA counter-terrorism officer and the first U.S. official to confirm the agency's torture of detainees. Punished for being a whistleblower, he served nearly 2 years in a fe...deral prison. www.johnkiriakou.com Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Buy 1 Get 1 Free Trucker Hat with code ROGAN at https://happydad.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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So you were saying you replaced Mike Baker
Yeah Mike's a great guy
He was a good officer
He was
He doesn't really talk about his work a lot
Maybe it's because a lot of years have passed
But he was the real deal
I replaced him in Athens
And he had done a lot of preliminary
legwork in Athens.
Athens was a tough place.
At the time, the American government spent more money on security in Athens than they spent
anywhere else in the world, including Beirut.
Why?
It was a combination of two things.
There were two indigenous Greek groups that were exceedingly dangerous.
One was called Revolutionary Organization 17 November.
They had killed the CIA Station Chief, two U.S. defense attaches, just bad guys all
around. The other was called popular revolutionary struggle. And then on top of that, you had
Abu Nidal, the Libyans, the PFLP, the PFLP, G.C, the DFLP, everybody was there. Because there was this
informal agreement between the Greek government of Andreas Papandreou at the time and these terrorist
groups that if you don't kill Greeks, we'll leave you alone. Oh, boy. Yeah.
but killing Americans wasn't part of the deal so it was every man for himself wow your story is pretty
nuts man it's and your story of getting in trouble and eventually going to prison for something
that was what they were doing what you reported on was completely illegal and you were completely
honest about it um and it was essentially about the u.s torture program right tell us how this
all started. Like, how long had you been involved in the CIA? Oh, by then I'd been in the CIA.
Well, by the time I got to Pakistan as the head of counterterrorism operations after 9-11,
I'd been in the CIA almost 13 years. And I was responsible for all counterterrorism operations
in the country. Al-Qaeda was running out of Afghanistan into Pakistan because we were bombing
the daylights out of them. And so my job was to find them and grab them and then just
hold them or send them to trial was the original idea. And we were planning at the time for
our first big name capture, right? Bin Laden, Iman Azawahiri. We had killed Muhammad
Atef. He was the head of what they called military affairs for al-Qaeda. We killed him at Torbora.
But then there was Abu Zubeda.
And then there was this unknown person that we later learned was Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.
So we were looking for any of these four or five people.
And then there were others, those responsible for the embassy bombings in Africa, the USS coal bombing.
So it just so happened that in February of 2002, we got a lead on Abu Zabeda.
And we captured him.
It took us six weeks to track him down.
And we were close a couple of times, close where we would bust down the door and there's
like an uneaten, like half-eaten sandwich on the counter, a cigarette still burning.
Sometimes we were a day or two behind him, but he knew we were looking and he knew we were
close.
So we finally got him.
And then the question is, what do you want to do with him?
And they told me hang on to him.
We're going to send out a plane and we'll take it from there.
So they did.
and I wasn't cleared to know
what they were going to do with him
just like the guys on the plane
weren't cleared to know who it was
we had captured and
why they were taking this guy
where they were taking him
but um
that is that all just need to know
yeah it's all need to know in fact
when I got onto the plane
we three FBI agents and I picked him up
on this gurney and carried him onto the plane
we had to stand him up and maneuver him onto the
plane then we laid him across the luggage rack
at the back and tied him down
And one of the guys on the plane, he was dressed completely in black with a black hood on.
And he says, John, and I said, who are you?
And he lifts up his mask and he's an old boss of mine.
And I said, hey, what are you doing here?
He said, oh, I came to take your prisoner.
I said, where are you taking him?
And he said, I can't tell you.
You don't have a need to know.
I said, no, that's cool.
He said, who is he anyway?
I said, oh, dude, I'm sorry.
You don't have a need to know.
He says, yeah, fair enough, fair enough.
Okay, safe travels.
And then, you know, your job is to take him from point A to point B, not to become his friend and, you know, get his family story.
Just like my job is to catch him and hand him over to the next guy, and it's none of my business where he's going.
And so when I got back to headquarters in May of that year, I was just standing in the sandwich line at the CIA cafeteria.
And one of the senior guys from the Counterterrorism Center came up to me, very casually.
And he said, oh, hey, I'm glad I ran into you.
I meant to ask you, do you want to be certified in the use of enhanced interrogation techniques?
And I had never heard that term before.
This was May of 2002.
I said, enhanced interrogation techniques, what's that mean?
And he goes, we're going to start getting rough with these guys.
Like that.
And I said, what's that mean?
So he describes these 10 techniques.
And I said, I don't know, man.
That sounds like a torture program.
And he said, it's not a torture program.
We got it cleared by the Justice Department.
and the president signed it.
He says, think about it.
I said, yeah, give me an hour.
I need an hour to think about it.
I walked out of the cafeteria.
I went up to the seventh floor, which is the executive floor.
And there was a very, very senior officer up there for whom I had worked 10 years earlier in the Middle East.
Knocked on his door, no appointment or anything.
And I said, hey, I need some advice.
I was just asked if I wanted to be trained in these enhanced interrogation techniques.
what do you think of that and he said first of all let's call a spade a spade he said this is a torture
program they can use whatever euphemism they want but this is a torture program and torture's a
slippery slope he said you know how these guys are somebody's going to be a cowboy they're going to go
overboard and they're going to kill a prisoner and when that happens there's going to be a
congressional investigation then there's going to be a justice department investigation and somebody's
going to go to prison do you want to go to prison i said no i don't want to go to prison
as it turned out I was the only person who went to prison but I said no I don't want to go to prison
I went back downstairs I said listen I have a moral and ethical problem with this I think it's
illegal and I don't want any part of it the funny thing is I had just captured Abu Zabeda who we
believed was the number three in Al Qaeda and I got passed over for promotion and the reason I got
passed over they said was because I turned down the training the head of the counterterrorism
Center said in my promotion panel that I had displayed a shocking lack of commitment to
counterterrorism and then the guy who had given me the advice saw that my name wasn't on the
promotion list and he promoted me out of cycle so I realized then I was up against something that
was going to be tough and then there was a psychiatrist at the agency whom I had known for years
we earned the same men's group we went to the same church and he happens to be both
a brigadier general in the army and a CIA psychiatrist.
And he said to me one day,
buddy, you know they call you the human rights guy behind your back.
And I said, yeah, I don't care.
And he said, you know that's not a compliment, right?
And I said, Steve, they're wrong about this.
And I'm right about it.
I said, I'm comfortable with the decision that I made.
And I just left it at that.
I didn't realize, though, how much I,
had pissed them off until later on so all you had done essentially was stand up for your
beliefs your morals your ethics and the law and you said I don't want to participate in
anything that I know to be illegal that was the start listen I wish you're standing out
against the group and I was the only one I'm I'm almost ashamed to tell you that
they asked 14 of us if they wanted if we wanted to be trained in the enhanced
interrogation techniques I was the only one
who said no. Now, this doesn't necessarily mean that you would have to use them. You were just
going to be trained in them. No, they were to use. And then, but you would be required to use these
techniques. So if you were not trained in them, then what would happen? Would that preclude you
from ever being involved in any sort of a questioning, interrogation? Yes, which is funny
for a couple of reasons. Number one, there was no such thing at the time.
as an interrogation class, right?
The FBI has deep, years-long interrogation classes.
We never had to interrogate anybody.
And in fact, when we started capturing prisoners in Pakistan in January of 2002,
I'm like, well, what do you want me to ask them?
I cabled headquarters.
We caught this guy.
What do you want me to ask him?
Oh, you'll figure it out.
Just go with it.
I'm like, okay.
So I was working with the Pakistan.
intelligence service and I said listen I'm I'm usually the good cop you want to be the bad cop and
he's like yeah I'll be the bad cop so we bring the prisoner out we're sitting there looking at him
I said what's your name he's like screw you the Pakistan he wax him across the face so I say again what's
your name listen buddy just give me your name my friend here he's not in a very good mood he's not a
very nice guy just tell me what your name is come on and then they tell you their name standard
Yeah.
So what exactly, did you know what enhanced interrogation techniques they were going to implement?
Oh, yeah.
That day in the cafeteria, my colleague explained it in great detail.
And a lot of these techniques are not torture, right?
If I grab you by the lapels and say, dogg on you and answer my questions, that's not torture.
Or the first one was called the belly slap or the intention.
slap was another way they called it where I smack you in the belly makes a cracking sound maybe
it leaves a handprint it's a little bit embarrassing that's not torture but then it graduated quickly
to things like waterboarding which everybody knows about but there were techniques that were that were
in my view that were worse than waterboarding like for example there was the cold cell so they
strip you naked they chain you to an eye bolt in the ceiling so you can't you can't lay or kneel or sit or
anything you can't get comfortable in any way and they they chill the cell to 50
degrees Fahrenheit and then every hour somebody comes in and throws a bucket of
ice water on you but we killed people with that technique the Justice Department
never said we could kill people and when we would kill them don't with that at
least two with that technique that the agency admitted to from hypothermia and there
wasn't a protocol in place to stop them from dying no there
There was later, but in those early days, no.
Later, we always had a doctor on scene.
Like, for example, with Abu Zabeda, his heart actually stopped during a waterboarding
session, and the doctor revived him just so he could be tortured more.
It's like, you know, didn't the Germans do that?
Come on now.
Now we're doing it?
That's not cool.
Is there any other way that, like, I know that MK Ultra experimented with a lot of drugs
and a lot of different techniques involved in whether it was trying to find the
truth out of people or getting people to commit acts was did they ever implement something where they
would give someone something that's a good question the short answer is yes not in the very beginning
but they were working with things like truth serum and different drugs like relaxation drugs
gabapentin you know stuff like that to sort of get get you to open up but remember too that the agency
got in such trouble in 75 and 76 before the church committee and the Pike Committee about
MK Ultra that as soon as Senator Church said, don't destroy the documents, the director went right
back to headquarters and ordered them to destroy everything. And so only about 20% of the MK Ultra
documents still exist. So we don't really know exactly what it was that was learned in that
program like what worked and what didn't work we hear these stories about you know dosing the the fog
laden air of san francisco just to see if everybody gets sick we've all read the stories about this
bakery in france where apparently we dosed the bread and everybody in the village went nuts
but we don't really have fulsome documentation that we could have used operationally
while interrogating prisoners so just to avoid
prosecution, they figured out a way.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
And so then whatever they did learn is lost.
Yeah, it's lost.
If there was something, whether it's MDMA or LSD or whatever they give people.
They worked with LSD for 20 years, at least, at least 20 years.
You know, there was an operation, it was a sub-operation of MK Ultra where they rented a safe house in San
Francisco, they recruited a bunch of hookers and had them go out and pick up Johns, bring them back
to the safe house where they thought they were going to get laid, dose them with LSD, and then
interrogate them and try to get them to give up their deepest secrets.
It's like, what you did?
Yeah, midnight climax.
Yeah, midnight climax, exactly.
Nobody's agreed to do this.
You haven't informed them properly.
These are American citizens.
You can't just take people off the streets and force LSD down their throats.
They were running the Hayd Ashbury Free Clinic until right after a month after chaos by Tom O'Neill came out.
You're exactly right.
Yeah.
My mom's mom went there.
She was a hippie in San Francisco.
She went to the Hayd Ashbury Free Clinic.
It was run by the CIA, which is so crazy.
And it's totally connected to Manson, the Manson family.
Oh, yeah, Manson.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Manson was a part of it as well.
It's so nuts.
And they wouldn't have even known about that until they found a stash of documents that connected it all together.
And just think of what's been destroyed.
Right.
What we could have learned.
Exactly.
We only know a small fraction of what was done.
So is it a case of just they're not elected, they're put into power, presidents come and go.
And over the course of their career, 20 years plus, they just have so much power.
and so much ability to get things done
that they just bypass the law.
I think that's the whole story
right there in a nutshell.
When I was there,
I remember being shocked
by some of the old timers
who had been there
for as long as 40 or 42 years.
There was one in particular.
He was the National Intelligence Officer
for warning.
So he was the one
that was supposed to say,
you know,
I'm worried about what Libya
is going to look like
10 years from now.
And then somebody writes a paper about it.
He had been there for 42 years.
He had to get a waiver from the director because he had aged out.
Well, these guys make no secret of their belief that they can outweigh pretty much any president.
Presidents come and go.
And these guys are there forever.
And so if the president wants them to do something that they don't want to do, they just slow roll it.
Just wait until he leaves.
And that's the end of it.
You know, that's why I say, I've said this in interviews a lot.
There is a deep state.
You don't have to call it the deep state if you don't want to.
You can call it the state.
You can call it the federal bureaucracy.
You can call it whatever you want.
The fact is it exists and it's unelected and it's generally unaccountable to anybody.
And they just wait for the president to leave if they don't want to do what he wants.
So you find out about this torture program.
You won't participate.
So that puts you on the outs.
And when do you know that this is going to be like a significant problem in your career?
You know, honestly, I didn't know until well after I left the agency.
You know, once I turned this down and I got this out of cycle promotion for the Abu Zabeda operation,
I was named executive assistant to the CIA's deputy director for operations.
And in that position, you have access to literally everything that the same.
CIA is doing around the world. And so I'm reading these cables coming back from the secret site
and people are saying like, whoa, I didn't sign up for this. Nobody said we're going to torture
people. I quit. And then they come home. Or there was a secretary who fainted once when she
happened to be in the room while Abu Zabeda was being tortured. And she curtailed her assignment.
That means she sends a cable to headquarters saying, I'm coming home.
I'm not doing this anymore.
That is a career-ending decision to curtail an assignment.
And I remember thinking, so I'm not the only one who thinks this is illegal.
Certainly somebody's going to come out and say something.
And nobody did.
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Like, what of the techniques that they were using that were, like, causing her to fame?
The big ones were waterboarding, the cold cell, and sleep deprivation.
Sleep deprivation doesn't sound like any big deal.
And when that finally leaked, Don Rumsfeld, who was the Secretary of Defense at the time, made a statement that still kind of sticks in my mind.
He said, there is no such thing as sleep deprivation.
He said, I have a stand-up desk in my office.
I don't even have a chair in my office.
And sometimes I'll work 24 hours and then into the next day, 36 hours.
But that's not what we're talking about here.
We know from the American Psychological Association that people begin to lose their minds at day seven with no sleep.
And they begin to die.
Their organs begin to shut down at day nine.
But the CIA was authorized to keep people awake for 12 days.
And that was another thing that caused prisoners to do.
just die. They would have heart
failure, you know?
How'd they keep them awake? You chain
them to that eye bolt in the ceiling again.
You have these industrial
strength lights on them 24 hours
a day and like death metal
24 hours on volume
11 and
they just can't sleep
because if they
collapse, they'll pull their arms
out of their sockets.
They're chained to that eye bolt.
Jeez. It was
bad and then when people would die
they would just dig a hole next to the interrogation building
put them in the hole covered up and then bring the next guy in
no report no nothing nothing there was one guy
they reported on and headquarters wrote back and said just put them on ice
until we can figure out what to do and they literally just put them in a bathtub
and filled it with ice and then just decided a couple days later he started to
turn we should probably bury this guy
Wow.
Yeah, it was ugly.
And the Justice Department never said anything about that.
They're like, oh, listen, you know, you can do these techniques.
And if you kill them, just bury him out back.
Yeah, and that wasn't the approved operation.
Was any of it effective?
Like, was there any actionable information?
That's the worst part of this.
No, none of it was effective.
You know, I say this all the time, Joe.
It's like I kick in my gut to have to compliment the FBI.
But if there's one thing that the FBI is really good at, its interrogations, they've been doing
interrogations effectively since the Nuremberg trials in 45 and 46, these guys know what they're doing.
And so with Abu Zabeda as an example, we captured Abu Zabeda and normally oversees, the CIA has
primacy. Domestically, the FBI has primacy. But 9-11 was still an open criminal investigation.
And so we sent Abu Zabedah out to the secret site and the FBI took over.
The CIA was furious about this.
But there was an FBI agent by the name of Ali Sufan who did exactly as he was trained to do.
And he began to engage Abu Zabeda in a conversation.
And Abu Zabeda just gave him the silent treatment for weeks.
This went on for weeks.
But you'd go in, you offer him a cup of coffee, you offer him an orange.
If he's cooperative, you'll let him write a letter to his.
mother, you know, whatever. And finally he opened up. And he gave us actionable intelligence
that saved American lives. And I'll give you two examples. Number one, we had no idea what the
Al-Qaeda wiring diagram looked like. We knew it was bin Laden and Zawahiri. And then we just didn't know
what the organization was like, how it was built. So he explained to us how each one of these
cells all around the world was stovepiped, compartmentalized. So,
So cell A had no idea what cell B was doing.
And Ali said, as an example, if you want to do an operation in, let's say, Dusseldorf, how would you do that?
And Abu Zabeda said, well, there's this guy, Muhammad, and here's his phone number.
Muhammad lives in Dusseldorf, and he has a cousin, Abdullah, and Abdullah has access to weapons.
And here's Abdullah's email.
And then Abdullah's got a friend, Rashid.
They meet at the coffee shop and Russia has access to explosives.
And then we're able to call the Germans and say,
hey, listen, you have a serious problem in Dusseldorf and here's what you need to do.
And then they kicked down the door and they grabbed these guys.
That saved lives.
The other thing that he told us, and he laughed actually because Ali didn't know what the heck he was talking about.
He was talking about Mukhtar, a guy using the nom de guerre muhtar.
We knew from our own files that there was this guy out there who called himself Muktaud,
who was a very bad guy in 1996.
He had initiated something called the Bojinka operation.
It was supposed to be carried out in the Philippines.
And the idea was to hijack as many as 14 747s and then fly them into buildings all up and down the west coast of the United States.
it just so happened that one day muhtar working on his plan his diabolical terrorism plan he went out to have lunch
and when he went out to have lunch the cleaning lady came in to clean the apartment and she sees all
this stuff laid out and she said that looks like a terrorist attack being planned she calls the cops
the cops come and say ooh this looks like a terrorist attack we better call the philippine
intelligence service they come and look at it and somebody says
We should probably call the CIA on this.
And so we confiscated everything, and Bojinka was disrupted.
That's crazy.
It's crazy.
A cleaning lady.
You never know.
You just never know.
It's just crazy that he would leave the plans, just hanging around.
Thinking nobody's going to come, nobody's going to see it, and then he ran off.
So we knew there was this guy out there planning this big thing, and his name was Mukhtar.
Abu Zabeda laughed at us and said, you don't know who Muqtad is?
And Ali said no.
And Abu Zabedah said, his name is Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.
That's the first time we ever heard that name.
We didn't have any documents in any files that were about any guy named Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.
But that was the very first time we were able to piece it all together.
And it was thanks to Abu Zabedah, in turn, thanks to Ali Sufans treating Abu Zabedah with respect.
But on August 1st, 2002, George Tenant went to the White House, and he asked the president for reasons that have never been made clear.
He asked the president to turn over primacy to the CIA.
He did that.
And the CIA director, Robert Mueller, to his credit, he knew exactly what was going to come.
Not only withdrew FBI personnel from the secret site, he withdrew FBI personnel from the country.
that the secret site was in.
And within 12 hours, the CIA began to torture up his beta.
He went completely silent and remained silent.
And then the FBI went back to the president and said, look, the CIA is screwing this up.
We were getting all this intelligence from this guy.
Now he won't say anything.
And we're putting him in a coffin.
And we heard that he had this irrational fear of bugs.
So we pour a box of cockroaches on him in the coffin and close up the coffin.
And we would open it up every couple days to change his diaper and give him food.
And he went nuts.
And so finally, the White House turns everything back over to the FBI.
It takes Ali months to get him to talk again.
And then he starts talking again.
And he's given us more and more information about Al-Qaeda operations in Malaysia
and anti-Australia operations and what's going on in Canada
and how Al-Qaeda is able to move across border.
between Europe and Asia.
And then the CIA comes back in again
and starts torturing them again
and screwed it all up.
Now, why would they do that?
I don't understand.
If you're getting information,
why would they decide
to ramp it up and torture them?
I think for a couple of reasons.
I think we should never underestimate
the motivating factor of a desire for revenge.
Right?
This was the worst intelligence failure
in the history.
of the country. Three thousand people died because we hadn't done our jobs. So that was one
thing. The other thing is the CIA had entered into an agreement with these two contract
psychologists, James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen, in October of 2001. And they said, hey, we've
reverse engineered the military's SEAR program. And we think this would be an effective, but
harsh interrogation technique and so we were chomping at the bit at the agency to try this thing
out without using the word torture we paid those guys a hundred and eight million dollars to say
oh we think you should torture people here's here are the torture techniques just let us know
when you want us to start 108 million dollars for that and so we thought well we've already
spent the money and we really do want revenge on these guys so what the hell let's just let's just
go for it i think that's what it was wow so how did you get in trouble i waited for somebody to
say something about torture and nobody did and then i got divorced my my kids moved with my ex-wife to
ohio and they were little they needed their dad so i decided i'm
going to leave the agency, go into the private sector so I can see my boys on the weekends.
And still I waited for somebody to say something and nobody did.
Now, I wish that I could tell you that I stood up and I took a stand and that wasn't
it at all.
I got a call in December of 2007.
So now I'm out of the agency three and a half years.
I got a call from Brian Ross at ABC News and he said,
that he had a source who said, I had tortured Abu Zabeda.
I said, that was absolutely false.
I was the only person who was kind to Abu Zabeda.
I said, I've never laid a hand on Abu Zabeda or any other prisoner.
And he said, well, you're welcome to come on the show and defend yourself.
Well, I had never spoken to a reporter before.
I didn't know that was a reporter's trick.
So I said, I'll think about it.
in the meantime president bush i remember it being a monday president bush gives a press conference
and the international committee the red cross had said in a paper that the CIA was torturing
prisoners uh human rights watch said CI's torturing prisoners and amnesty international said
CI's torturing prisoners so a reporter says look all these international human rights organizations
are saying that the CIA is torturing its prisoners what's your response to that
and the president looks right in the camera and he goes we do not torture like that and I said to my
wife who was a senior CIA officer I said he is a bald-faced liar he's looking the American
people right in the eye and he's lying to us and she said are you surprised well then on
Wednesday two days later um he gets another
a similar question, and he said that there is no torture.
I knew he was lying.
And then another two days later, it's Friday.
And he's walking from the South Portico of the White House to the helicopter to go to Camp
David for the weekend.
And a torture shout, a reporter shouts another question about torture.
And this time he stops and he turns and he says, well, if there is torture, it's because
of a rogue CIA officer.
and I said to my wife
Brian Ross's sources
at the White House
and they're going to pin this on me
so I called Brian Ross and I said
I'll give you your interview
and I decided in the whatever it was
why did you think they were going to pin it on you
because they were calling you the human rights guy
so that you were going to be a patsy
and I was not willing to assume
that that was going to happen because that's just
your experience with the organization
oh yeah they're going to leave somebody out to dry
to protect themselves
So I called Brian Ross.
I said, I'll give you your interview.
And I decided that whatever he was going to ask me,
and he never told me in advance what he was going to ask me,
I was just going to tell the truth.
And so he met me at the ABC News studios on DeSalle Street in Washington.
And I said three things in that interview that changed the course of the rest of my life.
I said that the CIA was torturing its prisoners.
I said that torture was official U.S. government policy.
It was not the result of any rogue officer.
And I said that the policy had been personally approved by the president himself.
And then, as you can imagine, within 24 hours, the CIA files what's called a crimes report against me with the FBI saying that I had revealed classified information.
The FBI then investigates me from December of 2007 to December of 2008.
and then they send my attorney a letter called the declination letter declining to prosecute.
They said that they had completed their investigation that the information was already out there
because of Amnesty International Human Rights Watch and the Red Cross.
But most importantly, torture is a crime and it is illegal to classify a crime for the purpose of keeping it from the American people.
So no charges.
My wife and I went out to celebrate that night we went to dinner.
Three, four weeks later, Barack Obama becomes president.
And he names John Brennan.
At first, CIA director, but the liberals went crazy because Brennan was one of the fathers of the torture program.
Everybody seems to forget that now.
And we can get into that if you want.
But he then names Brennan the Deputy National Security Advisor for Counterterrorism.
Brennan immediately sends a memo to Eric Holder, the new attorney general, and says, talking about me, charge him with espionage.
And Holder writes back, we got these memos in discovery when I went to trial.
Holder writes back and says, my people don't think he committed espionage.
And then Brennan writes back and says, charge him anyway and make him defend himself.
So they charged me with five felonies, three counts of espionage.
They waited until I went bankrupt.
And then they dropped the espionage charges.
Yeah.
Oh, God, that's so gross.
That's Washington.
It's just so hard to believe that the United States of America government works like that.
I believe it.
I believe it.
Oh, yeah.
It's hard to swallow.
There's a book by Harvey Silverglate, who's a professor of law at Harvard University.
The book is called Three Felonies a Day.
And he says that we are so over-regulated, so over-criminalized in this country that the average American, on the average day, going about his or her normal daily business, commits three felonies every single day.
So if they want to get you, they're going to get you.
And there's nothing you can do to protect yourself.
So what was Brennan's beef with you?
Was it just because of the fact that you did that interview or was there underlying tension?
We were never pals.
I've known John Brennan for 35 years.
We never really cared for each other.
To tell you the truth, I thought the guy was in over his head intellectually.
When I first started there, he was a deputy group chief.
He was a GS-15, nobody, journeyman, you know, first-line, second-line manager.
No big deal.
There are hundreds of them.
And he worked for this really wonderful woman, a great intellect named Martha Kessler.
And Martha was so highly respected.
She had written this book.
I still remember the title called Syria, Fragile Mosaic of Power.
And when you got hired, you got her book.
And you had to read the book.
Because like, this is what we do.
This is the perfect example of what we do.
So he was her deputy.
One day he went to her and he said, Martha, you know, I've been your deputy for X number of years.
I think I'm ready for promotion into the senior intelligence service.
And Martha said, and I just talked to her daughter a couple of weeks ago about this,
Martha said, not only will you never be a member of the senior intelligence service,
I don't even want you working for me anymore.
You're fired.
well you're not really fired at the CIA if you're fired that means you have six weeks to walk
the halls and find another job if you can't find another job in six weeks then they escort you to
your car they take your badge and you know so long good luck well it's the normal job turnover
is in the summertime this is the week before Christmas 1990
three or four, I can't recall now.
And there are no jobs open at Christmas.
So he finally finds one job.
It is in the PDB staff, the president's daily brief.
And it is as a morning briefer giving the president's daily briefing to the lowest ranking person entitled to a PDB briefing.
So that's the National Security Council's director for intelligence.
programs who happened to be this guy named George Tenant.
And so they immediately hit it off to alpha dogs, cigar smoking, hard drink.
And there used to be a kiosk right at the corner of 17th in Pennsylvania Avenue adjacent to the
White House that sold cigars.
Tenant had had a heart attack and he wasn't supposed to smoke and his wife would yell at him.
So they would, after the briefing, they'd walk out to the kiosk and buy cigars and just stand there
and laugh and you know talk about chasing women or whatever totally hit it off then tenant becomes
the deputy director of the CIA so he brings he brings Brennan back with him and makes him
Martha Kessler's boss deputy director of the office that Martha's working in he calls Martha Kessler in
and says now you're fired and so she just elected to retire well he ended
up being identified by tenant as the guy.
Like, this is my guy.
This guy's going places.
He needs operational experience because he's been an analyst and an analytic manager all
these years.
I'm going to make him the station chief in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
He's an analyst.
He's never served overseas before, never recruited a spy, ever.
It wasn't his job.
Now all of a sudden, he's the station chief and one of the most important stations in the world.
So he does that for a long.
time. By the way, during which he approves the visas for the 9-11 hijackers. And then he comes
back as the deputy executive director of the whole CIA, right? So it's director, deputy
director, executive director, and then the deputy directors for operations, intelligence, science,
technology, administration. And they're dotted lines. So he's now one of the five most
senior people in the entire CIA. He does that for a couple of years and then becomes the
executive director. By the time I get promoted to be the morning briefer for the director
and executive assistant, I'm throwing all these stupid terms out, executive assistant to the
deputy director for operations. I'm meeting with Brennan every single day. So we're doing the
Iraq war, we're doing terrorism and al-Qaeda and all this stuff. He didn't like me and I
didn't like him and then when I became the quote unquote human rights guy that just kind of sealed
it for me but I didn't care because I didn't respect him anyhow I will say that that Jim Pavett the
deputy deputy director for operations legendary officer and a really great guy he hated Brennan more than I
did and he used to mock Brennan because Brennan at the time was telling everybody I want to head my own
agency. I want to head my own agency. And they finally put him in charge of this thing that was
temporarily called the T-TIC, the Transnational Terrorism Information Center. It later became the
National Counterterrorism Center. And they sort of shunted him off there. And it was a nothing
analytic organization, not even in the headquarters building. It was out one of the outlying
buildings. And then he kind of went away. But where he really did right for himself is in
2007, there was this wave of retirements, right? We're enough now beyond 9-11 that people can
begin to retire. So this huge wave of senior level retirements in 07. And then once these guys
retired, half of them went to the McCain campaign and half of them went to the Hillary Clinton
campaign. And John Brennan was literally the only one who went to the Obama campaign. And he
saved himself. Wow. So how did you wind up going to prison? Well, as soon as Barack Obama became
president, John Brennan decided he was going to have my head. And so he asked a holder to have the
FBI grab me. And I'll tell you what, they knew they didn't have a case. So there's a little bit of
background. From 2009 to the end of 2011, I was the senior investigator on the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee working for John Kerry. It was a terrible job. Carrie said, oh, I want you to do
this and do that and we're going to investigate this and investigate that. And then he would kill all
the investigations because he wanted to be Secretary of State and you didn't want to piss anybody
at the White House off. So I can't talk about how Afghanistan produces 93% of the world's heroin
and all of it is because the CIA said they could.
I can't talk about the Dashi Lali massacre
where 2,000 Taliban soldiers were suffocated to death in container trucks
because the CIA didn't punch holes for them to breathe in the containers.
Can't talk about any of that stuff because you want to be the Secretary of State.
So I left in 2011.
And right before I left, I got a call from a Japanese diplomat.
And this is one of the things that I loved about that job is this constant engagement with foreign diplomats.
Who's doing what?
And what do you think about Israel?
What do you think about China?
What do you think about what's going on in, you know, Mexico or Cuba or whatever?
And I get a call from this Japanese diplomat, and he invites me to lunch.
I said, great.
We met at a place on Capitol Hill.
And I remember that lunch very well.
I remember we talked about Israeli elections.
We talked about Turkish elections.
and we talked about the Arab-Israeli peace process.
And at the end of the lunch, he says to me,
and I should add, his English was so bad
that we had to do the lunch in Arabic.
So he said, what's next for you?
And I said, well, I think I'm going to resign soon.
I promised Senator Kerry I'd give him two years.
It's been two and a half.
I have five kids.
And I really need to make some money
and put my kids through college.
And he goes, oh, no, don't.
do that. If you give me information, I can give you money. And I said, what the fuck is wrong
with you? You have any idea how many times I've made that pitch? Shame on you, cold pitching me
like that. And I got up indignantly, and I walked out. And I walked, and I mean directly without
stopping, to the office of the Senate security officer. And I knocked on the door. I went in, I said,
hey I was just pitched by a foreign intelligence officer and he goes was it that damn Russian again
and I said no it was Japanese he goes Japanese I said I know right he goes well no sometimes they
poke around looking for trade information I said this didn't have anything to do with trade
information I don't think I don't know we didn't even get that far he said okay do me a favor
he said I've got a standalone computer here that's not connected to the internet write it up as a
memo and I'm going to courier it over to the FBI. So I sat there and I wrote the whole thing,
blow by blow. The next day he calls me and he says, two FBI agents are going to come up and talk to you.
And I said, okay, so they come up. I recount the whole lunch and they said, all right, here's what
we want you to do. We want you to call him back, invite him to lunch, and then try to get him to
tell you exactly what information he wants and how much he's willing to pay for it. And I said,
because I'm a patriot I said you want me to wear a wire and they said no we're going to be at the
next table we're going to listen to everything I said but he only speaks Arabic that's okay we got a guy
he speaks Arabic don't worry I said all right so I call him I invite him to lunch we go to lunch
do the whole thing but before the lunch right before the lunch they called and they said
operation came up just write us another another memo do the lunch and write us another memo I said
fine. So I wrote another memo. They asked me to do it a third time, a fourth time, and a fifth time.
The fifth time, he says to me, I have great news. He said, I got my dream job. I've been promoted
and I'm going to be the deputy ambassador in Cairo. And I said, congratulations. I shook his hand.
Never saw him again. So I've written all this to the FBI. One day in January of 2012, so I've been out of
the Senate for about nine months, the FBI calls. And I look at myself and it says, Federal Bureau
of Investigation. I was like, I wonder what that's all about. So I answer. And they said, hey, you
remember that thing you helped us out with a year ago? And I said, yeah. And they said, we've got a
similar situation and we need your help. And again, because I'm a patriot, I said, anything for the
FBI. I kick myself now for saying it. I said, anything for the FBI. What do you want me to
do. They said, come down in the Washington field office Thursday morning at 10. I said, done.
I go down there the next Thursday. And they're waiting for me at the entrance, which I thought was
odd. And we go up to a conference room and they said, we're both cleared, SITK, gamma. And then
there were two compartments above top secret that I was cleared for that they said they were
cleared for. And so if the if the conversation necessitated it, we could go.
into that area so they said well before before we start just wanted to ask you just read
your book it was great I loved it hey what about this that you said in your book and I was
like yeah okay yeah it was a cool story what about this other thing yeah I had fun I said
it was kind of hard you know it took me nine months to write the book 22 months to
get it cleared oh yeah you got it cleared yeah of course I got it cleared
22 months it took me to get it cleared.
I'm thinking, what an odd question.
Then they start asking me about something called the Sam Adams Project.
And I said, I'm sorry, I don't know what that means.
And then the bad cop of the two says,
we know you've been giving information to the Guantanamo defense attorneys.
I said, what are you talking about?
And then I said, wait a minute.
Are you investigating me?
And they said, yeah, and we're raiding your house right now as we speak.
And I said, thank God.
I said, I want to speak to my attorney right now.
That was the only reason that they didn't arrest me.
And one of the things that I learned, and this became painfully evident when they started arresting January 6 people,
was the FBI in Washington likes to make its arrests on Thursdays because there are no federal arraignments on Friday.
So you're in the D.C. jail Thursday night.
Friday night, Saturday night, Sunday night, getting the shit beaten out of you.
And then they arraigned you on Monday.
And then you want to make a deal just so you don't ever have to go inside that prison again.
But because I asked to see my attorney, they let me go.
So I called the attorney as soon as I got out of the office.
Actually, when I was walking out, one of them went over to, I didn't know it at the time, but it was Peter Strach.
And Peter Strach says, tell me.
he implicated himself.
And the guy said, not really, no.
We have to let him go.
And so I grabbed my cell phone and I left, went to the attorney's office.
They had already called my attorney and said they were charging me with espionage.
I hadn't committed espionage.
They knew I hadn't committed espionage.
And in fact, since then, I'm fast forwarding a lot.
Three FBI agents have reached out to me, well, two to my attorneys.
One reached out to me directly.
to apologize, saying that this came from the top.
They thought it was a BS case.
They were sorry they were involved, but there was nothing they could do.
One guy reached out to me through eBay, of all things,
like to try to cover up the trail.
He's like, listen, I've been losing sleep over this for the last 13 years.
I just wanted to tell you how sorry I am.
Blah, blah, blah.
It's like, well, I hope you feel better.
My whole life fell apart.
but I'm glad you got that off your chest.
So it became a matter of just survival after that.
You know, you have to take it seriously.
I was facing 45 years in prison.
And then when the Justice Department made a request for a proffer meeting, the proffer meeting is they'll give you a little idea of what they have against you and then they make an offer.
You can take it or leave it.
And they offered me 45 years.
and I said
I'm not doing
45 minutes
I didn't do anything wrong
and this woman
she became deputy attorney general
for the criminal division
under Biden
she said
take this deal Mr. Kiriaku
and you may live
to meet your grandchildren
oh my God
I went home that night
and
I went home
I'm ashamed to even say it
That night we put the kids to bed.
And my wife and I were watching TV and she said,
come on, let's go to bed.
I said, I can't sleep.
There's no way I'm going to be able to sleep.
And she said, no, come on, let's go to bed.
She knew I was going to go down into the garage,
turn the car on, and just lay across the back seat.
And she said, no, come on.
You need to try to get some sleep.
She saved me that night.
But 45 years.
and so they waited 10 months before they were even willing to engage in a conversation.
And then they offered 10 years on a Monday.
On Wednesday they offered 8 and on Friday they offered 5.
My lead attorney was this legendary guy named Plato Cacheras.
And Plato said, you know, I've been a criminal defense attorney in this city for 52 years.
And this is the first time I've ever seen them come down in time.
He said, usually they offer you 10.
You say no, the next offer's 15.
Then the next offers 20.
I said, why are they coming down in time?
He said, because they have a shit case and they know it's shit.
And that's why we're going to go to trial and we're going to win this thing.
I said, great.
Well, they stayed at 5.
And then they came back and they said, three and a half.
and I said, I'm going to trial.
I'm going to win this thing.
Turned out at the time, my best friend, his wife, had an uncle who was O.J. Simpson's jury consultant.
And she called him for me.
And she said, hey, my friend John, he's in this situation.
He's like, yeah, I read about this in the papers.
He could use your help.
He came up, didn't charge me a cent.
He came up to Washington.
We got him a security clearance, which was another thing.
We asked for a security clearance.
and then the Justice Department called and said,
the White House said Kyriaku's attorneys have enough security clearances.
And I said, who at the White House said we have enough security clearances?
Well, they had to tell us that it was John Brennan.
No more attorneys for Kyriaku.
Fisher cut bait.
We're like, it's not up to John Brennan to decide if I have enough attorneys.
They have an unlimited number of attorneys, an unlimited budget.
as it turned out they spent six million dollars to put me in prison was society really better off
spending six million dollars to put me in a low security prison for for 23 months so in the
end they said best and final offer 30 months you do 23 well i was the only the second
American who had ever been charged with this crime of violating the Intelligence Identities Protection
Act of 1982.
The only other person that was charged with it was a woman named Sharon Scranage.
She was a CIA secretary in Ghana in the 80s, and she was having an affair with a member of Ghana's
intelligence service.
And in the course of pillow talk, she revealed the names of all of the CIA officers in the
station and the names of the sources they were running.
And so the Ghanaians executed these guys.
Oh, my God.
She got nine months in prison, nine months, and they offer me 45 years for blowing the whistle
on the torture program.
So my wife and I stayed up all night, literally all night.
And because Sharon Scranage had taken a plea, there was literally no case law.
So what we found, we found several things.
We found several articles from the Harvard Law Review saying, this law is unconstitutional.
It violates the First Amendment and it is prior restraint, right?
Like it tells you in advance you can't say X, Y, and Z.
But because there was no case law, you couldn't challenge it in court.
And I said, well, can't we just appeal the charge?
and maybe all the way up to the Supreme Court
and they said, yeah, we can do that post-conviction
and then you're going to be 45 years
waiting and hoping that the Supreme Court
does the right thing. We can't do that.
So I decided by 6 a.m., I'm going to turn it down.
I believed in my heart.
I hadn't done anything right.
This was political.
It was a vendetta by John Brennan.
And Obama, by all accounts,
friends, of course, who were still working at the agency and working at the CIA or at the White
House. And they said that Obama had this Nixonian obsession with national security leaks.
And it's because that came from Brennan. Obama was a senator for two years. He didn't have any
experience doing anything. So he did what John Brennan told him to do. And Brennan said,
you got to crack down on these leaks. They do nothing but embarrass us. So I decided I'm going to
to turn it down. 6 a.m. I send an email to my attorneys. I had 11 attorneys. I was paying half of
them, five of them. And then one of them writes back and says, put on a pot of coffee, we'll be at
the house by seven. So they come to my house. The four main ones came to the house. Plato was the
first one in. Now imagine this, like 80 year old six foot to 280 pound mean old man. He comes in and I
said good morning plato and he said you stupid son of a bitch take the deal like that i said take the
deal you're the one that told me not to take the deal you're the one who told me we're going to go
to trial and win this thing and he says i only told you that to keep your spirits up oh god and then
the second one is partner bob trout a sweet gentleman a southern gentleman he says if you were my
own brother, I would beg you to take this deal.
And I'm like, now what do I do?
And then the third, who is the guy, Mark McDougal, one of the best attorneys I've ever
encountered in my life.
And the one that I liked and respected the most out of all of them.
I liked all of them and respected all of them, but I felt a connection to this guy.
He pulls me aside.
He was a little bit angry.
And he said, you know what your problem is?
Your problem is you think this is about justice, and it's not about justice.
It's about mitigating damage.
Take the deal.
And I looked at my wife, and she's just like, what are we going to do?
So I took the deal.
And I got two and a half years in prison, and they made me do every single day of it.
In fact, we went to sentencing, and this was in the Eastern District of Virginia.
the espionage court.
And the reason why we didn't go to trial in the end was that the OJ Simpson jury consultant
said, if we were in any other district in America, I would say, let's go for it.
We're going to win this thing.
But the Eastern District of Virginia, your entire jury is going to be people from the CIA,
from the FBI, from DOD, from intelligence community contractors.
He said, buddy, you don't have a prayer.
Take the deal.
Yeah, it was bad.
Wow.
So it's sentencing.
My attorney said, Your Honor, we request that Mr. Kiriaku be sent to a minimum security work camp.
She says, any objection from the Justice Department?
They said, no objection.
She goes, okay, minimum security work camp.
No bars on the windows, no locks on the doors.
You're free to come and go as you please.
You're just on your honor not to abscond.
And most of the guys work, there's a little college in town.
You go sweep the floors or whatever.
or whatever so I got to the prison three months later and it's it's weird the system that we have
Joe you just you walk up and you knock on the door and you say hi I'm John Kiriakum here to turn
myself in that's all you do and your friends and family just drive away and so they said yeah
you got to go across the street to the actual prison they'll process you and then they just
bring you back over here and I said okay so I'll go across the street and I said I'm I'm
John Kiriaco, I'm here to turn myself in.
And the guy takes me by the arm.
We go outside and we start walking around to the back of the prison.
And I said, no, no, I'm supposed to be at the minimum security camp across the street.
And the guy laughs at me.
And he goes, not according to my paperwork, you're not.
And I was like, oh, my God, take it easy.
We later learned Brennan was so angry at the shortness of my sentence.
that he told them make it as difficult as possible.
So I told myself, take it easy.
If you make any ruckus, they're going to put you in solitary.
You don't say a word.
So I didn't say a word.
It took them about 40 minutes to process me.
Then they walked me to my cell.
The only thing the cop said to me, he says, a word of advice, buddy.
If anybody comes into your cell uninvited, that's an act of aggression.
and I said, great, thanks.
I'm here 40 minutes, and now I'm going to get my ass kicked.
I appreciate it.
And then I started that whole odyssey.
And so what kind of prison were you in?
I was in FCI, the Federal Correctional Institution at Loretto, Pennsylvania,
which is a low security prison, but it's called a low medium,
and then there's a high medium.
So this was a low medium.
It took me five days to get access to a phone.
And I called Mark McDougal, the attorney that I liked so much.
And I said, Mark, they put me in the actual prison with the pedophiles and the mafia dons and the drug kingpins.
I said, what do I do?
He says, oh, my God.
Well, he said, we could file a motion, but it'll be two years before we get a hearing.
And you'll be home by then.
He said, buddy, I'm sorry.
You're going to have to tough it out.
And so that's what I did.
Wow.
so you have this long career working for the government they put you away and what is it like for you
to feel so betrayed and to get out and what do you what do you do what do you do you do you do you do
do you get out i was frankly very angry when i got out i didn't realize how angry i was like
people would mention it to me like maybe you should talk to somebody maybe you should you know
think about a pharmaceutical option and I was like why there's nothing wrong with me
you know I'm ready to fight and march and you know raise my fist against the Obama administration
and so um I was wrong of course I was I was so angry that that it wasn't even healthy for the
people around me. But I'll tell you, Joe, the hardest thing is you think you can just step back
into your life again. And you'll never be able to step back into your life. So I thought, okay,
well, I'm highly educated. I have a bachelor's degree in Middle Eastern studies. I have a master's
degree in legislative policy analysis. I finished my PhD case, classwork in international affairs.
I got rejected by McDonald's, by Safeway, by Target, by Uber.
We don't hire felons.
I mean, I couldn't get a job anywhere.
And you broke.
And I was broke.
Bankrupt.
So you couldn't even get a job driving for Uber?
Uber turned me down.
Yeah, it's crazy.
It's crazy.
But you know what, though?
What did you do?
Well, I was confident that I was.
right and they were wrong and my my wife unfortunately she's now my ex-wife but she gave me some
of the best advice anybody ever gave me she said you have to keep telling your side of the story
because eventually they're going to move on to their next victim and if you keep talking
your side of the story is going to be the side of record and eventually the truth is going to come
out. And sure enough, six weeks before I was released from prison, I called her. I was allowed to call her
every other day for 15 minutes. So I called her and I said, how was your day? And she said, it was
great. And I said, really? Great. Why was it so great? And she said, because the Senate torture
report was released today and it proved that everything you said was true. And I said, that is great.
and she said, John McCain stood up on the floor of the Senate and said, if it weren't for John
Kiriaku, the American people would never have had any idea what the CIA was doing in their
name. And so when I got home, God bless him. One of the first calls I received was from John McCain's
chief of staff. And he said, Senator McCain says, welcome home. And he wants to know what he can do
to be helpful. And I said, oh my God. I said, tell him, I said, thank you. I liked McCain very much
from when I was working on Carrie's staff.
Carrie was a little jealous of McCain.
And McCain would go out of his way
to shake my hand and say hi.
Carrie said to me one time,
why don't you two get a room or something?
And I said, no, I said,
we have this connection over torture.
I said, McCain takes me seriously
and I take him seriously.
And so when I spoke to McCain,
I said, these damn Obama people,
they confiscated my pension.
And I'm going to have to work
until the day I die.
they drove me into bankruptcy and took my pension.
So he came up with this idea.
It was a great idea to write an amendment.
My attorney wrote this amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act of 2016.
And it said that every American convicted of violating the Intelligence Identities Protection Act between October 1st and October 31st.
2012 shall hereby have his pension reinstated so of course I'm the only person in the world
that that refers to so he said nobody reads these 1,500 page bills we're going to slip it in
there and he said I'm going to be on the conference committee we'll get it taken care of
and then he got sick he got a brain tumor and he wasn't named to the conference committee
and so they pulled it back out again and then he died and so here I am
Ten years later, the only way that this can be made right is with a presidential pardon.
And that's what I've been working on for years now.
So what did you do for money?
I was offered a job at a small think tank in Washington called the Institute for Policy Studies.
And they said, we'll give you an office, but you're going to have to raise your own salary.
And so it was just like constant go fund me.
So I did that for a year.
I made $20,000 for the year.
And I said, I can't do this.
It's untenable.
And so I just decided, look, no company is going to hire me, right?
I can't go back into government again.
And so I'm going to have to work for myself.
So I had already written my first book, made number five on the New York Times bestseller's list.
My second book I wrote longhand from first.
prison. I ended up winning two literary awards for that book. I won the Penn First Amendment
award, which along with the Penn Faulkner, the Pulitzer, and the Edgar Allen Poe is one of the
big four. And then I won the forward reviews memoir of the year that year. I thought, I'm going to
keep writing books. I started writing a column that ended up being syndicated through the consortium
for independent journalism. So it's like 200 small town papers around the country. And, you know,
a little bit here, a little bit there, consulting.
And then the Greek government, I happen to be Greek American.
My grandparents all came from the island of Rhodes.
As soon as I was arrested, like within a day, the Greek ambassador called me.
And he said, what can we do to be helpful?
And I said, you can give me citizenship.
And man, like that, I got Greek citizenship.
And so as soon as I got out of prison, the Greek government hired me to help them write
a new whistleblower protection law.
And then they passed it quickly.
The parliament passed it into law.
And then the European Union adopted it.
So I went to Brussels and I testified there.
And then they repackaged it.
Now it's the law of the land and all of the European Union.
And then people in the states began taking me more seriously.
I started doing some paid speaking gigs.
I got hired as an adjunct professor at a couple of different universities.
And then, you know, after a while,
you can make an okay living
I'm still going to have to work
until the day I die
because I have literally
nothing saved. It all went to the
attorneys and
you know hope for the best. I will
say that
I was a third generation
Democrat. I left
the Democratic Party ages
ago.
John Brennan
and Barack Obama's actions
convinced me that I had done the
right thing. And now I have found common cause with populist Republicans. You know, you don't have to
agree on every issue, right? You don't have to like everybody and everything that they believe in
and everything they stand for. But I've struck up a great friendship, for example, with Tucker
Carlson, sweetest guy in the world, and a great supporter of mine. And Judge Napolitano,
it's a love fest every time the two of us get together. And I realized that, you know,
this thing, this, this political system we have, it's antiquated. It doesn't work. You have to,
you have to engage with the individual. Like, I never thought that I would be agreeing with Marjorie
Taylor Green on some of these
civil liberties issues
right or Thomas Massey
or Bernie Sanders for that matter
but I've realized that
I've got a
I've got to stand up for what's right
not what the DNC
happens to think what's right
or some politician that I used to
you know think I had respect for
thinks is right
a couple of nights before I left
for prison
the director
the former director of the CIA's Counterterrorism Center,
who later became the Deputy Director for Operations
and was very close to Brennan.
He was the DDO when Brennan was the director of the CIA.
He tweeted at me, and he said,
don't drop the soap with a laughing emoji.
I gave myself a couple hours to cool off.
And then I texted back, and I said, Jose,
I'm on the right side of history, and you are not.
and that gave me such peace
I knew I could go to prison
survive this just fine
and come out and still make an impact
and you know knock on wood
that's how it's worked out
it's ugly
you know and you get to prison
one of my attorneys
said hey I've had
I've collected a list of six
emails, email addresses from people who want to know how you're doing.
Once you get there, once you get comfortable, just send me a letter and I'll send it around
to these people.
I said, okay, great.
It took me, you don't realize it, but you're in shock for the first week or two.
And then I started settling into the routine.
And it was kind of, I mean, it was pretty screwed up.
That first day, 20 minutes after the.
cop warned me about people coming into my room unannounced. These two guys just walk in boldly,
just walk in. I jump up. I put my fist up. I go, what do you want? One of them has a swastika
on his neck. It took up his entire neck. It came up onto his face. The other one had,
fuck you, tattooed on his eyelids. So I go, what do you want? And the swastika guy says,
you the new guy? I said, yeah, so? And he says, you a fag? I said, no, I'm not a fag. I said, no, I'm not a
fag he said you a rat i said no i didn't have anybody else in my case i'm not a rat and he says
you a chomo i go i don't know what that word means he goes chomo child molester i said no i'm not a
child molester and he goes okay you could sit with the arians in the cafeteria and i was like
oh hmm i guess i'm with the aryans now grand yeah and then the guy across the hall from me was the boss
of the Banana family.
And one day he said to me, I would get the New York Times and he would get the New York Post
and we would trade at the end of each day.
He asked me, let me ask you something.
He says, why you sit with those Nazi retards in the cafeteria?
I said, I don't know, Pete.
My first day here, they told me to sit with them.
He goes, from today, you're with the Italians.
And I said, awesome.
and they became my closest friends.
I mean, I got a book out of it.
They were absolutely wonderful, honorable, honest, fun,
the smallest so-called gang in the prison,
but the one that commanded the most respect.
And once word was out that I was with the Italians,
it was hands off.
And it was thanks to one guy,
shout out to Mark Lanzalotti.
Mark was from Philly,
and he saw in the New York Times
I was going to be assigned to that prison
on a Sunday. I was assigned
on Thursday and
he took it upon himself
to go to every
one of the Italians to say
there's a CIA guy coming here
he's not an FBI
agent. The FBI
are cops and rats. The CIA
protected us from the Muslims
and they're like oh
okay and so it was
you know welcome
no problems
God it has to be insanely stressful
it was like living in the twilight zone
the stress the stress will kill you
it's incredible you see people break down all the time
they just lose it
and it's not like you're gonna you know be taken out to some
medical unit someplace you go to solitary
and you can live or die down in there
yeah oh so I was telling you
so I waited about six weeks
before I was comfortable enough to
write a letter.
So I very arrogantly called it letter from Loretto
because I had such respect for Martin Luther King's letter
from Birmingham jail.
And so I said two things in this.
I mean, I talked about the food
and I talked about the Italians and,
but I said two things.
I said there was this one guard who was really abusive.
She was absolutely horrible.
You know that phrase rode hard and put away wet?
That was this woman.
All tatted out from, you know, the neck down
and just a nasty, mean, old, awful, awful person.
So I was walking through the hall one day, and she said,
hey, are you that motherfucker whose name I can't pronounce at Mail Call?
And I go, Kiriaku, just like it's spelled.
She goes, how about if I call you fuckface?
Like that.
So I said, classy, and I walked away.
Somebody later told me, they're not allowed to talk.
to us that way. That's a violation of, you know, code 11.8 subsection, you know, B, whatever.
So I wrote it in the, in the letter. And I was just like, you know, life in prison. What am I
going to do? This woman swears at me. There's nothing I can do. The other thing was more important.
I had been there three days. And one of my cellmates was an Australian arsonist. And he said,
let me walk you around and introduce you to the guys. I said, okay, we go to this other housing
unit and there's a little tiny guy there who didn't speak any English and he said this is
I forget what his name is Ahmed or something he's from Iraq and I said I should have been
it's very nice to meet you and he says ah that kalam arabi I'm in Iraq I said yeah great
you're from Iraq I was in Iraq it's very nice to meet you turns out he was there in a terrorism
charge he was the imam of some mosque in New York and somebody was trying to sell a stinger missile
somebody and he translated the document the bill of sale and he got wrapped up in this
terrorism case so I get called into the lieutenant's office the next day and usually if
you're being called into the lieutenant's office you're going straight to solitary so I hear
my name kiriaku lieutenant's office immediately always with immediately and they know you can't do
it immediately because all the doors are locked so I wait for a 10 minute move period the
the bells ring and I go to the lieutenant's office I said you wanted to see me and they have
this guy's picture on a on a computer screen you know this guy I said I don't know him I met him
yesterday what'd you say to him I said I said nice to meet you what did he say to you he said
nice to meet you too oh yeah well after you walked out he called a number in Pakistan and they told
him to kill you. I said, get the fuck out of you. I could kill this guy with my thumb. Oh, no, no, don't
do that. We've been looking for a reason to transfer him out. I'm like, okay. So every time I see this
guy, I give him the stink eye, right? And then he gives me the stink eye back. But then the more I
thought about it, the more I thought, that doesn't make any sense. He's Kurdish. He only speaks
Arabic and Kurdish, why would he call a number in Pakistan when they don't speak Arabic in
Pakistan? That just didn't make sense. So I saw him in the yard and I went up to him and he got
kind of scared like he was going to try to defend himself. And I had, you know, six inches and a hundred
pounds on this guy. So I said, wait a minute. I just want to ask you a question. Did the cops say anything
to you about me? And he said, yeah. I said, what did they say to you? And he said, they told me that
after we met, you called a number in Washington and they told you to kill me. And I said,
oh, they did, did they? So I went back to the law library and I looked this up and this was a class
D felony. It was conspiring to commit violence in a federal facility. It's punishable by up to
five years in prison. So I wrote it in my letter and I sent it to my attorney and I didn't give
it a second thought. I didn't know my attorney was friends with Ariana Huffington who then put it
on Huffington Post with this banner headline,
millions of hits.
The next thing I know,
Jake Tapper drives to the prison to interview me,
and it's in,
I mean,
it's everywhere from CNN to Playboy to the economist
and Time Magazine,
when Time Magazine was a thing,
and NPR's calling the prison to interview me,
and the next thing I know,
I'm called to the warden's office.
Well, that's in an off-limits part of the facility.
So the warden calls me in.
like, I'm going to send you to solitary right now.
And I thought, you know, is now the time to be, to be humble before the warden,
or should I stake my claim?
And I said, warden, with all due respect, I've gone nose to nose with al-Qaeda, with
Hezbollah, with the Iranians, and you want me to be afraid of you?
Give me some credit.
He said, yeah?
We'll see what you say when you've spent some time in solitary.
I said, I've lived in Yemen, in Pakistan.
I'm not afraid of your Loretto, Pennsylvania, solitary.
Besides, I said, go ahead and send me to solitary.
CNN's going to be waiting for you next to your car in the parking lot.
And I just looked at him.
I never went to solitary, not for a minute.
Wow.
geez so they're trying to set you guys up
trying to get you guys at each other's throat
and hopefully one of you'll do something they did it one other time
my one of my attorneys know who orchestrated that
no
do you think it was the warden himself no I don't think he was smart enough
I don't think he cared enough it had to come from the agency
oh my god there was one other incident too
I lived in the same block of cells with an Afghan-American pharmacist who had an oxy problem.
Nice guy.
And he came up to me one day and he said, hey, the spokesman for the Taliban is here now and he wants to meet you.
I said, the spokesman for the Taliban.
I said, are you talking about that case in New Jersey?
And he said, yeah.
I said, I don't have anything to say to the spokesman of the Taliban.
I don't want to meet him.
and he said oh okay i'll tell him so i'm out in the yard one day and my attorney had warned me
they're they're upset at the shortness of your sentence so be very careful they're going to try
to set you up and add years on so i'm out in the yard and here comes this guy with a beard down to
his waist and he's got his hand out to shake my hand and i put my hands up so as not to touch him
and I look just past him
and there's a guard in the woods
outside the thing with a long
distance camera lens and he's going
click click click click click click click click click click click click click click click click click click click click click click click and
I said don't you even think about touching me
and he said oh come on man come on we have a lot in common
I said we have nothing in common I spent half my career trying to kill people
like you I said get away from me don't touch me
or you're going to end up unconscious on the ground
and he walked away
and then he got transferred out
and I said
isn't it interesting
that the spokesman
for the Taliban
was sent to our prison
and was only here
for four days
isn't that interesting
and then they just gave up
wow
this kind of stuff
is so hard to believe
it's America
you don't want to believe
this about America
you want to believe
we're the good guys
yeah
and you want to believe
that we would never
turn on our own like that over something that's just.
Yeah, but they do.
But the crazy thing is, it's like the CIA torture program wasn't even effective.
No, that's the thing.
It wasn't even effective.
But you know what, though, Joe, when these guys die, and they've started to die, in their obituaries,
it's going to say that they were among the creators of the CIA's torture program.
And so they have a vested interest in repeating this lie over and over and over again that it was the right thing to do.
What I don't understand is wouldn't they want to be effective?
You would think.
If they were clear-headed, yes.
That's the only thing that makes the least sense to me.
Like, idealistically, I like to think of the people that are in charge of the CIA of having a very important role in national security.
And if you're in a position where you have a very important role in national security, it's imperative to do what is most effective.
And if torture is not most effective, then don't do it.
Then you would abandon torture and use those coercion tactics that the other guy was using.
Yeah, that's right.
And in fact, they ended up abandoning the torture program.
Yeah.
Mitchell and Jesson took their $108 million and they retired to Florida and then
subsequent CIA directors following George Tenet said yeah you know this didn't work
we're not going to do it anymore god I mean I have to laugh just because it's so
nuts what else can you do it's beyond nuts it's disgusting and it's disgusting and it's
It's just amazing that they could get away with that.
Yeah.
And they have.
Nobody's been prosecuted.
Nobody.
Does Trump know about all the stuff?
About my stuff?
Yeah.
Like, have you ever trying to get a pardoned out of him?
I've tried.
Let me rephrase.
I am trying.
So I have a letter that Ronald Reagan's former deputy attorney general generously wrote
asking the president to pardon me. Tucker Carlson signed it. Judge Napolitano signed it. Doug Deeson,
who's a friend of the president, signed it. Sid Miller, who's here in Texas, has signed it. And
the president's former U.S. attorney in Utah has signed it. And then, and I sent it to Ed Martin,
the U.S. pardon attorney. And then other people have said, oh, I would have signed that. So we have a second
letter. Dr. Phil has agreed to sign it. There are a couple of other people, high-level people,
Ken Higian, who was the head of the president's transition team, has signed it. And there are a couple of
others. We had really good news yesterday from the CIA director John Ratcliffe. And he said that
the CIA has no objection, if the president were to pardon me. That's a big deal. That's great news.
We have also a nice one-sentence statement from Tulsi Gabbard saying that she has no objection to a pardon.
So, I don't know, man.
I'm hoping for the best.
You know what they say in business school?
Hope is not a strategy.
But I genuinely don't know what else to do.
Now, you're doing all these conversations.
You did the conversation with Tucker.
You did his show.
You're now doing my show.
You've done a bunch of other shows.
Do you have any concern that in exposing more of what has been done to you, that it somehow limits your possibility of being pardoned because you're exposing so many people that may still be working there?
I'm told that all of my detractors are either dead or retired.
A friend of mine from the CIA called me the other day to say something very funny, that she was sitting in a mandatory security briefing and she said,
One of the slides was just a picture of me.
And it said, the insider threat underneath.
And she said, everybody started to boo.
And the instructor said, why?
Why are you booing?
And one of the guys said, he's not an insider threat.
He's a whistleblower.
And she said, in the next running of the class, my picture was removed.
So I won.
I won.
And John Brennan lost.
That's really what it's come down to.
Oh
It's so hard to hear these stories
It's terrible
It's so hard to imagine
That our government could be so disgusting
Oh my God
I wouldn't wish this on my worst enemy
Truly I wouldn't wish it on anybody
And you know think of it this way
Also at the working level
These FBI agents don't get promoted
By not arresting you
Right
The assistant US attorneys don't get promoted
By not prosecuting you
or by giving you a short sentence.
Right.
Right.
They all see themselves as, you know,
having the corner office at the law firm someday
or running for Congress or for the governor.
And they're going to make that career on your back.
That's the problem, right?
Because there's a lot of cases where people are setting people up.
And, you know, I was talking to a friend of mine
about this one case where there was a,
I'm sure you remember it,
there was a 19-year-old,
I think he was probably at the,
very least intellectually challenged guy and they tricked him into, they radicalized him, gave him a fake bomb, gave him a cell phone. Do you know the story?
I know exactly what you're talking about. And then swept in and got him. And he wasn't planning on doing anything. No. It was they talked him into doing the whole thing. He wasn't a bright person and they got a arrest because of that. So it adds to their career. That's it. Like when I was having a conversation about this, we brought
up the governor
that they were planning on kidnapping
Governor Whitmer
Yeah
Michigan
Yeah
And that 12 of the 14 people
We're working with the FBI
Yeah
Which is just
Listen there are well documented
cases where the FBI
infiltrates a group
And they go to a meeting
And literally everybody in the meeting
is an FBI agent
Like what is that
Is this a joke
This is what the American
taxpayers money goes for you remember have you heard of the root 82 bridge plot in
Cleveland no there are three morons sitting in a bar getting drunk oh I did hear about
this the other guy comes in hey you know what we should do it would be so much fun blow up the
root 82 bridge I have some explosives these guys are drunk they're like yeah let's do
root 82 bridge well the guy with the explosives is an FBI in for me he set them all up
and they got like 2018 and 15 years in prison it was the FBI's idea
not their idea they're just sitting in a bar drinking well how about January 6th how about January 6th
this is there you go I was trying to explain to Jim Gaffigan one day Jim Gaffigan was talking about
what they did in January 6th I go do you understand that there were paid people that were
working for the federal government there were employees of the federal government that were on
that lawn trying to convince people to go in and he was very incredulous he did he did
not believe it. And I said, there are agent provocateurs that are, that is their job to try to
get you to do something illegal. Exactly. So they can build their careers by making these
arrests. Not just that, but demonize the president, the former president to a much larger
extent, to charge him with insurrection, to say that he was plotting to overthrow the
government. Yeah. And as it turns out, the only one who was actually plotting to overthrow the
government was John Brennan.
How was he plotting over to the government?
In 2015 and 2016 with Rushagate.
Oh, right, right.
You know, I remember talking as CIA friends of mine saying, you know, they taught us in training that you've got to follow the evidence.
And there's no evidence that any of this happened.
I worked with Christopher Steele on an operation in London 25 years ago, 26 years ago.
there was this fundamental misunderstanding of what an operations officer was supposed to do.
An operations officer goes out and collects intelligence and then sends it back.
And that's it.
Then it's up to the analyst to decide, this is great, this is crap, this is not true, this is partially true, whatever.
So he goes out there, talks to whatever low-level, terrible sources he happen to have,
writes all this nonsense down, sends it back, and they're like,
oh, look what Donald Trump did.
He hired prostitutes to pee on Barack Obama's bed.
No, he didn't.
One guy made this up, and Christopher Steele wrote it and sent it back.
That doesn't make it fact.
It wasn't it funded by Hillary Clinton?
It sure was.
Yes, it was.
Yeah, which is equally wild.
You made another point I wanted to address.
These January 6 people, let's say that some of them did do whatever, broke the window or went into the building unauthorized.
Okay, then that's deserving of a smack on the hand and a strongly worded letter and maybe a $1,000 fine.
Don't do that again.
30 years in prison?
Again, is society's, you?
really better off
by locking all these people
up and spending millions
and millions of dollars of the taxpayers
money to do it. Of course
not. No, of course not. But it also
just divides us even further. It does.
And it also very much
distorted the narrative with people
like Jim Gaffigan, who's a friend of mine
who's a very left-leaning comedian.
And he had it in his
mind that these people went
and they also have this thing where they say,
was murdered. That's not true.
I hate that. They say it over and over again. That's not true. One cop died after the fact
of a heart attack. You could say maybe it was because of the stress of January 6th, perhaps.
Maybe. Maybe not. Maybe not. Maybe he shouldn't have been a cop. Yeah. I mean, if you can die of a
significant health problems. Right. Like that's not normal to just die of a heart attack because of a very
stressful day. That's, but that's it. This idea that
they killed cops that keep that narrative keeps coming out it was an
insurrection they murdered cops they broke into the White House they were
looking for Nancy Pelosi they were gonna kill her like okay are you sure because
there's a lot of the story that's bullshit now it turns out at one point in time
they were saying it was 20 FBI agents now the the latest number is 270 that's
right yeah that's huge that's a lot of people it's a lot of people that's a lot
of people that are encouraging people to break in and there's many instances of these
suspected people that are on camera a lot of them wearing face masks there's one
of them were guys removing the broken glass from the window and encouraging people
to go in and another guy gets in his face and goes do not do that and then he
pushes that guy fuck you and the other guy backs off how is that not being
investigated as a serious crime and like that that is a serious it's a
violation of what you're supposed to be doing in the first place if the
FBI was on that loan on that lawn I would hope what they would be doing is
informing people entering into this building is a felony breaking these
windows getting into this building is you do not want to do this if you want to
peacefully protest do that but I'm telling you
You this will fuck with you for the rest of your life and most likely ruin it. I think you're a hundred percent right that's what I would hope from law enforcement I wouldn't hope that they would be trying to set people up and from a civil society right you know do we we want to set people up to go to prison we want to wreck families and wreck people's lives why would we want to do that also what was there did they turn down
the idea of bringing in the National Guard?
You know, I really don't understand.
It appears, yes.
It appears that that's exactly what happened.
Also, significantly deterred people from committing these crimes.
That's right.
That they were encouraged to do.
I'll tell you, if I was at a demonstration and all of a sudden, the National Guard showed up, I'd say, ah, this isn't for me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think most people would do that as well.
You're right.
It's crazy.
It's just so gross that our legal system gets used against political opponents in that way, in such a devious and just a sinister way.
Harry Truman once famously said, if you want a friend in Washington, get a dog.
Yeah, yeah.
God, what a gross business.
It's just sad because I also am a patriot.
I want to think of us as better than that.
Yeah, we're the good guys.
And I don't think it's necessarily the fault of these individuals.
I think the system really sucks.
And I think you work for that system.
And just like all these congresspeople that wind up insider trading, everybody else is doing it.
It's the culture.
You get wrapped up in it just like bad cops.
You know, you get assigned to a precinct that's filled with corrupt cops and you have to do things to stay with them.
They're your blood brothers.
and you're all in this together.
And so you wind up doing some criminal activities
that you think are just everybody does it, is what we do.
Yep.
And you're an FBI agent, well, we've got to set this guy up.
Okay, let's set him up.
This is what we do.
Hey, if he doesn't do it, he's not committing a crime.
We got nothing on him, okay?
And then you just convince him to do it,
and he's a fucking idiot.
And so he does it, and he hits that cell phone,
and now you're arresting him, and he's like, what?
Yeah.
And he's so dumb, he barely knows what happened.
Mm-hmm.
And the chances are he can't afford a decent attorney or he's not notorious enough and newsworthy enough to get, you know, A-list attorneys volunteering pro bono.
So he's stuck with a public defender that's going to spend eight hours on the case and he's going to get screwed in the end.
And there's also the narrative that's very difficult to shake.
So if you get accused of some sort of a heinous crime, the narrative for most people that,
are casual viewers of that story is that you're a terrorist.
Yeah.
Or you're a guy who's going to kidnap the governor.
Or you're a guy who is an insurrectionist who's trying to overthrow the government on January 6th.
And then you watch the footage that they wouldn't release during the trials.
And you see them getting a guided tour.
The guided tour through like the security guards are walking them into the Senate.
Like what the fuck?
What is this?
Like what is and why is no one outraged?
And why is it only one side that's outraged?
God, if I was a, if I was a Democrat congressman or a senator, or if I was any sort of a politician on the other side, I'd be like, do you know how disgusting this is?
This is, you're using this to go after Donald Trump?
Of all things.
Instead of just better political opposition.
Exactly.
And the media are to blame in part as well.
Well, they're bought and paid for it.
Absolutely.
I mean, 100%.
The media in this country is a complete and total failure.
The only thing that's real media in this country are independent journalists.
That's right.
And there's mostly people who worked for large media corporations and either were fired or had to leave because their own ethics and morals and eventually branched out on their own.
And now they're in grave danger.
Yeah.
You know, and they're worried about being prosecuted or set up.
I couldn't agree more.
...killed.
Yeah.
It's super sketchy because that's...
We like to think of ourselves as better.
This is the shining example for the rest of the world.
This is the experiment and self-government that the whole world follows this lead.
And when you see that, not just tolerated, but standard.
Yeah, it hurts.
It really does.
I was raised in a family like you were, where I was taught that this was the greatest country
on earth, bar none.
I still think it is.
And I do too.
And that's why we have to weed out
the likes of John Brennan.
God.
But it seems like there's a lot of people like that.
Yeah.
That are deeply rooted.
Yes, indeed.
And this is what you were talking about, too,
that presidents come and go.
But those people, that's the real power.
You know, this term the deep state,
a lot of people that, you know,
there's a lot of people that don't like
to entertain any kind of conspiracies
because they think it's like a fool's journey.
But you're really foolish if you don't believe in conspiracies.
Yeah.
Because just how many of them have to be proven true before you go,
maybe I should reassess my position on these things.
That's 62 years after the JFK assassination.
Right.
We're still learning new information.
Yeah.
Information that's been kept from us.
And still being kept.
There's still a lot of it.
I mean, they were supposed to, that was one of the more disappointing things about this.
Like immediately right off the jump, we're supposed to get all the CIA files, all the JFK files.
We're supposed to know exactly what happened to him.
We know very little, very little new information has been released that illuminates any aspects of that case.
Yeah.
It's a shame.
Yeah, it's terrible because most likely, at least some part of our government was involved in assassinating the president.
And no one went to jail.
No.
Nothing happened.
And in fact, people succeeded and thrived after that.
Sad truth.
Yeah.
That's exactly what happened.
I mean, it goes back, there's so many cases.
Like, I've had conversations with people that, like, they, you know, they don't want to be fools, right?
So that's a lot of the people that don't want to believe in conspiracy.
Like, most of it can be explained away by incompetence or coincidence and this and that.
Like, that's not even true.
It's not even most of it.
Most of it. It's some things can be explained. Some things. I had a friend at the agency. He was one of my first bosses. And he had started out in this like internship program that the agency had the, it was a, you had to be working on a master's degree. But anyway, his first assignment was in the counterintelligence center, which at the time was being run by James Angleton. And on his first day, the secretary,
walked him around and you know this is what we do over here and this is what we do over there
and there was this entire wall of file folders and she said whatever you do don't look in those
folders you're not cleared for that well he said well of course the very first minute that he's
left alone he runs and looks in the folders and he said every single one of those folders
was on an american citizen and the CIA is forbidden by law
from spying on Americans.
Oh, God.
Yeah.
The crazy thing, too, in a lot of people's eyes,
is the difference between what they thought of,
what the narrative is of the Obama administration
in terms of, like, whistleblowers,
and, like, what the hope was.
You know, it was hope and change, right?
Oh, hope and change.
And you know the statistic.
The espionage act was written in 1917.
to combat German saboteurs during the First World War.
Between 1917 and 2009, three Americans
were charged with espionage for speaking to the media.
Under Barack Obama, eight people
were charged with espionage for speaking to the media.
So he was the enemy of whistleblowers.
Not only that, that was part of his campaign.
Yeah. Part of his campaign was protection of whistleblowers.
Absolutely.
In fact, it was in the hope and change.
website. Yeah. Well, look at the Dahti Layli massacre that I mentioned earlier. It was part of his
campaign to open an investigation of Dahti Leli. What happened was at Dahti Lali Afghanistan on November
the 30th and December the 1st, 2001, 2,000 Taliban soldiers gave up en masse, right? And the Northern
Alliance called us and said, what do we do with all these guys? We don't have room for them.
So we told them put them in trucks, take them out to the desert, and just hold them there
until we can divide them up and send them to smaller jails all around the country.
And if we have to, we can send some to Pakistan.
But there were no air holes in the containers.
There was no food.
There was no water.
And of the 2014 survived.
And one of the 14 said that when they opened the trucks in the desert,
the bodies fell out like sardines from a can.
So Barack Obama said in 2008, if he's elected president, he's going to investigate this massacre and get to the bottom of it.
And then there was nothing.
So I said to John Kerry, I said, listen, this is part of the Obama campaign.
Let me go to Afghanistan and investigate this thing.
And so I went.
And there are still bones just sticking out of the sand.
There are clothes that have just been laying there in the desert all these years.
bodies are still there. What's left of them?
Really? Yeah, it's grizzly.
So I come
back and I get a call
from a kind of a prominent human rights
activist and he said, wanted to see me, but it had
to be private. So we went to
Johns Hopkins University.
There was a classroom that
wasn't being used. We met there and he said,
listen, I have a witness
who was 12 years old at the time
and he
was hiding behind a rock
and he saw what happened when they opened the trucks and the bodies fell out.
I said, okay.
And he said, but what's new is he says that there were two men there wearing blue jeans and black t-shirts and they were speaking English.
I said, okay, that's all I need.
So I wrote a letter to the agency and I asked, you know, for clarification, were any CIA personnel on site at the box up or at the location where, at the location where,
the trucks were opened and I had it auto penned John Kerry chairman six weeks later a colleague
comes into my office and he says hey you got a response from the agency to your letter I said I didn't
see any response from the agency I just checked my mail an hour ago and he said they classified
it top secret it's down in the vault I said top secret I said well what did it say and he says
it says go fuck yourself I said great that's how they want to play it
So I went to Carrie, and Carrie says,
Ah, you know, we're stirring up a hornet's nest here,
and I think we should just let this fade into history.
I was like, again?
Because you want so badly to be Secretary of State again.
God, what a gross business.
It's awful, hideous.
What is it like for you on the outside now?
watching what's going on in the world?
There are some places that I'm optimistic about.
And actually, there are some developments
that may look ugly on the surface
that I'm optimistic about.
First of all, this C-Spire...
We're recording this on, I guess, today's Thursday,
but the C-Sfire that was announced this morning,
this is huge, huge.
And I think this is not a victory for these Israelis.
I think that it makes Donald Trump stronger and Benjamin Netanyahu weaker.
Netanyahu's decision to bomb gutter was too much, just too much.
It served, it could have served to embarrass the president.
What it ended up doing is it weakened Netanyahu's position.
So that's a victory for the White House, as far as I'm concerned.
Can I stop you real quick?
Yeah.
The correct pronunciation?
How did you say it?
Gutter.
You said gutter.
It's a kha. It's back here. It's called a kaff.
But so I've heard Kater. It's not Kutter, but G. You're saying it like a G?
They use a G sound.
Gator. Other Arabs would call it Qatar with like a Kha. But in the Gulf dialect, it's way down here.
Qatar. Qatar. Okay.
The other thing is Iran. Man, I follow Iran more closely than anybody I know.
you remember you're you're a little bit younger than i am but not much um when we were kids we had a
terrible relationship with china and richard nixon was the most anti-china person that could possibly
have been elected president yet it was nixon that went to china and made peace with the chinese
and open diplomatic relations and i call me crazy but i think that if there's going to be
peace with iran donald trump's going to make that peace with iran it may not be
in the form of a trip to Tehran, but I could see a trip to Riyadh, and have a meeting
brokered by Muhammad bin Salman, and maybe we can come to some sort of an agreement on issue
number one or issue number two.
Well, it seems to be a part of what he wants to accomplish in these four years, is that
he wants to go down as having made significant change in the world in a positive direction.
And we're seeing it, whether people want to admit it or not.
That's part of the problem because of narratives.
That's it.
You know, peace between India and Pakistan doesn't fit in the Democratic Party's narrative that Donald Trump is a warmonger.
He's not a warmonger.
Ask, you know, the Africans that he's weighed in for.
And we have peace in sub-Saharan Africa now.
Or this agreement today between Hamas and the Israelis.
You know, I think this is the first of several new developments that's going to lead to the end of this conflict.
What is your take on Netanyahu's position?
Because if war is over, Netanyahu will no longer be running Israel.
Is that correct?
Eventually, Netanyahu has a vested interest in making sure that this war lasts as long as possible.
Because remember, he's still under indictment for corruption.
Also, one thing that most Americans don't understand is,
the Israeli political system is such
that it is literally impossible
for any party to win a working majority
in the Knesset. Right? There are just
too many parties and too
many individual interests. So you've
got, you know, a dozen parties represented.
Benjamin Netanyahu has
never won more
than 27% of the vote.
Wow. He's very unpopular.
It's just that he's the
least unpopular of the
unpopular politicians.
And it's a crazy way to run a country.
One of the things that the Greeks did, because the Greeks had the same problem.
There are just too many parties, right?
So you win 20% and you become the prime minister.
20%, nobody wants you.
So what they did is they raised the threshold to which you have to meet to win election to the parliament from 3% to 5%.
So that narrows it down to like six or seven parties.
But then the party that comes in first, first past the poll, gets an extra 50 seats.
then you don't have to go into any coalition governments with anybody and you can run the country for four years or five years whatever it happens to be that's what the Israelis need to do but but Netanyahu longest serving prime minister in Israeli history wildly unpopular and it's funny because he used to be considered a right-wing extremist and now he's the moderate of the government really the likes of Idemar Ben-Gavir and and Smotrich and these other guys
who have come in from the right,
they were attacking him to the point
where he had to bring their parties
into this coalition government
just to get him to shut up.
I mean, these are people
that have felony convictions
for anti-Arab hate crimes
and now they're, you know,
Minister of National Security,
Minister of Finance with Responsibility
for the West Bank.
What's that?
Wow.
It's a terrible, untenable position.
haven't they decided to go ahead and prosecute him even while he's in office?
Yeah, there's an ongoing dispute that the Israeli Supreme Court has weighed in on a number of times.
So the Minister of Justice is appointed, of course, by the Prime Minister.
But the Supreme Court is independent of the Prime Minister and the Minister of Justice.
So the Minister of Justice says you can't prosecute him while he's Prime Minister.
And the Supreme Court says, oh, yes, you came.
and orders the court then to continue the case.
So if the case is going to be continued,
Netanyahu's only viable strategy is delaying tactics.
Appeal after appeal after appeal.
You submit motions on little technical issues.
Maybe you get them to focus on Mrs. Netanyahu,
who's also under indictment,
and you just delay it as long as you can.
But the best argument that he has is,
I can't focus on my own defense because I have a war to prosecute.
Well, if there's peace, then he's going to have to go on trial.
Wow.
Which incentivizes him to stay at war, which is so crazy.
Isn't it, though?
Strange situation.
Well, a lot of people aren't aware that there was hundreds of thousands of people protesting in the streets before October 7th.
Oh, you're exactly right.
In fact, in August, we saw the biggest protest.
protests in American history, I'm sorry, in Israeli history demanding that Netanyahu resign. And it
was all because of corruption. And what is the specific corruption that he's being accused of?
You know, it's changed over the years. Some of it had to do with business. Others had to do,
other accusations had to do with him trying to essentially sell positions in the government.
But, you know, I read the accusations when they first came out. They weren't strong.
They're defensible.
So I don't know why he doesn't just grab the bull by the horns and go for it.
Wow.
So out of all the issues that we face internationally, do you think that the Israel-Palestine is the most significant one?
I don't, actually.
I think the threat is greater from China.
the Chinese are incredibly patient
there was a there was a joke in
the onion the other day it was a bunch of Chinese
guys just sitting around the table
and it said
the Chinese government sits and waits for the
United States to self-destruct
or continue its self-destruction
or something like that it's because they know
that they can they can outweigh us
you know we
we have convinced ourselves over the decades that we have to be all around the world protecting
the weak and those without a voice and being the peacemaker.
You know, we have, we have 190 bases and 144 countries.
We have to do all that.
And the Chinese say, yeah, yeah, you have to.
Go ahead.
Spend all your money on that stuff.
In the meantime, we're going to have three.
350 mile an hour trains and the best highways in the world and the best schools and the best hospitals and the nicest airports and then all of our extra money. We're going to essentially bribe foreign countries to do things that we want them to do. So it's a lesson that I think we haven't learned as a country that there are other ways of of winning hearts and minds.
what's also they're actively engaged in making sure that people are arguing online
yeah you know they're very good at these kinds of behind the scenes like quasi
spy like surreptitious actions they actively promote us arguing fighting disagreeing they
promote these societal disruptions that we're all
so worried about and you know we we blame the russians all the time and certainly the russians
do this kind of thing too but it's the chinese that have really perfected it and i think that
most americans don't realize how much we should be worried about that and trying to counter it
well what could be done to counter it because a lot of it is what's going on in social media is
echo chambers people exist in these echo chambers are completely addicted to their smartphones
They're on the algorithm all day long.
They're checking things and getting ramped up by things.
And they're being told various narratives, whatever it is.
And there was a story recently about China getting caught using ChatGPT for various different services where they were using bots.
And so they had done it automated through ChatGPT.
Brad Parzcal is doing it right now on behalf of the Israelis.
He recently won a $6 million contract.
to train chat GPT to be more pro-Israel.
It was in Reason Magazine a couple of days ago.
Well, you also have the recent purchase of TikTok.
Absolutely.
A lot going on.
Which I think could be very helpful for us.
One of the things that we're bad at is identifying bots
and controlling bots once they've been identified.
I'll give you an example.
I write columns all the time and have my own,
little podcast and
and I said that I was optimistic
that a deal seemed to be at hand
you know between Israel and the guys of Palestinians
and then immediately I started getting attacked
and it was it was by obviously
anonymous
writers I can't imagine that these writers
are human beings they had to be bots
one called me virulently
anti-Semitic
because I
said this deal
that it appears the president has negotiated
was a good idea.
So I'm virulently anti-Semitic.
And then they built on that
and by the end of it
and nobody else was commenting
but by the end of it they said
that I was
morbidly obese
and ugly and stupid too.
I was like, what the fuck is that?
That does sound Chinese.
Morbidly obese,
ugly and stupid too.
Uh-huh.
You don't even look a little fat.
No.
No, I'm 6.1.19.
I feel like I'm okay.
You look great.
That's so funny.
It's kind of hilarious, though.
But if you just say things, enough people are going to believe it that it's effective.
But at least it moves a narrative into a certain direction.
You know, and chat GPT and these other chatbots are very easy to influence.
When chat GPT first came out, just for fun, I said, who is John Kyriaku?
and it said, John Kiriaku is a former CIA officer,
blew the whistle on the torture program, etc.
John Kiriaku graduated from the University of Maryland
and earned a master's degree in peace studies
from the University of Bruges in Belgium.
I don't even know where the University of Maryland is located specifically.
I know it's called College Park.
I don't know how to get there.
I've never been to the University of Maryland.
I didn't know there was a university in Bruges,
let alone one that gave me a degree in peace studies.
So I said, John Kiriaku graduated from George Washington University with degrees in this and that.
And it says, you are incorrect.
And I said, no, you are incorrect.
And then it says, no, you are incorrect.
And then I just gave up.
Why didn't you just say, I'm actually John Kiriakou, you fucking idiot?
I was afraid it was going to do to me.
But I mean, did you ask it, where are you getting your information from?
No, but it pulls from literally everywhere.
Right. So there's a narrative out there somehow or another that there's universities that you never attended.
Right. Huh. Yeah. Yeah. And then, you know, if you make somebody angry, you can be just deleted from chat GPT. A friend of mine was Pulitzer Prize nominated political cartoonist, Ted Rawl. He did the same thing. Who is Ted Rawl? Well, Ted Rawl, we know, is 15 years at the
the Los Angeles Times as an award-winning editorial cartoonist.
It says, there is no such person as Ted Raw.
Hmm.
So I wonder who he pissed off.
Have you tried subsequently?
No.
Let's see what perplexity says.
Okay.
Pull up, that's what we use.
That's one of our sponsors.
Let's see who is John Carriaco.
Let's see if they get it wrong, too.
Because if that's the case, that means somebody probably planted this incorrect
information out there into it which is like how and why like what would be the purpose of doing
that what I mean especially something that's not even derogatory no it's just it's just factually
incorrect yeah about your education you gave you different places that you went to school which is weird
like that doesn't even make sense no like what would what would be the benefit of that
I have no idea no answer well I was trying to get that didn't give the education but it just
Ask it, who is John Kariaku?
Let's see what it says.
Who is John Kariaku?
Okay.
American whistleblower, author, journalist, former intelligence officer.
All that stuff's true.
Personal background.
CIA, 1990.
All this is accurate.
Yeah.
All of that is accurate.
Whistleblowing and legal case, recognition and advocacy,
remain active in speaking out against torture and advocating for government transparency
and ethical intelligence policies.
All that's true.
Yep.
So, perplexity gets it absolutely correct.
Absolutely correct.
So ask a follow-up, what is his education history?
There it is.
Graduated from Newcastle High School, Washington University.
All this is accurate.
All that's correct.
Okay, so it seems like whatever it was was just in chat GPT, which is really weird.
I'm using perplexity from now on.
What do you think it could have been?
What would be the benefit of giving incorrect information?
about your education in chat GPT.
I don't know.
I don't know, but I'll tell you, I used chat GPT.
I teach a class in a graduate school class in the history of terrorism at the University of Salamanca in Spain.
And so I was very proud of the course outline that I had written up.
And I put the whole thing, I just cut and paste it into chat GPT.
And I asked it to recommend scholarly journal articles that I could use to use.
to supplement, you know, the books that I had recommended.
So for the 14 sessions of the pod, it gave me 14 different links.
Every single one of the links was fake.
Whoa.
Every single one of them.
There were no such links.
There were no such articles.
It just made it all up.
Is it possible that chat GPT is like, has a mandate to fuck with you?
You know what I mean?
It's possible, I suppose.
Because imagine if you weren't doing your due diligence.
Right.
And you just incorporated those links and they're like, oh my God,
karaoke is a fraud.
These aren't even real articles.
Yeah.
This is bullshit.
Right.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
I think so too.
Do you, I mean, you must be paranoid.
I mean, you have to be, right?
I'm paranoid.
You have to be.
I mean, but you must be because of what's happened to you.
When you see something like that, you must be like, what the fuck?
It's almost like they're just always trying to get you.
Yeah.
Yeah. I do feel that way sometimes. I'm sure that you do too. You know, the old saying, just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you. Yeah. There were times when I, after I got out of prison, the first two years after I got out of prison that every once a while, and I'll preface this by saying, I was a surveillance detection instructor at the CIA. Every once in a while, I would see surveillance. And I would write down the license number and just call my lawyer. And then he'd call me, you know, a day.
later and say it's the FBI they're just curious as to what you're up to and I'd say all they
have to do is ask it's all they have to do they don't have to follow me to get pizza with a buddy
of mine and rest in you know see them following you they're really not good at surveillance
which is horrible because that's their job right god john you've been through a quite an
Odyssey. It's awful. It really is awful. I'm serious when I say I wouldn't wish it on anybody. It's a
horrible thing. But it's, it's also awful because you've done so much good for your country.
I've tried. That's what's crazy. And that's, I, look, I'm, you know, I criticize intelligence
agencies and everybody else who are doing wrong things, but I think they're important, very important.
I do too. When people say we need to dismantle the CIA and dismantle, like, what are you talking about?
Like Mike Baker, I've had long conversations with him about threats overseas.
Like if you talk to someone who's actually worked in the field, they will give you an understanding of all the bad things that are happening in the world that we have to keep tabs on.
Like don't say we should not pay attention.
That is fucking crazy talk.
You just don't want to corrupt CIA.
That's right.
That's it.
That's the bottom line right there.
We don't want to corrupt CIA.
We don't want to politicize CIA.
Politicized, yes.
I'll give you another example.
Yesterday, just yesterday, the deputy director.
of the CIA Ellis named himself
the acting general counsel
and people were like oh my God I woke up
and I see these podcasts oh my God
Ellis is taken over the CIA
so I do a little bit
of research and by the end
of it I was like yeah
I would have done the same thing if I were Ellis
he's qualified
right he's had all the
the relative jobs
NSA ODNI
CIA
House Intelligence Committee
he's done all these jobs
he wants the office of the general
counsel to do what it's told to do
to further the mission of the CIA
and they refused to do it
and so he took over
you can't criticize that
yeah that seems like if he's
a just man that seems like a good
response but I don't know
I don't know enough about that world to comment
on it honestly but getting back to your point
and Mike Baker's point
you know, and I'm out of the CIA, so I don't know as much as I used to know on a daily
basis. But, but Americans get only just a little, a little tidbit of what's happening in the
world. Like, we don't read about these emerging threats, for example. We'll never know
about some kind of counterterrorism operation that succeeded, you know, and that saved
Americans from a terrorist attack
well just never know because that's the
that's the nature of intelligence right
you're not supposed to know right
you know the likes of Timothy Weiner
will write a book about
failures
but the successes
have to remain secret
wow
what is it like
having been a public servant
haven't worked for the government
and having done
all these things that are
so critical and important for national security.
And then to have that machine turn on you, do your time in prison and come out and now
being someone who talks about it all.
Yeah.
It was hard at first, Joe.
I won't lie to you.
I felt really alone in the world.
And then a couple of days after my arrest, I got an email from a retired deputy director
of the CIA, a guy that I had worked for at the very start of my career.
And he said, I saved this as a kind of a souvenir.
He said, you've chosen a difficult path.
I only wish that I had had the guts to do it myself.
Whoa.
And that made it, that changed my entire outlook on what I was facing.
That I actually wasn't alone.
And most of my CIA friends, like the people who were truly friends of mine at the CIA
are still friends of mine today.
Oh, that's great.
They had to be discreet about it for a little while, but they never walked away from me.
Well, that's great.
Well, John, you're a strong man.
You know, I know how you've gone through all this, come out on the other side as a person who comments on the state of the intelligence agencies.
I'll add to that the election of Donald Trump,
in kind of an odd way, freed me up to be more vocal because the Obama people and the Biden people
were far, far more willing to say, that is speech that we don't like.
That needs to be prosecuted.
And with Donald Trump, and I don't know if he even meant to do this.
this or not. It's like so much more is out there and in the public realm, the public domain.
Why do you think that is? You know, I think at the end of the day, that's populism. It's just a
different way of looking at government. It's funny because under populism, the feeling is very
strong that they work for us, and they answer to us. And with these mainstream,
mainstream administrations, whether it's Obama, Biden, George W. Bush, it's like, well, the wise men are running the government, so we need to sit by quietly and let them do their important work.
And that's how things like the Patriotac gets snuck is.
Exactly right. That's a great point. Yes. And the NDA. And the NDA. Oh, we're not going to use that.
Right. We don't use that on.
Don't worry.
You know, when I was on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee staff, the Obama administration passed the NDAA in 20, whatever it was.
15.
Where they legalized propagandization of the American people.
Right.
This came out of the most innocuous issue.
We had this propaganda station, radio and television, called Radio TV Marti, and it was beamed at
Cuba, right? The only thing the Cubans really care about watching from us is baseball. So we would
broadcast a lot of baseball games. But the way it was being broadcast from Florida, there was this
little strip of land on the Gulf Coast in southern Florida where they could pick it up, but only with
like dish network, I think is what it was. Well, that's illegal because it's a propaganda station and
Americans can't watch American propaganda.
And so rather than
not broadcast it anymore
or move the satellite
or whatever, they decided
we'll change the law
to make it easier
and legal to propagandize
the American people. So now
the government can produce any
propaganda that it wants
and foisted on the American people.
It's like, thank you, Barack Obama.
Now I don't even know if the news
that I'm reading is real or not.
Thank you.
That is so insane.
That is so insane that that's the origin of it.
Wow.
Yeah.
Lazy bastards.
Well, lazy and also just taking advantage of an opportunity.
Because this is an opportunity to push something through that could be beneficial if you want to push propaganda on the American people.
And up until now, it's been illegal.
That's right.
Has there ever been any talk of turning that back?
No.
No, a lot of people believe that after Ed Snowden's revelations, it would be turned back, even if it were just, you know, one part at a time.
And that's just never happened.
No.
Where's the outrage?
No, where is the outrage?
And he's got to hide in Russia.
Mm-hmm.
Yep.
Crazy.
Depressing.
Do you think it could possibly push further in that direction?
Oh, I think that, that, first of all, 100% yes.
I think that it's natural that it would push further.
It's up to us to push back.
And I don't think the American people have their act together enough.
Well, we're too divided.
Yeah, that's part of the problem.
But something like the NDA should be a nonpartisan issue.
Everyone should be looking at that and go, this is crazy.
Something like using propaganda against American citizens.
Like, what's the pros and what's the cons?
I want two columns.
I want you to write down all the things that are going to be negatively affected by propaganda on American citizens, all the ways that could be used corruptly, and then all the positives we're going to get out of it.
Yeah.
Oh, we can lie to Cuba.
Fuck you.
That's not enough.
No, it's not enough.
I went to Cuba last year because they translated my first two books into Spanish and put them in the National Library of Cuba.
and they had this ceremony during the international book, something or other,
for a bunch of American authors.
So I went.
And before I went, my editor at Consortium News said,
do me a favor.
He said, ever since I was a little kid, I've been an avid radio listener.
He said, tune in after sunset, when the signals are stronger,
tune in to American radio stations and tell me if the Cubans are jamming them
or if you can hear stations.
I said, that's a great idea.
So I had a radio there in my hotel room, and I got too many American stations.
Miami and Fort Myers and anything you want to hear in Cuba from the United States, you can hear.
They don't jam anything.
And it's baseball, baseball, baseball, baseball.
They want to hear every baseball game.
We don't need radio TV marty.
You know, I get a kick out of the Washington Post.
just clobbers Carrie Lake all the time.
Every time she testifies on Capitol Hill about the voice of America,
they're like, no, we need Voice of America.
We need to spend another $50 million to.
Why?
We don't need to propagantize them.
First of all, have you ever heard of this thing called the Internet?
Right?
Because that's where almost everybody gets their information.
You want to propagandize people.
Do it on the Internet.
Not on some AM radio station that you're beaming on.
off into space in the middle of the night.
But they must be doing that anyway.
They must be using it to propacandizing.
I should hope so.
I mean, these bots that we're worried about from China, a bunch of them have to also
be from America.
I would assume some agency.
Yeah.
Which is just like, and then as AI gets more and more powerful, that's the race, like,
who's in charge of that?
Yeah.
Like, how does that go?
And what happens when everything gets automated?
And what happens when everyone gets on universal basic income and then they're relying
entirely in the government.
Right.
Yeah.
Good point.
And this is maybe a decade away.
It's coming.
Yeah.
Is there anything else you're concerned about before we wrap this up that you want to talk about?
I'm less concerned about the Russians.
I think the president has played this right.
He tried to kind of force the two sides together.
He got pushed back.
He did what he could.
We just have to wait until they slug it out.
And then when it looks like one's going down, then we can step in and try to
negotiate something but what are you going to do is that really the only solution at this point you
know i have a lot of friends who are um professors of russian studies soviet studies all this stuff
and they all say the same thing that the russians are winning the ukrainians are losing so the
policy decision is do we really want to jump in on the side of the ukrainians or do we want to
let diplomacy let diplomats do what they're paid to do and i always say sure
we used to make fun of the Bush administration when I was at the agency because we had never seen an administration work so hard to not speak to our enemies, right?
We weren't allowed to talk to the Russians or the Chinese or the North Koreans or the Iraqis or the Iranians or the Cubans, the Venezuelans.
Like, my God, who do we talk to?
We're not going to accomplish anything diplomatically if we just talk to the British and the French and the Germans.
So keeping the lines of communication open, I think are very important to settling this.
I think eventually what everybody predicted at the very beginning of the hostilities is going to be the final result.
And that is that the Ukrainians are going to lose territory.
And the Russians are going to have to agree to probably fast track membership into the European Union for Ukraine.
And not NATO membership, but major non-NATO ally status, the same status that we have for us.
Australia and Japan and Bahrain and Saudi Arabia and the Emirates and Ukraine.
I think that's how it's going to end up.
I just can't imagine why they would want to keep it going.
I mean, at this point, they're...
What I'm told is that Putin is under great pressure from his military establishment.
That the Russian people don't necessarily want this to continue as much as the Russian military leadership does.
That's what these professors.
are telling me.
And why do they want to continue it?
Because they want to destroy Ukraine.
They want to take Kiev.
They want it to collapse.
You know, there are a lot of Russians who don't believe that Ukraine is a legitimate
country.
You know, even Crimea.
Crimea was Russian until 1953.
Khrushchev gave it to the Ukrainians as a gift.
And then the Russians took it back in 14.
And so they feel the same way about Kiev.
Mm-hmm.
It's just whole horrible to see like 60-year-old men getting conscripted
Right off the street
And yeah, kidnapped
Just sent right to the front of the line right to the wood chipper
Yeah, it's just terrible
And we don't even know the real numbers
No, we don't
It's got to be huge
For the Ukrainians at least
So you're not concerned about that
You think that's going to work itself out
As tragic as it is
I think it's going to burn itself out eventually
I'm very worried that the Israelis are going to attack Iran again.
I'm worried that the Israelis aren't going to respect the deal that appears to be in process in Gaza or the West Bank.
I mean, we're not talking about the West Bank.
Right.
Where just two weeks ago, a Christian village ceased to exist because settlers from New Jersey took all their houses.
You know, what happens next in the West Bank?
Are settlers from New Jersey?
Yeah.
There are a lot of synagogues in New York, New Jersey, Toronto that have these things called real estate seminars where you can put your name on a list and then they call you and say, hey, a house just opened up over here in this Arab village that's not Arab anymore.
Come and take your house.
And two weeks ago, the village that the Israelis cleared out was one of the last remaining Christian villages.
drives me crazy so what do you think their overall strategies they eventually want to just take over
all i i think we should we should believe the israelis when they tell us that that they believe
in greater israel which includes the west bank the gaza strip the southern quarter of lebanon
a strip in in southwestern syria and i mean the map that netanyahu had at the u.n the other day
included the Sinai Peninsula for heaven's sake what's that all about they took the
sinai in the 67 war and gave it back after the camp david accords so this yeah we've i'm
worried about about israel yeah what are you worried about israel's influence on american
politics because that's one of the things that's coming to light over the last couple of years
since the invasion, where people are paying more and more attention to Israel, and then also seeing
what happens when you criticize Israel.
They are very quick to primary elected officials who criticize Israel, and usually they'll win
those primaries.
APAC is very well funded.
It is very, very well organized.
It's the gold standard of lobbying organizations.
I've never understood why APAC doesn't have to register as a...
foreign agent with the Justice Department when everybody else does why is APEC special that
it doesn't have to register you know back in 2008 I guess it was I want a very small
contract to write it was like six op-eds for the Abu Dhabi Chamber of Commerce and it
was because I was going to write op-eds that supported American business in
in Abu Dhabi, right?
So I had to go on FARA.gov, F-A-R-A.gov,
it's the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
And there's a form there.
And I said, yeah, I took, you know, I won this contract.
It was like 30 grand to write these six op-eds.
And the source of the income is the Abu Dhabi Chamber of Commerce.
And here's my name and my address, my phone number.
Enter, done.
I registered.
So if you're doing something, anything, on behalf of a foreign government, you have to register, except if you're AIPAC.
And I just don't understand that.
That seems so insane.
And whenever you see like just dozens of senators and Congress people going over to Israel, like.
Oh, oh, man.
And my very first week in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee staff, these lobbyists came in.
It was a parade of lobbyists all the time.
Every day they're coming in asking for something.
So these two guys came in could not have been any friendlier.
Hi, welcome to Capitol Hill.
I said, oh, thanks.
It's not my first go-round.
I've worked on Capitol Hill before.
Well, we wanted to welcome you with an all-expenses paid trip to the Holy Land.
I said thanks no I can pay for my own vacations but I appreciate it oh nonsense we'll take you to all the Christian holy sites thank you I've been I don't want to go and some of my colleagues went for their all expenses paid trip to the holy land courtesy of A-PAC I was like yeah no thank you not interested yeah and that's just the beginning of it that's
nothing compared to helping
out your campaigns. Well, I'll tell
you, I tell this story a lot, but I
think it's appropriate
here. I had been at the
agency for
two and a half months, maybe.
Two, about two
and a half months. And I was
told to give my very first
liaison briefing. So this is
going to be the Israeli
Mossad and Shinbet.
And I was going to be
one of about eight analysts.
and I was the most junior, so I would go last.
Well, we don't allow the Israelis into CIA headquarters.
We used to, but every time they would come,
they'd say, hey, we brought gifts.
Here's a gift for you.
And it's all packed full of listening devices and batteries.
Every one of them?
Every one of them.
And we'd say, you guys, you can't come back here every single time
and try to bug our conference rooms.
What'd they say to that?
Oh, sorry.
We're not sure how that happened.
So we're like, yeah, you can't come in here anymore.
So we rent an office where we meet the Israelis off campus.
Wow.
Yeah, because you just can't trust them.
That is so crazy.
We got to this briefing and it's just two people.
It's a woman who was the Mossad officer and an older guy who was the shin bet officer.
So because we were all overt, we were giving our true names.
And first, the senior political officer gives her briefing and then the econ guy and the
military guy and the oil guy and finally comes around to me. So I said, my name is John
Kiryaku and I'm going to brief you on Saddam Hussein's current psychology. And the
shinbet guy goes like this. He goes, spell your name. So I spell it. He writes it down.
And he's looking at me over his glasses and he goes, you are Jewish? And I said, I am not
recruitable. Don't even think about trying to recruit me. Afterwards, I was furious. I went back
to the office. My boss said, how did it go? I said, that son of a gun, Shinbet guy tried to
recruit me. Everybody started laughing. I said, why is that so funny? And he said, they've done that
to every single one of us. It's like they can't help themselves. It's crazy how effective it is,
though. Oh, yeah. Look at Jonathan Pollard. Now he's running for the Knesset. Bastard.
It's just crazy how much influence one country has. Yeah, it really is. On a much bigger country.
Much bigger. And they have such a tiny population. I know. What is it like 9 million people?
Yeah. Pretty gangster. It's pretty gangster. Kudos. It really is. It's like Chicago taking over
the world. That's right. Right? And saying,
And we're going to do things our way.
Not even Chicago.
Chicago might have more people.
Fuck.
Wow.
Well, listen, John, I really appreciate your time.
And thank you.
And thank you for your story.
Thank you so much for having me.
This was a real treat for me.
It's a horrible thing that they did to you.
But I'm so glad you're out so we can get your insight.
Thank you very much.
Appreciate you very much.
Pleasure.
Thanks all my mind.
All right.
Bye, everybody.
Thank you.
