The Jordan Harbinger Show - 1145: Rwanda 2025 | Out of the Loop
Episode Date: April 27, 2025On this Out of the Loop, Nathan Paul Southern and Lindsey Kennedy explain the consumer decisions and corporate interests fueling conflict in Rwanda.Welcome to what we're calling our "Out of t...he Loop" episodes, where we dig a little deeper into fascinating current events that may only register as a blip on the media's news cycle and have conversations with the people who find themselves immersed in them. Investigative journalists Nathan Paul Southern and Lindsey Kennedy are here to help us understand why we're hearing a lot about Rwanda in recent news.Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/1145On This Episode of Out of the Loop, We Discuss:The M23 militia has recently resurged in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), taking over parts of North Kivu province and effectively controlling access to valuable mineral resources like cobalt, gold, and coltan — minerals critical for modern technology including electric vehicles and AI chips.There appears to be a connection between the UK's Rwanda refugee resettlement program (which sent hundreds of millions of pounds to Rwanda) and the reemergence of the M23, which had previously disappeared when international aid was threatened to be cut off. The timing suggests the UK money may have indirectly funded the militia.Rwanda is allegedly stealing minerals from the DRC, bringing them across the border, and claiming they were mined in Rwanda — creating the appearance of "conflict-free" minerals that major tech companies like Apple and Tesla can claim to use, even though they ultimately come from conflict zones.The conflict has become increasingly complicated with the involvement of private military contractors from various countries, Russian interests, and American billionaires like Elon Musk and Eric Prince potentially making deals to control mineral resources in the region.Understanding these complex global connections can empower us to make more ethical consumer choices. By researching which companies prioritize truly ethical sourcing and supporting organizations that monitor conflict minerals, we can use our purchasing power to encourage corporate responsibility and transparency in global supply chains for technologies we rely on daily.And much more!Connect with Jordan on Twitter, on Instagram, and on YouTube. If you have something you'd like us to tackle here on an Out of the Loop episode, drop Jordan a line at jordan@jordanharbinger.com and let him know!Connect with Nathan Paul Southern on Twitter.Connect with Lindsey Kennedy at her website and on Twitter.And if you're still game to support us, please leave a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: jordanharbinger.com/dealsSign up for Six-Minute Networking — our free networking and relationship development mini course — at jordanharbinger.com/course!Subscribe to our once-a-week Wee Bit Wiser newsletter today and start filling your Wednesdays with wisdom!Do you even Reddit, bro? Join us at r/JordanHarbinger!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Today, an out-of-the-loop episode with our friends Nathan Paul Southern and Lindsay Kennedy,
they were on earlier a few years ago cracking open the scam call centers in how,
many of them are actually run by human traffickers and slave labor. So all those scam calls,
scam texts you get are often by people being held against their will. And today we'll do an update
on the cyber slavery thing, people being trafficked into those scam call centers. Also the connection
between cyber slavery, North Korea, Yakuza, triads, and other organized crime groups as well as scam
call centers, plus an update on what the heck is going on in Rwanda and Congo. Surprisingly,
they're actually connected in some ways. Congo and Rwanda are actually fighting over control
of mineral resources with the help of Russian, U.S. and other foreign private military companies.
This, however, is an insane new level of conflict, which not only involves governments,
but also involves corporations, which hire armed groups to fight one another for natural
resources. Yes, it is as crazy as it sounds. So here we go, out of the loop on cyber slavery
and Rwanda with Nathan Paul Southern and Lindsay Kennedy. Every time I talk to you guys,
it's a weird time over there, and yes, there's time zone stuff, but I just get the idea that
your city, Phnom Pen in Cambodia, is just 24-hour operation? Is that accurate? Yeah. Nathan is literally
sitting in a 24-hour bar next to the flat. 24-hour bar sounds like it could be a dangerous place,
not just for you as somebody who likes to drink a little bit, but for the type of clientele
that a 24-hour bar attracts, sounds like it could go from the backpacker all the way up to
who's at a bar at 7 o'clock in the morning? That's basically the question.
A very sad, retired men who are here to look for very young girlfriends.
Oh, God.
That's normally what you see.
All people just finishing their scam centres shifts.
That's also a common thing.
I see.
We have had the odd Belgian pedophile.
What's that Belgian pedophiles?
Yeah, it was a 12-year-old or a 10-year-old boy that he was with.
He was so 15.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Gross.
But we tweeted about it at the time when the Belgian embassy got in touch within minutes
and said, can you give us all his details?
And we're going to try and get him on the way out of the country.
Oh, wow.
So they did take it seriously.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
That's good to hear.
Because you think, oh, hey, there's a pedophile here.
It's not in our country.
Yeah, he's holding one of our passports, but what are we going to do?
But they were just kind of like, oh, this is making us look bad.
Let's arrest this guy.
As much as we're about to really dump on the Belgians for like decades and decades of some of the most horrific abuse in the Congo,
pretty much everywhere they go.
One thing they're really good at is they've got a really good global anti-pedophile division.
and they really pursue it.
That's their line.
Global paedophiles,
they do try to stop and they make calls.
That's one thing the Belgians really have gone for them.
So, yeah, good for them on that.
They made an arrest, which is quite cool,
and also very rare in general in Cambodia.
You guys are in the think of it.
The reason that this is relevant is because you guys are not just like,
oh, I've read a book about this or I've researched this.
It's your neighbors are literally the people that you cover,
which is somewhat uncomfortable, I would imagine.
Yeah, it's a bit nuts because, yeah,
so a lot of our work is,
the scam industry. We often write about how whole kind of towns have been taken over and turned
into kind of scam hubs. But in cities like Phnom Pen, you also have these kind of mini scam
compounds that go more under the radar. And on either side of the building that we live in,
there are new-ish Indian restaurants that are very much fronts for scam compounds upstairs.
You just see loads and loads of young, mostly guys every day arriving from like India,
Pakistan, Nepal, like very much the Indian subcontinent, looking very much.
and then sort of getting upstairs to the dorm rooms to work for scams.
And it's horrible to see for a start because some of those guys are allowed out
and seem to be more middle management.
Some of them we know aren't allowed out.
But from a purely practical point of view, all night sometimes we can hear them building,
almost like over our building.
They're like expanding and building a construction over the top of us.
It's also just continually jams the internet and phone signal.
So just the sheer effort of trying to write about scam centres is,
currently being interfered with by the building of the scam centers on either side of us, which is
it's crazy.
It's a horrible ironing, yeah.
How many people do you think are in the buildings that are near you?
Because I know last time you were on the show, we covered the scam centers.
Because I was trying to get behind the pig butchering scam and how it works.
And you had said, hey, by the way, a lot of these people are tricked into it, trafficked into it.
It's interesting.
Now I see, this is almost common knowledge.
People go, oh, you know these people are trafficked into it.
before you had told me this a couple years ago, I hadn't heard about it anywhere.
I couldn't find coverage on it anywhere.
So it was almost like you guys sort of broke this.
And now everybody's saying, hey, these people are trafficked.
They're victims.
You see some crackdowns.
But I'm curious how many people you think are working in a scam center adjacent to where you live, if you had to guess.
So I think there's this new wave of justification of what's happening where there was an acceptance,
like you said.
There was, okay, this is happening.
There's huge amounts of forced labor happening around the world.
And now it's become such a difficult issue to deal with, but I think the new narrative, and it's often adopted by various embassies that are trying to smooth over relations with certain countries in the region, that actually most of these people come here willingly. And then that's just not true. There are people who come here willingly, and there's people who very much don't. The Indian, Sri Lankan, Pakistani contingent, they're still an area of the world that you can recruit people directly to Cambodia and they don't know the risks. So if you're recruiting something from Vietnam, then they know,
not to go to Cambodia. They know they'd only take a tech job in Thailand and then they would cross
them over the border in the car. But with the South Asian people, that's not been spread as well a
message. So they're coming straight into the airport and we see basically the Chinese gangsters
behind border control, like where they should not be, taking their passports directly off them.
I tell them the telecops, say, man, these guys are getting trafficked. I've been pushed back by the
cops as they do it. So with these guys, I've spoken to them. And they say, yeah, look, we're doing
crypto that turns on online gambling scams. They admit it they say it all. And then I say, well,
who can leave? And we're like, for us, it is 50-50. The marketing guys, they're allowed to leave.
But the workers are the operators. They have different little names for them. They can't leave until
they earn enough points. And then we see it for it to say there's these different levels. There's
thousands and thousands of people just in Prompten who just fundamentally can't leave and are still
tortured with tasers. And then the most horrific ways you can imagine. And then there's so many people,
though that then get rescued or leave that have so much shame and that's like horrible psychological
barrier of what they've been forced to do for two years so they see themselves as that so they can't
return home to the philippines or to Uganda or to the Congo because they're worried their
family's going to know what they do then they enter it back into it willingly but then that still is
part of you in trafficking because even though they enter willingly then their freedoms are again removed
so even if you enter into criminality and your passport's taken off you and you're tased or you're
beaten or you're tortured and you're not allowed to leave because you're not
hitting numbers, then you're still forced into it. So anyone who claims to know the numbers
of who's forced and who's not, they're just lying that you wouldn't know. But a general estimate
of tens and tens of thousands of people in Cambodia alone and again in Myanmar and a little bit
less in Laos is a fair representation of full on objective force labour. And then there's a lot
of grey area within that as well. Wow. So on each side of our building, I think there's
probably about maybe six, seven floors. And I would say there's like maybe a couple of
100 people in each one of those.
And then you multiply that across the city
and you think how many there are
just in some small buildings.
We're not quite entirely sure how many people are squeezed into each room.
But there must be at least hundreds on either side of us
because we see so many people arrive every day
and we never see anyone leave.
If you go to the larger areas,
the last couple of weeks we've been doing a bit of a reiki
of some of the major scam hubs around the country
that we've talked about before.
At the weekend, we went back to Boka Mountain,
which used to be a big tourist attraction in Cambodia.
It was quite almost like a religious place for a lot of Cambodian people.
And they're building a new casino, which is just basically a massive scam compound quite clearly.
You just count the floors sometimes.
And if you're basing it on an average of six to ten people in a room, you're like, oh, there's
going to be tens of thousands of people just in that one building.
And down in Kokong right now, you're like, oh, you can probably get, we're counting
the floors and we're like, okay, you could probably get maybe 5,000 people in that building.
And then you see that they're building 20 of them in a row.
And that's just, again, one small strip of real estate.
So, yeah, a couple of years ago,
there was an estimate that came out in Cambodia that said about $120,000.
It's probably a lot more than that now.
Really?
Oh, my God.
That's a metropolis of just crime.
Yeah.
And I know that this number has been contested
because there is no real way of figuring this out.
It's really accurate.
But one of the big anti-scam organizations recently calculated
that they think that around a trillion dollars a year
is stolen through scams, a trillion dollars.
Yeah.
That is nearly 1% of the world's wealth every year going through scams.
So the scale is just enormous, yeah.
A generally accepted figure just for the US would be about $50 billion being stolen each year.
And I'll be a big underestimate because most people don't report it.
But just 50 billion just from the US alone is like a reasonably accepted number of like a minimum.
But to give you a bit of context of what some of these places look like now,
okay, we have the dodgy Indian restaurants when they have cell towers that they build on the roof,
which is really helpful for us to work out where something's going on because there's a huge cell tower
on top of a small Indian or Chinese restaurant. So that really helps. But then you go to some of these
places and they are full cities. Nothing else is operating. Putscan. Lindsay mentioned Kocon.
And one of the few people that have been sanctions on the Cambodia side is a guy called Liompa.
He was sanctioned last year by the US and by the UK and lately around the world. And what he's done
is he's went hard on it since. So he owns a bunch of casinos, huge properties, thousands of people.
we went back to Kocong since the sanctions and he just started blowing up mountains.
He is blowing up mountains everywhere so that he can build more and more scam compounds.
And these are like Hilton-sized kind of buildings and there's 20 of them.
The Bokar Mountain that Lindsay was saying being a tourist site, have you an idea of that.
It's like you drive up in a little scooter and there's monkeys and it's beautiful and there's like a haunted Catholic church where there was a massacre from the Camero Rouge.
But it's still like a tourist spot.
And then you go to like the old Boker Palace.
It's again, shelled out and stuff.
but interesting to sea and some shrines and things.
It's covered in mist, so it's really atmospheric anyway.
But now you go up and if you look just beyond the mess,
you still see all backpackers taking selfies.
They don't realize that those 30 buildings behind them
in the selfie are scam compounds.
They didn't exist two years ago, and they're absolutely everywhere.
There's been a huge shift in the last few months.
There's been an enormous push towards recruitment
from people from East Africa,
especially Burundi, Rwanda and the DIRC,
which coincided with the conflict escalating in that region.
It's really depressing because every time you start to see another explosion of war,
any kind of conflict or genocide, all of this stuff,
this flooding of people into scam centers because they're so easy to recruit because they're desperate.
Right.
It's like an early warning sign sometimes that you know how bad things are getting
when you see who's being recruited.
And there's also means there's a larger francophone, French-speaking population here
that can target French victims around the world as well.
And because Pompen is this hub that's just not been touched, there's been like some crackdowns on the Ta-Meanmar border, but again, they're pretty superficial at best. And there's reasons for that we could go into it. But 7,000 people have been rescued and there's like maybe 200,000 people there. So it's very much a push. Now you get Chinese private military contractors have taken over the region and loads more casinos have opened up doing the same thing, just further down the border. But no one is talking about Cambodia, no one's looking at Cambodia. So now you've got this really weird situation where I always call like a chamber of commerce for organized crime. But we'll sit in a
bar. It could be this fine 24-hour one, or it could be in the main, like, cocktail, like,
district area of Prompin where backpackers and expats and middle-class Cambodians will all go
and have a special martinis and have a little dance. But at the same time, you start looking
around, you realize the nationalities have grown a lot from what they were a few years ago.
And now we start talking to people in those bars, and they could be from the Congo, they
could be from Russia, Ukraine, they could be from Uganda, they could be from Vietnam, they could be
from the Philippines and almost so much
at the time we start talking and say, so what do you
do? Our mates are out with us and we see the eye roll
like, come on, we're just trying to have
a normal night and some beers and you guys are about to
go into a 10-hour harrowing story, like
with this person's life story or some person
that's just been rescued from a compound and doesn't want to go home
or it's some really bored
Chinese or Japanese gangster
tatted up completely with full body tats
and like they just want to like boast and talk
about their life because no one listens to
them and actually gangsters are quite lonely.
So they just want to sit there and say like, oh yeah,
I work in IT.
Well, actually, it's crypto.
Actually, I make this.
Actually, I don't like people to leave.
And they just keep talking and talking because no one's listening to them and they're lonely.
Yeah.
Look, this sounds like a pretty miserable life.
By the way, for people who want to do a deep dive on this episode 833 with both you,
where we talked about sourcing cyber slavery and how it all works in a deep dive level.
So these gangsters are essentially tricking people into coming to work in these scam centers.
They say there's a tech job in Thailand or whatever.
Then they trick them into coming to come.
across the border, they get trapped in these prison, fake casino slash call center things where they
can't leave and they have to text people and say, hi, this is Sherry? Is this Don? Great dinner
party last week or whatever, dot, dot, crypto scam. These gangsters, they live there. It seems like a
pretty miserable existence, right? Because yes, you're not a cyber slave, but you still work in this
prison casino. And what you look forward to is going and getting drunk at night and then waking
up and doing it all over again. I mean, those people are also not living.
a great life if their only outlet is talking to journalists about how they rob people. No offense.
Yeah, and that's the luckiest ones. We got talking to someone a few weeks ago, a Filipino guy,
who had been told he had a job in a casino, and I don't think he really realized online gambling
is illegal in Cambodia now because it was legal at the time in the Philippines. And only when he
arrived, realized he's working for this very dodgy crypto platform, but didn't really sink in for a while
that it was scam. And a lot of these places, they recruit people who work in marketing, and they use
marketing language. It's very kind of awful force street. You replicate a real business. People
feel like they're working for a real business. So they can almost have a double thing until they
can't. And so for this guy, it was only really when they did the first rug call and said, oh,
we're shutting down the crypto platform and then we start a new one and everyone loses their
money. But he really clicked at, oh, this is just a scam. And then he hated himself, but he
couldn't leave. He knew he couldn't leave. They'd made that very clear. And then when he eventually
did say, look, I really can't do this anymore. I feel like a terrible person. And then he's
I want to leave, he was gang raped by the guards and they continued to gang rape him for a year
until he finally found a reason for them to let him go. And so even the threat of violence and the
knowledge that it can happen for people is often enough to keep them in line, right, as well.
Yeah, of course. Jesus. So by the way, the rug pull for people who don't really understand what
this is, this is where they create a fake crypto platform, they trick you into putting your money in,
they make it look like your money's growing, but you can't really take your money out.
and then eventually when enough people are onto them
where the site starts getting blocked by, who knows,
whatever, certain firewalls or there's enough negative reviews online
about how it's a scam, et cetera,
they just close it down and they make a new one
with new branding, a new URL.
And that's the rug pull where even people
who are in the middle of the scam who might think it's working,
they just can't log in because it's gone.
And that's the end of that.
Just to quickly jump back to what you were saying,
though, John, about it's a rough life for the poor me gangsters.
And it depends where you are, right?
Like, you can be in one of the war-torn parts of Myanmar
where your movement's really really restricted
or you can be in Trump-en, it's okay.
There's a lot of people who just live here
because it's like a fun, nice place too.
But we go into these places usually when they're being cleared out
briefly and see what they're like.
And you can see the massive efforts they go
to give the gangsters like a nice happy time.
And that usually means the most depressing casino
that you can imagine.
It's like a bunch of very sad, heavily tattooed,
Chinese dudes just like smoking
and just like gambling away,
everything that they've just earned upstairs and it's in the same room. And then they've got barbershops,
they've got bars, they've got karaoke bars, they've got girls and drugs on tap, and you see all
of this, and then they can get their Ferrari, they can get their Rose Royce, and this developing
country is absolutely full of these cars and they can drive up and down in them. But yeah, eventually
it just starts to feel pretty dull and why we're doing this. But that's why some of these
places now, there's a new place that's really developed near the Vietnam border in Cambodia called
Sretemps. And there, it's like these big terrifying scanners.
compounds, but they've also recently built a lovely
promenade that goes over the war,
just looking over Vietnam. Now you see all the
gangsters are coming out and their families are moving out.
It's like a family posting now. So they're starting
to see this as a long-term investment as a
new crime type. So they want to get people in
who know what they're doing and keep them for longer than
six months. So some places are going to
efforts to make this nicer for
the criminal syndicates as well.
Certain levels of the syndicates.
Yeah, for certain levels. Yeah.
The low level of people are still getting tortured in
horrific conditions. But for the top
triads and yakuza and Russian mafia and whatever, they're getting prominent.
And unfortunately, it's going to get a lot worse now because Trump's executive order extravaganza
cancelled funding for pretty much any form of investigation in this part of the world.
Shut down USIP, which was the biggest organisation in the world that was actually trying to
track and investigate and prevent these groups from growing and from targeting Americans.
That organisation was, he shut down RFA and VOA, two of the only free press newspapers that
funded by the US and left in the region.
The day that it was shut down, the leaders of Cambodia and China celebrated publicly
and thanked Trump for shutting down the newspapers that had been criticising them
and exposing corruption in their countries, which is great.
But also shut down funding for things like any form of support for trafficking victims.
There have been safe houses in Penh, that we know, have been shut down because they
partially had American funding and they were shut down overnight.
So now even if you want out of a place, your options are more and more low.
limited. And it's just like a massive own goal for the U.S. because in trying to be like,
why should we fund the world's problems? We live in a world where you can't escape from the fact
that those problems are coming back to bite you. If you stop trying to stop overseas crime,
it's going to end up harming you in your own country.
I was just going to say the counter to this that people are screaming at their iPhone right now
is why should we pay our tax money to help fund to free Filipino trafficking victims or
Ugandan trafficking victims trafficked by Chinese gangsters? Why should the US tax dollar go to that?
And the answer is because they're targeting Americans with this and it costs more in losses that way.
Yeah, absolutely. I think there's a general acceptance that Trump's very happy to go against the drug trade, right?
Mexican cartels and organized crime that way. Those cartels are very linked up with the same groups here in
terms of money laundering now as well. It's very linked. But yeah, but just simply by cutting this stuff down
internationally, people don't understand, then you just open it up to allowing so much more
pain on US citizens, taking your pension fund, taking all of your money, all of your savings,
huge capital outflow, which is ending up a lot of the time in China, ends up as a bit of a power
for China as well. And, you know, Chinese espionage groups loving the power that they're having
over this. And North Korea has an increasing interest within this field. And at the same time,
you have all these organizations shunned down. You have Starlink and SpaceX coming into Cambodia
and declaring a priority investment country.
Now, the one thing that has happened in Thailand and Cambodia,
every now and then,
the ties come over to Myanmar into Cambodia
and they bring the cell towers down.
Bringing a cell tower down does actually stop a scam compound
for days or weeks until you build another one or you move.
But if you can have Starlink receivers doing your internet,
then you don't need to worry about anyone bringing them down.
So now we have destroyed the mediums that people are reporting on this.
So Americans are going to know about
less, it's going to happen more, and then it's going to be close to impossible to actually
stop them if they do start using Musk's Starlink receivers. And when Musk says the reason
that they may be interested in Cambodia is the developing country to provide internet,
internet again, Cambodia is fantastic. Most parts of the country, you're going to be a better
connection than we get in a lot of Europe, definitely in the UK. They do not require it.
But also in areas where you don't have the internet, where people are too poor, in areas that are
underserved by Wi-Fi, there is like really good phone coverage with really cheap data.
The people who pay for that can't afford to pay for Starlink connections.
They can't afford to pay $4,000 a year when they earn $1,000 a year.
Like, that's not going to happen.
The only people who are going to be buying Starlink are going to be scam centers.
That's the only people here.
Slave labor and call centers?
No, thank you.
Slave labor making the fine products and services that support this show.
Now that's something I can get behind.
We'll be right back.
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where you belong. You can find the course at six-minute networking.com. All right, now, back to Nathan
Paul Southern and Lindsay Kennedy. It's interesting to mention North Korea, because I always
thought, how come North Korea is not in on this? Because there's a lot of pressure being put on
Cambodia, there's pressure being put on the Myanmar, the ties are going in and cutting down the cell towers.
North Korea can just build their own infrastructure, use their own internet infrastructure,
or Chinese internet infrastructure, and nobody could ever go in there and rescue people,
pressure people, write about it. You can't live next to the scam center.
I mean, they could create a special economic zone, build 100 scam centers,
and generate hundreds of millions of dollars a year for the regime.
I feel bad giving them this idea, but I'm sure they have it already, and it sounds like
they're already on the move.
They're making a lot more money, I think, out of selling the technology at the moment.
They make a lot of the technology used to scam, like the basic platforms.
North Korea does.
And they sell them mostly, yes.
So this is a bit of strange system like so in Japan and Korea.
The Yakuza, which is like the kind of the largest mafia group in Japan,
a huge proportion of the Yakuza are actually ethnic Korean for like historical reasons.
Korean people, especially North Korean descent, were treated very badly in Japan.
And one of the only sources of support and of Korean language education in Japan for a long time
was provided by an organization called the Chong Run, which is a North Korean organization.
And they're still allowed to operate in Japan.
They provide very pro-North Korean language education programs and schooling to a huge number
of people in Japan.
So a huge number of the yakuza are ethnic Korean, and they also then spread into South Korea
itself, which means you have basically a very powerful crime group, which contains a number
of people who are loyal to North Korea, and they've been partnering more with Chinese triads,
well. We see it here all the time as there's more and more collaboration. So that was one link in,
but also North Korea has been shown without a doubt now to be using quite a lot of the financial
systems owned by scam company owners here who have developed their own banking systems and
payment platforms. They're using those to move money from some of their massive heights.
A couple of weeks ago, there was the world's biggest heist when North Korea stole $1.5 billion
in one day or something. Yeah, from Ethereum. It was a buy-based crypto exchange.
And they've been moving that money partly through Cambodian scam center owners, like, financial platform.
That's not in doubt. That's just the fact.
Yeah. So North Korea is very wide into this. And it makes sense. Yeah, it's very much in their wheelhouse.
So this is something else that we've been trying to screen from the rooftops is that this industry is indirectly helping to fund North Korea as well, or sometimes directly funding North Korea.
So we're funding organized crime, but also we're funding states that want to threaten with weapons.
and war, other countries in the region, or even the United States.
Yes.
That is wild.
That money, because North Korea is very good at cyber attacks,
ransomware and theft, rather than so much of scams, like we said, they sell a tech for that.
On that theft, the group that they gave it to will just call them out.
They're called Yon, and they're a Cambodian financial platform that's been called
the biggest criminal platform in history.
So about $60 to $70 billion went through it last year, and we were desperately trying to get
sanctioned by the U.S. government because that is fertility.
not only North Korean movement of money, but also probably a predominant amount of US money
scams coming out here. I think in the New York Times actually just recently covered Yonpe.
And interesting, again, we're not sanctioning and we believe that there is maybe a link
between people like Elon Musk having financial interests here that mean that we're not actually
protecting, say, US citizens, if you just want to make it simple. And again, I think that
kind of Elon Musk link and the billionaire link, like I think that is something what they're doing
abroad is not being discussed in the same level of what's happening internally. And that's probably
what would bring us well into the Congo is talking about those exact same billionaires in their
interest there and why there is an enormous conflict right now that nobody is talking about,
but some of the America's top billionaires are getting ready to make an enormous amount of cash
and also potentially collaborate with China quietly as well. This is quite wildly off what we had
planned to talk about, but so interesting. Sorry, everything leads back to scams. I'm sorry.
It does. I love it. I'm here for it.
That's one reason why I love you guys on the show.
You did try to segue before.
I didn't bite on it, but I have one last question before we do transition to Congo and Rwanda,
which is if the Yakus of the Russian mob and the Chinese triads, probably among others,
are all in the same industry in the same area, do they have conflicts with one another?
Because traditionally, it seems like those guys wouldn't all want to hang out and then do business in the same place.
I have literally walked into a bar in Cambodia.
and seeing a Russian guy, a Ukrainian guy, and a Polish guy who all work together to develop
some of the tech platforms that they sell to Chinese triads to run these scams.
This is what's amazing is that criminal groups don't care about diplomatic ties.
And if you're making money, you're making money, right?
Unless you're super, super nationalistic.
If anything, to be honest, one of the really fascinating things about, like, the scam industry
is that the Taiwanese mafia is massive in this.
And one of the reasons they managed to become so massive so quickly is because obviously
China doesn't recognize Taiwan as a separate state and they get very upset if other countries
deal with the Taiwanese police.
But the Taiwanese, like, senior police, they don't want to go through China either because
they see themselves a separate state.
So what it means is Taiwan gets left out of so many discussions and so much knowledge
sharing.
So they can't give intelligence to other governments about Taiwanese gangsters moving into
their area and starting scam centers because they're not allowed to talk to them directly
without going through China. So for a long time, Taiwan just got bigger and bigger. And these Taiwanese
gangsters don't mind working with the gangsters from Fujian on the Chinese mainland. But they're
quite happy to do that. But it's just their governments that won't talk to each other. So often when
there's like problems between governments, it actually helps these different groups to forge connections.
So the Taiwanese government is not recognized by China and the Chinese government. And of course,
Taiwan, depending on their relations at the moment, usually not talking to Beijing either.
So the Taiwanese mafia can grow and grow. And if, let's say, Cambodia says, hey, we've got this
problem with the Taiwanese mafia, they can tell Taiwan, but Taiwan's not going to turn around and tell
China, China's not going to turn around and share with Taiwan. So basically, these groups have this
information black hole or this giant firewall, and they can just take advantage of that by operating
with impunity. I've been told by people in the know of this that sometimes when Taiwanese senior
police actually want to go and talk to their colleagues in other countries and have like proper
sit-down meetings to talk about the threat. They have to come in on like tourist visas and meet
secretly and they can't just go and have a proper meeting because that would piss off China so
much that it would damage that country's diplomatic relations. So this is how stupid the situation
is that it's all just vanity. There's also like at a much bigger level. It is still usually the
Chinese gangs that are the bosses of this. So if they collaborate with other groups, they are still
usually the heads, not always but predominantly. And most of those Chinese criminal bosses have
some kind of relationship going back to Beijing. And that may have been when Xi Jinping did his
big crackdown on corruption. And a lot of it was like a soft word to some of these big gangs
who are saying, listen, you can continue what you're doing and we're not going to fill you in jail,
but stop bringing it through China. So that may be stop hedling meth or guns through China or don't
do scams for whatever illegal activity. So they went places that you would be accepted. So they go
to Cambodia. But what they do is they can come and come these nationalistic,
gangsters. The views of the Chinese Communist Party abroad, they start business networks where they
push like the One China policy, where they promote Belt and Rodinish to the ideas. And then a lot of
these guys have such weird, convoluted relationships to the state, sometimes they're wanted by them,
sometimes they're not with China, but essentially they can act as almost as agents of the Chinese
state by exerting influence when they need. So by Chinese organized crime groups being the top
dogs across Asia and now increasingly getting involved in Latin America as well,
as the money laundering groups and also moving fentanyl, that creates an enormous amount of,
is it soft or is it hard? It's some kind of power for China. And that's something that as well is like
a direct threat to the United States national security interest. But it's a hard thing to explain.
These guys like Zhao Wei, who owns the King's Roman's Golden Triangle Special Economics own,
he's got these weird relationships with the Chinese governments. Several people here,
like Dongle Chang in Cambodia, the Prince Group organization here. They all have these back and forth
weird relationships with China. And the worry is that actually they're semi-acting as agents of
espionage to Chinese state, which is allowing them to also do their big mafia stuff. So they make
a bunch of money and China reigns them in when they want. And when they want to do a little bit of
pushing influence on the government, China doesn't need to do that direct. They've got guys with
tattoos and guns that they can do it in these countries and step. Wow. It's like a proxy organized
crime group. That's really interesting. Man, we could talk about this for hours. I remember King's Roman
Casino, we talked about this long time ago, and I did an episode on wildlife trafficking where
that casino made a cameo, our guest on episode 545, Rachel Neuer, she went undercover there
and was seeing people ordering, I don't know, like bear paws and pangolins and stuff at Kings
Romans Casino. I can't imagine being around all that. All right, let's transition to the DRC,
so Congo and Rwanda. And Lindsay, you mentioned that these are connected because the conflict in the
Congo slash Rwanda is creating more refugees and some of those refugees end up getting trafficked
to scam centers in Cambodia or wherever, Burma, Myanmar, whatever.
So let's start from the top because we haven't covered Congo at all on this show or really
Rwanda on this show.
What is the latest with this?
Because I know that those two countries, they sort of border each other.
Rwanda's invaded Congo a couple of times.
I don't actually know why.
What's the overview of this?
So we were there just over a year ago.
We actually went for two reasons. First of all, because we were quite curious to see
whether or not there had been French-speaking scant centers in that region, which it turned
out that we didn't really find much evidence about the time. It turns out they were all
being said over this way instead. But what the other thing we were looking at is, this is
probably not as familiar to this is from outside the UK, but the UK developed this incredibly
controversial refugee resettlement plan called the Rwanda, the Rwanda Refugee Plan.
And the idea was that the UK was going to start sending all of its refugees to Rwanda for processing,
which meant that it had to announce that Rwanda was a safe country.
And our government had to change all of its own advice on Rwanda and its own policy on torture and prisons and media freedom and all this stuff.
I had to play it all down to say that Rwanda was a safe country.
The whole thing was ridiculous.
Let me pause you for a second.
So refugees that are going to the UK were going to be sent to Rwanda for processing?
Yes, that was the plan. Wow. Yeah, so it was essentially modeled after the Australian idea of offshore refugee resettlement. So anyone who they say came here illegally, but that's not a thing. If you arrive and you're claims island, there's no other legal way to do it unless you're from like two countries. So the idea was that they started saying that Rwanda is a safe country. There's always been a UK government kind of closeness to Kigami and Rwanda after the genocide. So they set up this deal. They said it was a super safe place to be. They can send refugees.
G's there and there wouldn't be a problem. The Home Secretary at the time, she went out once and
seen this lovely housing development in Kigali, the capital of Rwanda, and said, look how lovely
this is. This is delightful. I want the name of the interior decorator. But the only journalists
allowed to go were from these kind of selected government-friendly right-wing rags, GB News, telegraphed,
Daily Mail. So, me and Lindsay thought, we want to go out and actually understand this refugee
policy from the perspective of what's happening on the ground in Rwanda.
So, yeah, the big thing for us was there have been lots of argument about the ethics of it,
like the morality of it.
But we were like, wherever you land on whether it's ethical, we were like, where has the
money gone?
Because by this point, the UK had sent about a quarter of a billion pounds to Rwanda,
and not a single person had been resettled.
And there was no sign of where the money had gone.
And the money just kept being sent and kept being sent.
and everyone was incredibly cagey about where their actual money was going.
So we were like, okay, we want to go there and want to see where this money is being spent.
And the only clue that anyone had were that these homes had been built called Buizah,
where the Home Secretary gave this speech.
So we started there, and we went to Boiza.
We arrived at the same time as a couple of very nice middle-class Rwandan families
who were looking for a starter home.
And it became very apparent very quickly that this was a housing development for
start our homes for middle-class families. And we were so confused. And they were showing us around.
And we just said, so I'm a little bit confused because we're from the UK. And we were told that this
development was going to be homes for resettled refugees. And the guy just went, oh my God, like,
that woman, she just turned up here. They were having like a kind of like passing out ceremony
for people who'd finished this construction training thing. And she rocked up as if it was she was going
to be there for that. And then just started giving a speech, apparent. This is what he told us,
about how the UK had funded this for refugees,
and just completely made it up, completely made it up.
And it was reported on by friendly press who'd gone with her as if it was true.
And it was a complete fuss.
No money from the UK government had ever gone to this.
And they eventually admitted that no money from the UK government had ever gone to this.
So then we're like, okay, well, where did the money go?
Where did the money go?
It wouldn't have cost anything like that kind of money to build places for refugees to be held.
It wouldn't have cost anything like that money to process people.
The UK was already going to have to pay for all the flights for people.
We were like, where is all this money gone?
Then we were told that there was a special fund
that would be administered by Rwanda for development.
That's where their money went.
So we were like, can you give us one example?
We asked so many people.
Can you give us one example, one single example of one project
that has been paid for out of this?
And no one could give us a single example.
Wow.
Then we basically looked at the timeline
and we realized that the M23s,
which is an incredibly brutal militia,
been Rwanda-backed.
It initially began years and years ago.
In around 2013, it was sanctioned by most of the world. It was conducting horrific massacres in the Congo.
The origins of it are that following the genocide in Rwanda, some of the people who had orchestrated that genocide fled to the Congo.
This group initially said that its purpose was to hunt down people who had been responsible for murders in Rwanda of the Hutu majority who fled to Rwanda and kill them.
But it became very quickly about most people left in refugee camps in the Congo now,
who are of Hutu origin, are children.
So they certainly weren't alive at the time of the Rwandan genocide.
So it very quickly became that the M23 was sweeping through mostly refugee camps
and areas where they were very valuable mines,
clearing everybody out, committing mass rape as a weapon of war,
murdering indiscriminately, and then taking over mines,
because Rwanda doesn't really have any of its own, like, Coltan mines and stuff.
Let me stop you for a second, because I don't think people know what Coltan is or necessarily about this history.
So for people who are not as familiar with the Rwandan genocide, so tell us briefly what that is,
and then M23, this militia decides to pursue the perpetrators of this into the Congo,
but that's not exactly what worked out.
Yeah, so very briefly, so Rwanda borders the DRC, right, the Congo.
and in the mid-90s there was a really horrific genocide
where the majority ethnic group, the Hutus, massacred,
the minority group, the Tutsis.
It was really horrific.
Some of the people who had been involved
in committing mass murders against the Tutsis
fled across the border into the Congo.
So at the time, some Rwandan soldiers
followed across and tried to hunt these people down.
And then this group called the M23 formed quite a few years later.
One of their purposes, they said, was to hunt down
people who had never faced justice to what they did in Rwanda.
The problem was that very quickly it became clear that this group was not pursuing any kind of
moral objective. It was storming refugee camps of ethnic Hutu people who have been displaced
by war, most of whom were kids and had nothing to do with the genocide and just massacring
people and trying to clear them out of areas where there were valuable mines, basically.
Rwanda is a very tiny country. It recently announced that it has always
mines full of very valuable things like Coltan and Colbock, basically things that go in electric
cars and batteries, things that the whole world is after right now. It doesn't have any of these.
There's absolutely no indication that it genuinely has any of these things. But what it has been
doing for about 20 years is stealing a lot of this stuff from mines on the other side of the border
in the DRC in Congo, bringing them across the border and then saying they come from Rwanda.
So the M23s were instrumental.
cool. Now, celebrate the fact that you're not imprisoned in a North Korean scam call center run by
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We'll be right back. Here's a little inside scoop you might not be aware of. When you use our
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Avenger.com slash deals. It is a win-win. You get an awesome deal and you help keep the show going strong.
We really appreciate your support. Now, back to out of the loop. Apple and Tesla can buy, I mean,
I'm not just throwing shade on them. Companies like Apple and Tesla can go and say, look, we got
conflict-free minerals. They're from Rwanda. But really, it's mined by slave kids in the DRC that are
being forced by the M-23 militia to deliver this stuff or whatever and mine it.
Yeah. Or it's all being played off that the people who live there.
have all been murdered so that the M23s can take over and steal it.
Oh my God.
I give a special shout out to Siddharth Kara and his book Cobalt Red,
which really dives into the mineral exploitation in the DRC
and that the huge amount of child slavery is essentially happening.
Yes, episode 807 of this show with Siddharth Kara,
if you want a deep dive on the blood of the Congo powers our lives.
He's an amazing guy.
Yeah.
And essentially, like, he'll explain it very well,
but there is no such thing as ethical cobalt, the cobal that we need inside lithium batteries to recharge.
There's no such thing.
Some estimates say up to 95% of it comes from the DRC, but even the stuff that doesn't.
There's some in Australia, there's some of Kazakhstan.
It's mostly all owned by Chinese companies that then refine it all together.
So there's no possible way for companies like Tesla or Apple to claim.
There's no such thing as ethical cobalt.
So what's to be happening for the last 10 years quite quietly is that Rwanda has been smuggling this over the river in boats.
at dark. They might have small amounts of mining of some materials, but cobalt and gold is coming
over from the DRC and then they're claiming it. So this happens at the same time that the UK really
cleans up their image by saying that they're a safe country to do that. And at the same time,
the European Union offers them 900 million euros and develop their own mining processes
to extract these. So everyone gets to pretend that it's from a safe country that's not got chilled
labor, that isn't warm minerals. But in actual fact, it is, we're stealing it. And Apple knows
that. Tesla knows that. Everyone knows that.
What was so damning about this is the M23, they are essentially, they're a terrorist militia.
And back in 2013, Rwanda at that time, was enormously reliant on international aid to survive.
It was rebuilding after a horrific genocide.
In 2013, pretty much the whole world said Rwanda denied and still occasionally does, it flips back and forward, whether or not it is the M23 or back to the M23.
It pretty obviously is.
Back in 2013, the UK was one of the countries that said, we're going to cut off all aid to you if the M23s don't.
go away, basically. And the N23s completely disappeared. Everyone thought that they had gone.
Disbanded overnight, basically? Pretty much overnight. The minute that the UK said,
they stopped taking new territory. Wow. Yeah, but they also went really quiet. No one heard of them.
And then the UK government internally warned itself, like some departments of the UK government
warned the leadership at the time in the UK that if they started working with Rwanda, if they started
saying Rwanda was a safe country, that it would put them in a dangerous position because
they would then be expected to say face, basically deny atrocities,
and that there were risks that if Rwanda started doing stuff like this again,
that they would have to take Rwanda side.
Otherwise, it would be too embarrassing, basically.
So we knew this as a country that this was a risk.
But what we realized when we got to Rwanda
and we started talking to people and we started matching up the timeline
is that at the exact moment when the UK signed this deal with Rwanda
saying, we're going to send you a ton of money to start this refugee resettlement program,
is the exact moment when the M23 suddenly reappear after 10 years of silence and start massacring
people again. And they shot down like a UN helicopter. They started taking territory. And then the
UK just keeps giving them money and giving them money and giving them money, giving Rwanda money.
And all of a sudden the M23 has money. And it was pretty obvious. That's where all the money
was going. It wasn't going anywhere else. And when we asked the UK government about this,
they freaked out. They were very careful not to actually deny anything, but they freaked out
completely. When we asked the Congolese embassy in London if they were sending money that was
meant to be for the resettlement program to the M23s, their reply was basically they deserve it.
Wow.
Like basically, the Congolese deserve it. They didn't deny it either. So by this point, we were like,
it's pretty obvious that this money is being used to conduct a genocide. Part of the fact that
this is obviously horrific, one of the great ironies of the situation is, at that time, I think
we had a backlog of about 90,000 refugees in the UK that needed processing.
Within six months, the M23 had created a million internally displaced refugees in the DRC.
Meanwhile, as we only found out when we went to Rwanda, inside Rwanda itself,
there were already about 700,000 refugees, still from the last war with the Congo,
who had never been able to leave refugee camps and never been processed.
And they had been told by the government, the only hope of them ever leaving these internal
refugee camps in Rwanda is if another country like the UK took them. And when you looked at the
fine print of this ridiculous deal the UK made with Rwanda, it actually said that they could also
send Congolese refugees to the UK. Now, that entire plan was scrapped when we had a change of government.
But had it gone through, in theory, in return for us giving them a quarter of a billion,
in theory for this stupid refugee program, they never took one refugee, they could have, in theory,
sent us over a million refugees that they had created.
using our money. So even outside of the horrors of the war and the genocide that they were committing,
the whole thing was just absolutely insane. So that's what then took us from Rolanda around the region.
And we started looking at some other groups as well that the Rwandans were funding. There's also a group
called the Red Tabara that kind of operates in the DRC, but also watch the attacks in Burundi.
So he went to the Burundi, DRC border. We actually kind of got briefly arrested there and detained by the
military and the accuses of being spies. But we got out of that and then we got to DRC.
And then we just seen the destruction of this conflict and it was horrific.
But one of the things it really hit is quite quickly was opposite of Airbnb.
There's not many places to stay in Goma.
There was one Airbnb.
One Airbnb?
Oh my God, that's funny.
We were in North Key, the most war-torn part of the Congo, yeah.
It was opposite what it seemed to be any Eastern European mercenary base.
So we just see all these big white dudes walking around with Valaclaba's AK-4-7s and one of them did have a Labrador.
Wait, did you say Eastern European mercenary base?
Yeah, exactly.
What outfit is this?
Is this like Wagner or something else?
We thought they were Wagner and everyone kept calling them the Russians.
Every kind of like white foreigner, especially of Eastern European descent, like in the Congo,
everyone just calls them the Russians.
Whether they're Russian or not.
So for a while we thought they were Russian.
Okay, gotcha.
And then we realized quite quickly that actually they weren't Russian.
They were mostly either a French-Bulgarian outfit that mostly high as Bulgarians or
this Romanian guy called Rashiopatra, who is very good friends with Eric.
Prince, who founded Blackwater famously, and he was in the French Legion. So this is another
mad European thing, right? The French Legion is basically almost like a mercenary force in France
that anyone in the world can join so long as they can pass the physical. So you can go and
basically fight. You're talking about the French Foreign Legion, right? Yeah, it's absolutely insane
situation. This particular group of mercenaries, they're mostly Romanian, and they claim to have been
the kind of Romanian contingent of the French Foreign Legion.
That's how they started.
So you had the Romanians there.
You had the Bulgarians there.
And then you also had Eric Prince hanging around.
And the UN accused him at the time we were there
of having actively tried to stir up misinformation
about the UN peacekeeping forces
to try and create riots that would get the UN kicked out
so that he could sell his mercenary forces in in this day.
Wow.
So when we were there over a year ago,
we started to get really concerned that,
because also a lot of these guys also do have links to Wagner, but the Congo at the time had almost
signed a bunch of contracts with the Russians because they were running out of options to push back
the M23s, but they really didn't want to burn all their bridges with the US and with Europe.
And so when the full-scale invasion of Ukraine began and sanctions started being put on Russian banks and stuff,
they agreed basically to pull back and not use Russian help.
But then they would suck because no one else was really helping them.
So they're using all these different small mercenary groups.
At the time, we were really concerned that this was going to turn into a kind of proxy war between countries.
Exactly after the fall of Kigua and Goma.
Yeah.
You know, essentially, there was very much a reason that these guys were reaching out to various mercenary groups.
The Congolese forces couldn't fight what was essentially a very well-financed, very well-armed Rwandan army,
which is essentially what M-22 was.
He couldn't fight it.
They had to reach out for help, and these mercenary groups from Eastern Europe were happy to fill in.
and they were necessary. The UNP-Skeeping forces were leaving. Congolese forces couldn't fight them,
so they were needed. And like when they said, they held back on the going Sudan, Central African
Republic and the Sahel countries have with signing overfield control to Wagner because he didn't
want to lose that US relationship. But then Rwandan M23 got stronger and about six weeks ago from now,
they took North Kivu. This is a part of the Congo? Yeah. So this is the kind of most war-torn part
of the DRC, where M23 have been operating for decades. But just in like the last, the last
year of offensive, they've now managed to take most of that province. And that province now has access
to a lot of the world's cobalt, gold, also 10, various other minerals. And now they don't need to
sneak over the border for ferries and on the river. Now they can actually use the capital city of the
region Goma, and they can bring it right over the land border into Rwanda. Now, what this is really
reminiscent of, and it's fascinating that no one's talking about it, is essentially exactly what
happened with Russia and Ukraine in 2014. When Russia denied, they were actually invading Ukraine
at the eastern part. Exactly what Rwanda said. And that kind of lie has continued, but everyone
knows that it's really them and sometimes they do accept responsibility. Now they've taken
most of that problems. They've actually threatened to take much, much more of the country as well.
And since then, things have gotten incredibly more complicated. So actually, the Rwandans ended
rounding up all of these Eastern European mercenaries. And there's some fascinating photos of these
Romanians getting handcuffed and then sent over the border to Rwanda where they were sent back.
And now the DRC government, instead of reaching out to mercenary groups, like the smaller ones
we're discussing, they're directly reaching out to Trump. And they're directly saying to Trump,
please come in. We will give you a deal like you want in Ukraine. We'll give you 50% of our minerals,
which are work about $27 trillion if you can offer security guarantees for the Congo. And then since then
Donald Trump seems to be in consideration with it.
Eric Prince has met with the
president of the Congo because it's likely that
Trump won't want to put his own trips on the ground
but could offer private military contractors.
Sure. And Starlink,
Hila Musk, have already been
in the DRC to discuss
potential expansion there. At the same
time, Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos backed
new AI company has already
started to make arrangements
in one part of the DRC to divvy up
control of mines between
them and the Chinese. So you essentially have
this new great game colonialism of Africa, but the actually Chinese and the Americans are
quietly collaborating and just billions will be extracted from the DRC.
That's what I was going to say. I'm not a very like everything goes back to colonialism
kind of guy, but this is almost new colonialism where you've got a Rwandan-backed invasion that's
funded by the UK, whether the UK meant to do that or not. It sounds like they did. And then
the US maybe hiring Blackwater or whatever it's called Academy, whatever is they, I don't know
what the name is this week. Eric Prince's, FSG, private military contractors to go into the Congo
to protect these mines alongside the Chinese who are going to then exploit the crap out of these
resources in exchange for maybe pushing back the not Russians or sometimes Russians, but sometimes
French Foreign Legion, but sometimes whatever private military contractor is floating around
in there. So it's almost like a proxy colonialist war in the making to get the,
elements so that we can make AI chips, basically?
It really, really is.
And the scariest thing about it is it's not geopolitical.
It's company-driven.
It's almost like we're talking about earlier with criminal groups
dividing up countries and taking the resources.
This is essentially that, but with billion-dollar companies.
Like Eric Prince, actually since he left Blackwater,
has worked directly with the Chinese government
and private military contracting groups, various ones.
And he's still a very, very close ally of Trump.
And what he's done is he has facilitated the safe,
movement of Chinese mining companies through Africa. Now you have a situation where it may be
Airy Prince, there's organising security for the Congo, in partnership possibly, with Chinese
companies, where Elon Musk, who absolutely desperately needs the supplies inside the DRC.
Elon Musk, who was also named directly, like a spokesperson for the Congolese government,
when they basically sent a begging letter to the US saying, please just help us push the 133 out,
we will at this point hand over access to our minds if you will do that and help protect them.
They mentioned Tesla by name as one of the companies that would benefit from this.
Sure, because it's a massive U.S. company.
Yeah, I'm sure when they wrote to the Chinese, they probably mentioned B.Y.D.
in other Chinese companies. Wow.
Exactly.
But I guess what I mean is that there's no pretense anymore that it's not just a commercial interaction.
Oh, I see.
Yeah, there's no like, free our people.
It's, hey, do you want some of these minerals?
Fight these other guys who want our minerals.
Oh, yeah, there's people there too, but whatever.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
Eric Prince, historically, FSG and FRG are slightly different.
FSG was like frontist of this group, which apparently he officially stepped down from a few years ago.
That was majority owned by the Chinese government.
So he was basically working for the Chinese government for many years.
And he has advocated at various times and got in trouble for it for the US to collaborate with Wagner in Africa.
as a mercenary force basically
to allow him to collaborate
with Russian forces. He has a lot of connections with Russian forces.
Musk, meanwhile, obviously has a lot of connections with China,
especially when it comes to production.
And so what this looks like to us
is that you have three empires
that are obsessed with expanding their size of their empires.
Russia is literally trying to expand its territory.
China is obsessed with expanding.
The US has an outside saying things
like they're going to invade Greenland and whatever.
They're actually literally talking about
expanding whether or not they're going to do it. And you have these three
neo-colonial empires basically saying, how do we carve up Africa between us? It's like
1850 all over again. It's like how do we carve this up between us and figure out who owns what?
This is so crazy. And I think we get lost in so much the bluster and there's so much happening
domestically in the US that I understand why people can't jump into the Congo and see it as really
important. But I think nowhere else represents the real dangers of what's actually happening.
whatever your politics are, like taking them away out of the US and just there is a very strong group of
billionaires with different companies. They're not even making efforts to step back from anymore,
even if they're involved with the government and they are stripping apart the minerals of the DRC.
This is like Leopold East India Trading Company. It's indistinguishable from colonialism. I like you,
I don't bring everything back to that, but this one is really hard to. The difference here is
they're not talking about something that they want in the headline.
We're not talking about we're pushing back the Russians or pushing back the Chinese, talking about quiet deals being made by billionaires who are in the government.
Rather than a state department who's trying to play a bigger game of security, actually this is such a direct threat to the security.
Because it is handing billions to already very powerful people, but actually divvying up these places really quietly.
And when you've also got Bill Gates and Bezos just coming out of nowhere, facilitating deals where the Chinese, Australians, the Congolese can divvying up.
the up one province between them. That is OG colonialism. It is absolutely just corporate oligarchy
level colonialism. It's crazy. We are now no better, or soon to be no better than Wagner in Africa,
just killing people, taking over gold mines and shipping the gold back to Russia for sale to
fund the war in Ukraine. I mean, this is like the same thing. And I'm not a conspiracy guy or one of
these sort of, oh my gosh, the next step is this crazy World War III. But what's almost certainly going to
happen is some sort of conflict with China, and that conflict is going to involve a lot of
AI and drone warfare, and those types of things are going to require the resources in these areas.
So we're going to have to then pay these same companies and people, trillions, whatever, of dollars
over a certain period of time, to fight each other not only for those resources, but so that
the nation states themselves that these people are from can control more of them.
So it's literally like a chess piece or at least one of the board of chess being played
that will lead up to whatever conflict we have with China.
It's so wild to think about that this oligarch game is going to essentially be a part of World War III if it happens.
It's almost like the short-sightedness of all from the US because whenever this term ends, possibly in three years, possibly not.
Whatever happens in the world, like Musk, a few other guys, Eric Prince, they're walking away with.
these enormous contracts. Those contracts don't go anywhere, right? But the US is in a state where it is
not planned. It's not planned its security. It's not planned for its economy. Whereas China's making
plans for decades and decades. And so is Russia. And we're seeing this new kind of game across
the world. It's not just in Congo, at a lesser extent in Myanmar, where Chinese and Russians are
cooperating. The US has started to become weirdly interested there as well, but not to compete against
them and also in Ukraine. We were there last year, and we never quite imagined this would be
what we'd be talking about, but this divvying up with resources between the Russians and the Americans.
And again, you just see these billion-dollar companies that are making these deals.
And then, yeah, you're right.
What happens when the next regime comes in, the next American president, if they're on the other side,
if they aren't gearing up for a conflict, do they trust the Elon Musk's and the Eric Princes to be loyal to the U.S.?
We don't have a choice anymore because these oligarchs and these companies now control the government.
And even if they don't control the guy who's in power at the time, they are going to have the
contracts and they're going to have the resources, we really don't have a choice. What are we going to do? Say
we decided we don't need rechargeable batteries anymore. We don't have a choice anymore.
This is the thing as well. We mentioned before about the kind of shock waves that a lot of cuts to aid
have had in this part of the world, right? And one of the reasons that was such a shock is for a lot of
people is that they had literal contracts. They had contracts that had contracts that have been
signed to say certain development projects would happen, to have certain people would be employed
for a certain amount of time. The fact that the US government could just tear up a contract and
say, actually, we decided not to honor it, was a real shock to a lot of people. And it's made a lot
of countries rethink whether or not they could work with the American government, because
if you can just have someone new come in in four years and tear up a contract, you can't work
with them. Russia and China, I mean, Russia's its own thing, but like China might give you a really
bad deal. China might tell you that you have to pay back a loan with insanely high rates,
or you lose your port, or you lose like your railways or whatever. But you still know what
the terms and conditions are when you do it. So at least they are consistent. And this is what's
scary about this situation is that Russia and China have been doing this a long time. They are
autocratic states that are in control and they have a long-term plan. So they are not going to
change in any fundamental way in the next 10, 20 years. The US might be a different country
in a few years. No one knows. So the people who are making these agreements are probably going
to be more likely to make them with oligarchs who are going to consistently be selfish in 10 years time
have the same goals because they are at least consistent, right? So that's not good for anyone because
you can't rein them back in. So it's not like the US is becoming stronger. It's like a handful of
oligarchs in the US are going to become stronger. And that will end up superseding any form of
democracy in the US. Like it's like you're basically just putting them in the same club as a bunch
of autocrats. This all sounds insane to say, but that is what's happening. A little bit, but it's
actually what's happening. Yeah, I was just going to say something like it does sound like we're
nuts. And if you're new to the show, you're like, oh God, this Jordan guy,
He's off the deep end, man.
I thought this guy was reasonable.
Look at all this crap that he's letting these people spot on the show.
But you're right.
It's like this is actually what is happening now.
This is not weird speculation.
This is the current status.
I think that it's very irritating that the only way that possibly we're going to get more attention
for what's happening in the Congo is by bringing it back to the colonial powers that are devastating it.
And that's always been the way, right?
Like for centuries, this place has been absolutely decimated and it should be one of the richest countries in the world.
the amazing work against
Starf Carra's done on our phones and on our cars
unfortunately we've not made an impact
we've not made a change on what we do for the
likes of Congolese children that are forced
into the most horrific conditions
so again the number one thing here is that
conflict is tearing these people apart for
our interest in the West but the thing that might
make people care and just look a little bit
beyond the domestic politics in the US
like just get out of that bubble of Trump's
signed a new mad executive order or he
renamed something and we're going to debate that
and then we're going to bring it back to some culture
war thing that we're all tied up in, look a little bit beyond it and actually realize that
there is nothing right now that suggests that Trump administration is interested in the
security, stability, and long-term economic progress of the United States. And in fact, everything
points to being a clear kleptocracy. It points more to Russia than to any visioner idea
of what United States is apparently supposed to be. And that's like the real warning here,
is we're handing it to billionaire kleptocrats who have no interest in the security and stability
of the United States. And we can say whether that's in the Congo or whether that's not
sanctioning groups in Cambodia because you want to set up selling and have their own geopolitical
balance with China or just make money for Obama and Musk. The issue is that oligarchs are
running the most powerful country and the most powerful military in the world and we're missing
that. That is a lot of people share that view. Thank you so much for coming back on the show.
this is fascinating. Definitely took like several left turns from what we had originally
planned to talking about, but I always find that super interesting. And I know you're doing this
live. People are probably like, where the hell is this from? Lindsay's in a dark cage somewhere
and you're adjacent to a trafficking hub at a 24-hour bar that's open at whatever hour it is now
with seemingly a shitload of traffic and customers.
How plus 1 a.m.?
That's busy. So if you ever want to go to a place where your insomnia is not a problem,
Nampen seems like the place to go because you just walk outside at 3 a.m. and everything is open.
You can always get a fried rice at any time of night or day.
Yeah. Jet lag doesn't matter. Just work from 11 p.m. or whatever until 5 o'clock at the morning.
And it's no different. It's just a little bit darker outside.
Thanks so much, guys, for doing this. I know it's a weird time.
Cheers, Jordan. Thanks, thanks, man.
Thanks so much, Jordan.
Here's a preview with the 26th National Security Advisor, General H.R. McMaster,
on the greatest threats to the United States.
War is this continuous interaction of opposites, right?
You and maybe multiple enemies and adversaries inside of a complex environment.
You have to understand strategic empathy to try to view these complex competitions
from the perspective of the other.
Do you think our divisions domestically right now are one of the greatest threats to our national security?
Absolutely, George, they are.
And our adversaries are doing everything they can to exploit them.
I mean, Russia is masterful at this.
When we were attacked on 9-11, you know, Al-Qaeda didn't target Democrats or Republicans, right?
They targeted Americans.
I think it's time to really demand real reforms, you know, and if teachers' unions are an obstacle,
we've got to tell them, hey, you can't strike reform anymore.
And we need to demand it.
The fact that we're driven apart from each other based on these divisions in our society,
what social media is doing to us by driving us apart with these algorithms to show you just more
and more extreme information based on your predilections, the fact that, you know,
If you're of one political persuasion, you watch one TV network, and somebody of a different
political persuasion watches a different one.
You're creating two different realities.
We're doing this to ourselves, George.
We've got to stop.
You know, we've got to stop it.
So let's think about it.
Let's work together to make our republic better every day.
And there are some who don't want to do that.
They think that, hey, you can't even empathize.
You're not even allowed to empathize.
It's a real tragedy.
For more, including General H.R. McMaster's thoughts on immigrants.
and climate change, check out episode 410 on the Jordan Harbinger show.
All things Nathan and Lindsay will be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Thanks to Nathan and Lindsay for coming back on the show, especially at this weird hour
from a bar near a scam call center. It's actually kind of dangerous for them to do this stuff
because the internet that they need is in a public-ish place and they're talking about criminals
who literally live and work right next to them. So it's a little bit dodgy sometimes for them
to even show up and do these shows. So props to them for doing this for us.
all things Nathan and Lindsay will be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com.
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